Key Takeaways

  • Beyond the Payroll: Digital memberships extend high-assurance identity to partners, contractors, and VIP members.
  • Identity as a Canvas: These credentials are fully customisable in both data attributes and visual brand design.
  • The Living Credential: Unlike static plastic cards, digital memberships are dynamic and can be updated or revoked in real-time.
  • Privacy-First: Organizations can verify specific roles or permissions without accessing the user’s private personal data.
  • Zero Trust Ready: Every interaction is authenticated, ensuring that access is granted based on verified identity rather than a physical badge.

Workplace identity has long been viewed through a narrow lens: a tool for staff to enter a building or log into a workstation. However, modern organisations operate within a vast ecosystem that extends far beyond their full-time employees.

Partners, contractors, consultants, and members all require secure access to services, physical spaces, or proprietary data. Relying on traditional tools such as physical plastic cards, generic ‘guest’ logins, or manual spreadsheets, creates a fragmented environment plagued by security risks and administrative friction.

Digital memberships represent the next evolution of this framework. By leveraging the same secure architecture used for corporate IDs, organisations can issue flexible, fully customisable, and brand-aligned digital identities to any user in their network.

What Are Digital Memberships?

A digital membership is an identity-based credential issued by an organisation to define a specific relationship with a user. It acts as a ‘digital twin’ of a membership card or professional badge, but with the added intelligence of a live data connection.

Unlike traditional membership models, these credentials are:

  • Identity-Linked: Tied to a verified individual, preventing the “sharing” of memberships or badges.
  • Dynamically Managed: Organizations can push updates to the user’s phone instantly.
  • Visually Brandable: Fully customisable designs that reflect the organisation’s aesthetic.
  • Attribute-Rich: Enriched with specific data points (roles, certifications, or expiry dates) that dictate access permissions.

The Power of Attributes and Customisation

The true versatility of digital memberships lies in their two-layer customisation: the Technical Layer and the Visual Layer.

The Technical Layer: Attribute-Based Control

Attributes are the specific pieces of information attached to an identity. They allow organisations to move from a binary ‘In/Out’ access model to a dynamic, context-aware system.

  • Membership Tiers: (e.g. Gold, Silver, Bronze)
  • Certifications: (e.g. ‘Certified Technician’ or ‘GDPR Compliant’)
  • Time-Bound Roles: (e.g. ‘Contractor: Valid until 1 June’)
  • Specific Access Rights: (e.g. ‘Floor 4 Access’ or ‘Admin Portal Only’)

The Visual Layer: Brand Identity

A ‘Work ID’ doesn’t have to look like an office badge. For membership-driven organisations, the visual design is a key part of the user experience. Digital memberships are fully white-labelable, allowing organisations to customise colors, logos, and layouts.

A high-tier club member can carry a sleek, gold-themed digital card, while a temporary event attendee carries a vibrant, colour-coded pass – all issued from the same underlying system.

Digital Memberships vs. Workplace Identity

While they share the same secure foundation, the application of these two concepts differs based on the relationship with the user:

Feature Workplace Identity Digital Membership
Target Audience Employees & Staff Partners, VIPs, Members, Temps
Primary Use Case Internal systems & office access External portals, facilities, & benefits
Relationship Employment-based Relationship or Project-based
Visual Design Standardised Corporate Design Fully Brandable & Dynamic
Lifecycle Long-term (Hire to Retire) Flexible (Join to Task Completion)

Real-World Use Cases

Partner and Consultant Ecosystems

Large enterprises often work with external consultants who need access to specific sensitive files for a limited time. A digital membership allows the enterprise to issue an ID that grants access only to the “Project Alpha” folder and automatically expires when the contract ends.

Professional Associations and Clubs

Associations can replace plastic cards with digital memberships that display a member’s Current Standing and CPD (Continuing Professional Development) points. Because the ID is dynamic, it can change color automatically when a member moves from “Standard” to “Elite” status.

Shared Facilities and Gyms

Instead of managing physical key fobs that are easily lost, fitness centers can issue digital memberships. These IDs can even store “health-check” attributes, ensuring the user has completed a safety orientation before the turnstile opens.

Security: The Zero Trust Advantage

Digital memberships bring the security of a corporate environment to the external world. By shifting from device-based or account-based access to identity-based control, organisations achieve:

  • Strong Authentication: Multi-factor authentication (MFA) ensures only the intended user can use the membership.
  • Instant Revocation: If a partnership ends or a membership is canceled, access is terminated across all systems in real-time.
  • Audit Transparency: Every access request is logged against a verified identity, providing a clear trail for compliance audits.

Conclusion

As organisations become increasingly decentralised, the definition of ‘Work Identity’ must expand. Identity is no longer just for employees; it is the fundamental currency of trust for anyone interacting with your brand.

Digital memberships offer a scalable, secure, and fully brandable way to manage these diverse relationships. By moving away from static physical cards and toward programmable, attribute-driven credentials, organisations can unlock a more secure and seamless experience for everyone in their ecosystem.

FAQs

Can we customise the look of the digital membership for different member tiers?

Yes. You can create multiple design templates. For example, you can have a different visual style for ‘Standard Members’ and ‘VIP Members’, which updates automatically if a user’s status changes in your system.

Is this more secure than a physical membership card?

Significantly. Physical cards can be cloned, lost, or shared. A digital membership is linked to a verified identity on a secure device, often protected by biometrics or PINs, making it nearly impossible for anyone other than the authorized user to utilise it.

Can we update a user’s permissions without issuing a new ID?

Yes. Since the ID is ‘live’, you can update the attributes (like access levels or expiry dates) in your central management console. The changes are reflected in the user’s digital wallet immediately.

Does this require the user to share their personal data with us?

No. Digital memberships allow for a clean separation. The organisation only sees and manages the ‘Professional’ or ‘Member’ attributes they issued, while the user’s private personal information remains separate and protected.