Chief's Core Premium tier in 2027 — what you actually pay extra for
Direct Answer
Chief's Core Premium tier (roughly $8,900 versus $7,900 for the base Core membership) bolts on a handful of incremental perks — two extra one-on-one coaching sessions with your Core Guide, slightly earlier event registration, a couple of premium-only Slack channels, and occasional founder office hours — that almost never justify the $1,000 delta for a typical member.
It is, structurally, a SaaS-style upsell tier engineered to lift average revenue per user (ARPU) and dress up the price ladder, not a fundamentally different product. The base Core membership already includes Clubhouse access, the six-meeting Core Group cadence, Wharton quarterly courses, the Hogan Assessment, ChiefX invitations, and virtual programming — meaning Core Premium's incremental surface area is narrow.
Most existing and prospective members should stay on Core, and the people who genuinely benefit from Premium tend to be those whose employer is paying anyway (where the marginal cost is zero) or first-year operators who specifically need more coaching reps. Everyone else is funding Chief's ARPU goals, not their own development.
1. What Core Premium Actually Adds
Strip away the marketing language and Core Premium adds five concrete things on top of base Core. First, additional one-on-one coaching with your Core Guide — typically eight sessions per year instead of four, though the exact ratio varies by cohort. Second, earlier event registration, which in practice means you get a roughly 48- to 72-hour head start on signing up for high-demand Clubhouse dinners, ChiefX panels, and visiting-speaker sessions before general Core members can register.
Third, access to one or two premium-only Slack or community channels, usually segmented by seniority band (sitting CEOs, board directors) or function (CROs, CMOs). Fourth, periodic founder office hours where Chief co-founders Carolyn Childers and Lindsay Kaplan host small-group AMAs, typically once a quarter and capped at twenty to thirty seats.
Fifth, a smattering of minor perks that rotate annually — early access to new Clubhouse cities, a dedicated concierge for travel logistics, occasional gift-with-membership items, and priority RSVP for the annual Chief retreat.
None of those line items are bad. The problem is that none of them are transformational either. The base Core membership already delivers the six-meeting Core Group cadence with a Core Guide, four standalone coaching sessions, Wharton quarterly courses, the Hogan Assessment, unlimited Clubhouse access in four cities, ChiefX summit invitations, and the full event calendar.
Premium is additive at the margin, not foundational. You are paying $1,000 to sand the edges of an experience you already have, not to unlock a meaningfully different one. The framing matters: this is not a product tier with a distinct value proposition, it is a quota bump with a velvet rope around it.
Read Chief's own marketing copy carefully and you will notice that Premium is described in volume terms (more sessions, earlier access, additional channels) rather than capability terms (something Core members literally cannot do). That tells you everything about who the tier is engineered for.
2. Why the $1K Premium Doesn't Pencil
Run the math line by line and the upgrade looks worse the closer you look. The four additional coaching sessions work out to roughly $250 per session if you attribute the entire $1,000 delta to coaching alone — which sounds cheap until you remember that standalone executive coaching from an equivalent-credentialed coach runs $300 to $600 per hour, and many Chief members already work with an outside coach independently.
Net economic win on coaching alone: positive but small, and only if you actually use all eight sessions, which utilization data inside any membership product suggests most members will not.
Earlier event registration is the weakest line item in the bundle. It only delivers value if there is a binding waitlist for the events you want — and for most Core members, the events they actually attend (local Clubhouse dinners, virtual workshops, regional panels) are not capacity-constrained in a way that makes a 48-hour head start meaningful.
You are paying for queue-jumping insurance on a queue that, for most members, does not exist.
Premium-only Slack channels deliver the same Chief content in a smaller room, which is genuinely useful for noise reduction but is not new information — it is the same information curated differently. Founder office hours deliver brand exposure to Childers and Kaplan, which is pleasant but rarely substantive: with twenty to thirty seats per session, the per-member airtime is two to three minutes.
The minor perks are minor by definition. Add it all up and the honest assessment is that Core Premium is worth maybe $400 to $600 of incremental value for most members, against a $1,000 price tag.
3. Who Should Actually Upgrade
The honest persona analysis is more useful than the marketing one. A first-year CRO or first-time C-suite operator should consider it — the extra coaching reps genuinely compound when you are still calibrating your operating style, and the founder office hours give you reference-class exposure you cannot easily get elsewhere.
A tenured C-suite executive on their third or fourth senior role almost certainly should not — you already have a coach, a peer network, and a calibrated playbook, and Premium's additions do not move the needle. A founder or CEO of a venture-backed company will get more from founder-specific peer groups (YPO, Vistage Chief Executive, founder-only Slacks) than from Chief Premium's office hours.
An industry-deep executive (healthcare, defense, regulated finance) will get more from sector-specific networks than from generalist Premium perks. The one clean "yes" is the Fortune 500 VP or SVP whose employer is paying for Chief as a leadership-development line item — in which case the $1,000 marginal cost is zero to you, and you should obviously take the larger bundle.
| Persona | Upgrade verdict |
|---|---|
| First-year CRO or first-time C-suite | Maybe — extra coaching matters |
| Tenured CRO or repeat C-suite | No — diminishing returns |
| F500 VP with company-paid membership | Yes — free upgrade for you |
| Founder or venture-backed CEO | No — founder networks beat it |
| Niche industry executive | No — sector networks beat it |
FAQ
Q: Is Core Premium worth it if I'm new to Chief? A: Probably not as a first-year move. Try base Core for twelve months, see whether you actually use your four included coaching sessions and attend events, and only then evaluate whether more coaching is the bottleneck. Most new members under-utilize what they already paid for.
Q: Can I downgrade from Premium to Core mid-year? A: Not retroactively. Chief membership runs on annual terms, and tier changes apply at renewal. Treat the $1,000 as a one-year commitment, not a monthly subscription you can cancel.
Q: Does Premium include anything Core members literally cannot access? A: Practically nothing exclusive in terms of content. The premium-only Slack channels and founder office hours are the only access-gated items. Everything else (events, coaching, Wharton courses, Clubhouses) is the same product with a different quota.
Sources
- Chief — What Do the New Changes to Chief Membership Mean for Me?
- Chief — Our New Membership Packages
- Chief — Frequently Asked Questions
- Chief — Membership Overview
- Chief — Core & Coaching
- Chief Introduces New Memberships Designed to Maximize Impact (BusinessWire)
- Fortune/Yahoo — Chief $5,800-per-year networking startup worth $1B
- Hollywood Reporter — Inside Chief L.A. Private Club