Running a poker club means managing more than just cards and chips - you have a vision for what the ideal club should be and you are striving for that.
Over time, I've found that tracking player behaviors has become one of the most valuable things I do as a host.
Why? Because the players who make your club sustainable aren't necessarily the best players. They're the ones who RSVP on time, show up when they say they will, don't cause drama at the table, and contribute to the experience beyond just taking a seat.
The Case for Scorecards
I've been developing a host-only SeasonStack scorecard system to track player engagement and citizenship behaviors. The idea is simple: give hosts a private, objective way to evaluate their player pool based on what actually matters for running a healthy club.
This isn't something players see. It's a tool just for you as a host/club manager for when you need to make decisions like:
The Framework I'm Working With
I've organized behaviors into three categories:
What are others doing?
SeasonStack will be releasing this as a tool in our Resources/Tools section soon but first:
Drop your thoughts below. If you've been hosting for a while, you've probably developed your own mental scorecard already. I want to hear what's on it.
Over time, I've found that tracking player behaviors has become one of the most valuable things I do as a host.
Why? Because the players who make your club sustainable aren't necessarily the best players. They're the ones who RSVP on time, show up when they say they will, don't cause drama at the table, and contribute to the experience beyond just taking a seat.
The Case for Scorecards
I've been developing a host-only SeasonStack scorecard system to track player engagement and citizenship behaviors. The idea is simple: give hosts a private, objective way to evaluate their player pool based on what actually matters for running a healthy club.
This isn't something players see. It's a tool just for you as a host/club manager for when you need to make decisions like:
- Seat allocation: 28 people want to play, you have 24 seats. Who gets priority?
- Identifying flight risks: Which players have referred others? If they leave, who might follow?
- Addressing problem patterns: Is someone consistently late? Frequently argumentative? Easier to act on when you have data, not just a gut feeling and you have
- Rewarding good citizens: Who contributes without being asked? Who supports newer players? Who participates in any club incentive opportunities (more to come on this concept later).
The Framework I'm Working With
I've organized behaviors into three categories:
- Reliability - Do they respond to event inquiries? Register on time? Show up when they commit?
- Table Etiquette - Are they respectful during play? Do they manage themselves well (phone use, volume, handling losses)?
- Citizenship Behaviors - Do they contribute to the club beyond just showing up? Participate in programs you offer? Refer other players?
What are others doing?
SeasonStack will be releasing this as a tool in our Resources/Tools section soon but first:
- What behaviors do you track as a host (formally or informally)?
- What situations have made you wish you had better data on your players?
- Is there anything in my three categories that's missing - or something that doesn't belong?
Drop your thoughts below. If you've been hosting for a while, you've probably developed your own mental scorecard already. I want to hear what's on it.
Last edited: