Fan club register
Maintain an opt-in register of exile clubs, their broad location, preferred contact route, and nominated liaison.
Preston North End supporters, wherever we live
A first draft proposal for bringing Preston North End exile fans and fan clubs closer together. The aim is to help existing groups flourish, give non-local supporters a stronger sense of belonging, and create a clearer route for shared ideas to reach the club.
Purpose
This work started with supporters involved in the Fan Advisory Network exploring how Preston North End could better connect with exile fans and fan groups. The first job is to write down a clear proposal, invite comments, and test whether the idea would genuinely help.
Preston North End has supporters who organise around cities, regions, countries, travel groups, family networks, and long-standing friendships. PNE Exiles should help those clubs flourish, expand their membership, and give individual exiled fans a stronger sense of belonging.
The group is not designed to replace any existing exile fan club. It should help create events, programmes, and shared conversations that make supporters feel closer to each other and to the club.
Hub-and-spoke model
Each exile fan club remains its own spoke: its own identity, organisers, meet-ups, travel plans, social channels, and local priorities. PNE Exiles acts as the hub only where coordination helps.
A club can affiliate, nominate a liaison, ask for recognition support, share ideas for future events or programmes, and opt into a club website presence. A club can also step back from any shared item without losing its own standing.
The proposed operating standards are informed by the Football Supporters' Association model: independent, democratic, transparent, inclusive, and accountable. That gives the hub a practical benchmark without claiming FSA approval unless members later choose to seek it.
Recognition
One of the first jobs for PNE Exiles should be a practical recognition framework: a simple, transparent way for exile fan clubs to identify themselves to the club and, if they want it, have a visible presence on the club website.
The purpose is practical: make clubs easier for existing supporters to join, easier for new exiles to discover, and easier for the club to understand when it wants to work with organised supporter groups.
That framework should use FSA-style principles as the baseline: clear criteria, democratic accountability, equal treatment for different groups, and no unnecessary bureaucracy for volunteers.
Maintain an opt-in register of exile clubs, their broad location, preferred contact route, and nominated liaison.
Ask the club for a supporter-facing website area where any recognised exile fan club can be listed if it chooses.
Work with the club on light-touch criteria that confirms legitimacy without making volunteer groups jump through needless bureaucracy.
Help emerging exile groups with basic guidance on contacts, conduct, accessibility, and democratic organisation.
Fan Advisory Network
PNE Exiles should act as a channelling point for issues that affect supporters who follow North End from outside the local area. That includes ticketing, fixture timing, travel, access, communications, away-day experience, digital inclusion, and the visibility of fan clubs.
There is no automatic FAN seat for this group. Where a PNE Exiles-backed candidate is elected, the hub should help them gather topics from affiliated clubs and individual members, then report back on what was raised, what the club said, and what remains unresolved.
That approach follows the same FSA-informed standard: representatives should know their mandate, avoid private platforms, and report back plainly to the supporters they represent.
Shared projects
A unified exile group should do more than maintain a register or collect views. It should create projects that make distant support tangible, give members something to build together, and show the club how far North End reaches.
These are starting points for discussion, not a closed programme. Each would need agreement with the club, clear funding, and member approval before becoming a formal PNE Exiles project.
Player pathway
Members could fund, or part-fund, support for one Academy player each season, then follow that player's progress through updates, interviews, and match data agreed with the club.
The value is emotional as much as financial: exile supporters would have a visible stake in a young player's journey without claiming control over football decisions.
Matchday presence
Remote supporters could check in on match days through a digital Deepdale or global map, showing where North End fans are following from even when they cannot be in the ground.
Done well, it creates a visual proof of reach for the club, sponsors, and supporters: if you cannot be there, your presence still counts.
Global relay
A GPS-tracked PNE Exiles flag could move between fan clubs and individual members, gathering signatures and photographs from cities, landmarks, and match gatherings around the world.
It would return to Deepdale for the final home game as a simple, visual record of the club's non-local support.
Governance
If PNE Exiles is going to act as the hub for exile fan clubs, it has to be open about where its authority comes from. A constitution is the guardrail that stops the hub becoming a private platform, a closed committee, or a voice that drifts away from the people it claims to represent.
The point is not bureaucracy for its own sake. The point is to make sure affiliated fan clubs, the spokes in the model, can see how decisions are made, challenge them, steer priorities, and change direction in the future. The hub should be useful only for as long as the spokes believe it is working in their interests.
The draft constitution therefore borrows from FSA-style supporter association standards: democratic elections, transparent records, member control, equality, independence, and clear routes for challenge.
Members and affiliated clubs should be able to see decisions, mandates, reports, and finances.
Fan clubs should be able to set priorities, raise motions, and shape the hub's future direction.
FAN input should be consulted on, recorded, and reported back rather than carried privately.
The benchmark is democratic, inclusive, independent supporter organisation, not private control.
Working draft constitution based on the supplied FSA-style template
Independent Supporters' Association for Preston North End exile supporters and fan clubs.
The name of the organisation is PNE Exiles, hereafter referred to as the Association.
The Association aims to:
The Committee will select from its number a Chair, Vice-Chair, Secretary, Treasurer, and FAN Liaison.
Any changes to this constitution require a two-thirds majority at an AGM or EGM.
Dissolution requires a three-quarters majority at an AGM or EGM. Any remaining funds shall go to a similar not-for-profit organisation whose rules contain a similar dissolution clause.
All members must support the Association's mission, reject violence, abuse, and discrimination, and respect democratic decisions.
Members must not:
Next steps
Who's involved?
This is the starting group for the proposal. More supporters and fan club voices will be added as the group is tested, challenged, and shaped into something useful.
I've supported the Whites from Harrogate, London and Sri Lanka as an exile after attending my first game at Deepdale in 1981. My favourite PNE moment was the Wembley win, and Graham Alexander is my favourite all-time player.
As Preston North End's Supporter Services Lead and a lifelong PNE fan, I've really enjoyed working with two members of our Fan Advisory Network, who are both exile supporters, to help set up a dedicated space for fans who follow PNE from further afield. We want exile supporters to feel connected, involved and part of the PNE family, wherever they are based. The new PNE Exiles website is a great starting point for supporters to connect with each other, share ideas and help us look at ways the club can support them and strengthen their connection with Preston North End.
I'm a PNE fan, exile and Fan Advisory Network member helping shape the first version of PNE Exiles, with a focus on making the hub useful to existing exile fan clubs and individual supporters outside Preston. My background is in technology, and I'm hoping to use that to add some interesting aspects to the exile fan experience. I'll pick Youl Mawène as my favourite player!
Contact
Leave your details and a short note. Tell us whether you would like to help actively, be kept notified as the idea develops, connect an existing fan club, or raise something else.