| Mastermind group | Executive community | |
|---|---|---|
| Size | Small, fixed | Curated, tiered |
| Focus | Accountability | Trust and peer learning |
| Programming | One recurring room | Dinners, forums, events |
| Membership | Same people | Curated across roles |
| Best for | Shared goals | Breadth and relationships |
A mastermind group is usually small, recurring, and focused on shared accountability or problem solving. An executive community is broader, often including events, dinners, content, introductions, and role-specific forums. The mastermind is one tight room. The community is many rooms connected by trust.
How They Compare
The table above maps the key structural differences. A mastermind's power is in its tight accountability loop with the same trusted group. A community's power is in the breadth of relationships across roles and its ability to update as your needs change.
Who Is This For
Leaders who want a tight, accountable room may prefer a mastermind. Leaders who want access to peers across roles and formats may prefer a community. For many, the community is more useful when decisions span finance, security, marketing, and governance.
How It Works
A mastermind meets on a set cadence with the same members. A community curates different rooms for different needs and lets relationships compound across them. The formats are not mutually exclusive - some leaders use both.
Where Open Future Forum Fits
Open Future Forum is an executive community that creates mastermind-like trust in curated rooms without being limited to one fixed group. It runs small, off-the-record dinners for C-suite executives, from the CFO Executive Forum to board-governance conversations.
Last updated: June 19, 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
Find Your Community at Open Future Forum
Open Future Forum runs private executive dinners from CFO forums to board-governance conversations. Small, off the record, give-first.