Bowls clubs are built on tradition, community, and continuity. These strengths remain vital, but they now sit alongside a new reality: clubs that thrive in the modern era do so by embracing digital tools with purpose and leadership. A clear digital strategy, led by a dedicated Digital Officer at executive level, is no longer optional—it is essential.

Digital Is Not “Just Technology”

Digital strategy is not about social media posts or updating a website once a year. It is about how the club communicates, operates, attracts members, manages data, and plans for the future.

In practical terms, digital touches almost every part of club life:

Without a coherent strategy, these activities become fragmented, reactive, and dependent on a small number of volunteers “doing their best” without authority or direction.

The Case for a Digital Officer

Many clubs rely on an informal web or social media volunteer. While well-intentioned, this model is increasingly risky. Digital activity now affects governance, reputation, data protection, and long-term sustainability.

A Digital Officer should:

This elevates digital from a technical task to a strategic responsibility.

Executive Status Matters

Placing the Digital Officer on the executive committee is crucial. It ensures that:

Just as clubs would not exclude finance or safeguarding from executive oversight, digital should not sit on the margins.

Supporting Membership Growth and Retention

Today’s prospective members—of all ages—expect to find accurate, up-to-date information online. A poor or outdated digital presence sends an unintended message that a club is inactive or closed to newcomers.

A strategic digital approach helps:

Importantly, good digital design also supports accessibility, ensuring information is available to members who may not attend the club regularly.

Reducing Pressure on Volunteers

Clubs often struggle with volunteer fatigue. A Digital Officer with a mandate can:

This makes volunteering more sustainable and less dependent on a single individual.

Preparing for the Future

Bowls clubs increasingly interact with national bodies, funding organisations, and partners that expect digital competence. Grant applications, compliance reporting, safeguarding, and communications are all becoming more digital by default.

A Digital Officer ensures the club is:

Tradition and Modernity Go Together

Embracing digital strategy does not dilute tradition—it protects it. By making the club easier to run, easier to join, and easier to engage with, digital leadership helps ensure that bowls clubs remain active, welcoming, and sustainable for generations to come.

Appointing a Digital Officer as an executive officer with a clear strategic mandate is a statement of intent: that the club values its future as much as its past.

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Introduction

I am a Senior IT Manager in the UK Civil Service with over five years of experience leading ICT strategy, governance, and digital transformation across the public sector. I specialise in delivering secure, practical technology solutions that strengthen operational performance, improve service delivery, and support evidence-based decision-making at senior level.

I bring a blend of strategic leadership and hands-on technical expertise, with strong capability across IT service management, governance and compliance, Microsoft 365 and cloud platforms, supplier management, and bespoke systems development. I am particularly focused on Generative AI and emerging technologies, and how they can be adopted responsibly to create measurable value in complex organisations.

Outside of my professional role, I contribute to community and voluntary organisations through digital leadership and modernisation initiatives.