Paul,
I think many clubs, like many people and businesses, got caught up in an improving economy that they thought would never end.
I witnessed the results of the "desire to please everyone" syndrome leading up to the "reversal of fortune"
My father's generation went through the Great Depression, they experienced Bad Times.
I once asked my father why he continued to work and worry.
He said because he didn't want to starve again. He didn't want to have to eat out of garbage cans and worry about where he would sleep or get his next meal.
That mentality, based on experiences in his early life, followed him through his adult life.
Those experiences served as a governor/regulator on spending, borrowing and saving.
His generation, his peers, tended to view financial commitments through a spectrum of caution.
As America distanced itself, generationally, from the Great Depression, the younger generation never knew hard times, or thought that the good times would come crashing down. Hence, they lost their fiscal disciplines and expanded everything in sight.
Club after club redecorated and/or remodeled their club house, expanded their services, and then expanded their clubhouse again to keep up with the expanded services, all the time, incurring debt and/or assessing the members. Dues kept going up and up and up as the expanded services cost more and more and more. But, there was a fresh line of new members whose initiation fees and dues offset the increasing costs.
But, when the flow of new members in the pipeline came to a trickle, financial pressure and reality reared their ugly head and few clubs were prepared for hard times.
Now, the great debate started.
Some felt that the solution was in attracting more members while maintaining services.
Some felt that belt tightenting, reducing those expanded services in order to cut costs was necessary.
Others felt that both were needed.
Still others thought that they'd rather pay more, lose more members and have an eite club.
One thing seems apparent, new members aren't so easy to find.
Clubs that ignore retention of their existing members are in for a rude awakening
There's nothing wrong with elasticity, in club services.
When times are good, spend to provide desired services, while also funding for capital needs and reserves.
When times are bad, cut back to retain membership.
Is it the Chicken Salad or the golf course that attracts and retains members ?