Why are Chief members leaving in 2027 — and where are they going?
Direct Answer
Chief is bleeding members in 2027, and the bleeding is structural, not cyclical. Four forces hit at once. (1) Cohort dilution past 20,000 members turned a club that sold "the most exclusive room in your career" into a LinkedIn group with a coffee bar.
(2) The $7,800 VP-tier price, plus travel and time, becomes a real $15,000-$20,000 annual line that no one can ROI on a deck. (3) Hybrid work gutted the Clubhouse use case — when your team is on Zoom Tuesdays, you do not fly to Manhattan for a free conference room. (4) Niche vertical networks now deliver the signal Chief used to monopolize.
Members migrate to Athena Alliance for the board track, AllRaise and How Women Lead for VC-adjacent paths, Women in Revenue and Women in Product for industry depth, and founder cohorts. Fortune's 2023 reporting put member-estimated Core non-renewal at up to 50 percent. Chief disputed the number, declined to publish a renewal rate, laid off 14 percent in April 2023, cut again that October, shut down the UK in March 2024, and in February 2025 handed the CEO seat to Alison Moore.
That is a $1.1B paper unicorn correcting toward $300M-$400M.
1. The 5 Reasons Chief Members Are Leaving in 2027
Cohort dilution past 20K. Chief crossed 20,000 in October 2022 and kept selling from a 60,000 waitlist. The pitch — "the most senior women you know, in one room" — works at the size of a private club, not a small city. Once members recognize more strangers than peers in their feed, perceived exclusivity evaporates.
Networks have a Dunbar problem; Chief solved it by ignoring it.
Price-to-value drift. $5,800 Executive and $7,800 VP sound reasonable until you add travel to NYC, LA, Chicago, or DC for Clubhouse and Core, plus two full days a quarter of opportunity cost. All-in lands at $15,000-$20,000 for any out-of-market member. At that price you compete with a real executive coach, a paid board search, or a graduate certificate.
Chief has never published the renewal rate that would defend the premium.
Hybrid work killed the Clubhouse moat. Clubhouses were the hardest-to-copy asset. They were also a 2019 bet. By 2026 most employers run two or three in-office days a week, usually Tuesday through Thursday, which is exactly when Clubhouses are busiest.
Members cannot run their team from a Clubhouse and attend a Chief panel simultaneously. Real estate members do not use becomes fixed cost passed back into the fee.
Generic content for the median member. Chief's email, panels, and Core curriculum target the middle of a 20,000-person distribution. A SaaS CRO, a hospital COO, a fintech General Counsel, and a CPG VP of Marketing all get the same "lead through ambiguity" session. Senior members get bored. Junior members get aspirational but not actionable.
Niche networks caught up. In 2021 there was no serious competitor. By 2027 there is a competent vertical for almost every profile: Women in Revenue, Women in Product, Women in Engineering Leadership, How Women Lead, AllRaise, Athena Alliance. Signal-to-noise in any of those rooms beats Chief's Core, often for one-tenth the price.
2. Where Chief Members Are Actually Going
The exits are not random. They follow archetype, and Chief cannot be all of them at once.
C-suite veterans aiming for boards migrate to Athena Alliance at roughly $3,000-$15,000, where the explicit promise is board placement. Athena publishes placements; Chief does not.
Operators planning a VC move go to AllRaise (free for qualified operators) and How Women Lead. The signal is who is raising, who is writing checks, and which firms hire operating partners.
Industry-deep operators — RevOps, product, fintech compliance — leave for Women in Revenue, Women in Product, Women in Fintech, Women in Engineering Leadership. Usually under $500/year. Conversations are about closed-lost analysis, PLG motions, and SOC2 fights, not leadership theater.
Founders leave for YC alumni and Founder Circle. Chief is built for corporate executives, not cap-table activity.
Solo C-suites writing $25,000-$50,000 skip group networks and hire 1:1 coaches from Reboot, BetterUp Care, or independents. One excellent coach beats forty Core meetings.
| Former Chief profile | Where they went | Annual cost | Why it fits better |
|---|---|---|---|
| C-suite, board-bound | Athena Alliance | ~$5,000 | Explicit board placement |
| Operator going to VC | AllRaise + How Women Lead | Free-$1,000 | VC signal, deal flow |
| Industry-deep VP | Vertical network | $300-$500 | Domain depth |
| Founder | YC alumni + Founder Circle | Free-$5,000 | Stage-specific |
| Solo C-suite | 1:1 executive coach | $25-50K | Personal leverage |
3. What Chief Has to Do in 2027 to Stop the Bleeding
This is the prescription. Whether Chief's CEO is allowed to execute it is open.
Cap membership at 15,000 and Core cohorts at 200. Smaller is the product. Premium networks turn revenue away.
Re-tier into three honest brackets. Explorer at $3,500 digital-only, Standard at $7,500 with full Clubhouse and Core, Founder at $15,000 with curated 1:1 introductions and board-placement support. Stop pretending VP and Executive get meaningfully different products.
Pivot from urban Clubhouses to global retreats. Three to five high-end retreats a year — Sonoma, Tulum, Lisbon, Kyoto — replace four underused 20,000-square-foot leases. Summit Series model: scales emotional value, shrinks fixed cost.
Launch industry-vertical Core tracks. B2B SaaS leaders together. Healthcare ops together. Fintech General Counsels together. Copy the vertical competitors before there is nothing left to copy.
Build a real B2B enterprise tier. Companies sponsor 5-20 leaders per year at $50,000-$200,000 with custom programming and reporting. That is where durable revenue lives, and it aligns Chief with CHRO and CEO buyers who currently treat the membership as a discretionary perk to cut.
FAQ
Q: Is Chief actually losing members, or is this overstated by ex-members? A: Real. The signal is in what Chief will not say. They have never published a renewal rate.
Fortune's 2023 reporting put member-estimated non-renewal at up to 50 percent. Chief called the number "false and misleading" but declined to publish the actual figure. They laid off staff twice, shut the UK, and replaced both founders inside 24 months.
Healthy unicorns do not do all four.
Q: Can Chief survive without major changes? A: Survive yes, justify the unicorn valuation no. The honest 2028 outcome with no changes is roughly $300M-$400M in revenue, profitable, with 8,000-12,000 stable members. That is a real business — not a $1.1B business.
Expect a down-round, a strategic acquirer (media or coaching), or a slow privatization back to the founder team.
Q: Who is positioned to overtake Chief by 2028? A: No one needs to overtake head-on. Athena Alliance owns board placement. AllRaise and How Women Lead own the VC-adjacent operator segment.
Vertical networks — Women in Revenue, Women in Product, Women in Engineering Leadership, Women in Fintech — collectively own depth-of-domain. Chief tried to be all three. The next decade of senior women's networking is unbundled, vertical, and cheaper per unit of signal.
Sources
- Fortune, "Some members of Chief say the club isn't living up to the hype," March 16, 2023 — member estimates of up to 50% Core non-renewal documented.
- Wikipedia, "Chief (women's network)" — 20,000 members as of October 2022, April 2023 layoffs of 14% of staff, October 2023 second round, March 2024 UK shutdown.
- Inc., "Chief Is Getting a New CEO," 2025 — Alison Moore takes CEO February 3, 2025.
- Yahoo Finance / Fortune, "Inside the growing pains at Chief" — operational scaling complaints, Core inconsistency.
- Glassdoor and Fishbowl forums, "Is Chief membership worth it?" — primary-source member commentary on price-to-value.
- Athena Alliance public site — tier pricing $3,000-$15,000, explicit board-placement model.
- AllRaise public site and 2024-2025 reports — free operator/investor membership, deal-flow signal.
- WomenCEO.co, "Chief Alternative: No Waitlist, No Fee" — competitor landscape documentation.
- Chief.com membership agreement and FAQ — automatic annual renewal, cancellation-form requirement, opacity on renewal rates.