06/17/2026
You Are A Member Not A Customer
One of the most important things to understand about our Moose organization is that you are not a customer to your lodge, you are a member of a not-for-profit fraternal membership organization.
At first glance, that distinction may seem small, but it is actually the foundation of who we are as a not-for-profit fraternal membership organization.
A customer visits a commercial business. They purchase goods or services from an owner whose primary goal is to generate profit and build wealth through that business. The relationship is transactional. The customer pays, and the business provides a service.
That is not what happens in a Moose lodge.
Our Social Quarters are not a public bar, restaurant, or entertainment venue. They exist to serve our members and support the mission of our lodge. Unlike a commercial business, there are no owners profiting from the success of our Social Quarters. No individual is building personal wealth from the food served, the beverages purchased, or the activities held within our lodge.
Instead, members support the lodge through their participation. The revenue generated by the Social Quarters helps pay the expenses of operating the lodge, maintaining our facilities, supporting our programs, funding our charitable efforts, and advancing the missions of Mooseheart and Moosehaven. It also allows us to provide mutual aid to members and support causes and community projects that our membership believes are important.
This is why supporting your Social Quarters matters. Every visit, every meal, every beverage purchased, and every event attended helps strengthen the lodge and its ability to serve others.
More importantly, membership comes with responsibility.
When you join a fraternal organization, you are not simply purchasing access to a facility. You are joining a community. You become part of the organization itself.
That means volunteering when help is needed. It means serving on committees, attending meetings, welcoming new members, helping maintain our facilities, supporting events, and stepping forward when there is work to be done. Sometimes that means helping clean tables. Sometimes it means assisting with maintenance. Sometimes it simply means showing up and contributing your time, energy, and ideas.
The strength of a lodge has never been found in its building. It has always been found in its members.
Our organization was intentionally designed around the idea that people working together can accomplish more than any one person alone. We have no owners. We have members. We have volunteers. We have a shared commitment to something bigger than ourselves.
That understanding changes everything.
When you view yourself as a customer, you ask, “What am I getting?”
When you view yourself as a member, you ask, “How can I help?”
The future of our lodges depends on members who understand that difference and embrace the opportunity to participate, contribute, and support the organization that supports our community.
Together, we are not simply operating a lodge, we are building fellowship, supporting one another, serving our community, and sustaining a tradition that has positively impacted lives for generations. What are you doing to be an active educated member of your lodge.
* Written by Dan Companion - Moose International Membership Chairperson