The points memberships are a really good idea, but, as yet, they are basically a creature of the proprietary club market. For obvious reasons, the older, member-owned clubs haven't really gone beyond cutting out joining fees and making a few alluring offers - buy now pay in three months, that kind of thing.
I live just outside Oxford, which isn't really a great golfing area. Frilford Heath is a good club, but it's too rich for my blood at about £1500 a year and £2500 joining fee (although I am pretty sure that's a reduction from last year, I have £1700 and £3500 in my memory). Southfield is the other decent club, and from their offers, it's clear they're hurting - no joining fee, £1100 a year sub and various easy payment deals. There are lots of newer courses, privately owned, and they are the ones with the low basic points memberships - typically you pay £150 or so, and that gets you enough points for about six or seven weekend rounds, or correspondingly more nine hole or weekday rounds.
The problem with these offers is that most of the courses, even if the golf is OK, aren't necessarily the sort of golf club we all imagine. I long for the kind of setup my Dad has at his club in the north of England, a perfectly ordinary, nothing-special club, but he has a group of fifteen or twenty buddies, most of whom he used to play squash with when he was younger, and so there is always a game at 0830 on a Saturday morning. No need to ring round, no need to book the tee, just rock up to the club, see who's there, throw the balls on the ground for partners and off you go. Done by 1230, a quick pint and a sandwich in the clubhouse, home by 1330 - crucially, golf in a half a day, not a whole day.
The challenge for every club that's struggling is how to create this kind of environment, where the members are happy, they can get plenty of golf in so they feel they are getting value for money, without having to spend every spare moment at the golf club. All the research says the two obstacles to people playing more golf are cost and time, but I think time is the most important. If you can get your golf in without it taking forever, you play more and your perceived value is better, QED.
On top of that, clubs have to deal with the greater mobility of today's adults. My Dad has lived in the same town all his life, and thus he has a circle of golfing buddies he's known thirty years or more. I've moved around quite a lot, and, although we've been in this house now ten years, and we have a great circle of friends, none of them are golfers. Thus I don't have the social network that gets you to the club regularly. I think the solutions here are at two levels - old and new. Clubs need great secretaries and other staff who introduce new members to the rest, help them get games and embed them in the club culture. But they - and the game generally - need to figure out how to use technology to bring golfers together. There are tons of Facebook style golf social networking sites, but none seem to have taken off - I joined a couple out of interest, and I get very little from them.
Oh - and like the rest of the UK contingent - I just can't get my head around what the US pays for golf!
Adam