Mr. Johnson,
You said, “Yes. I probably spend more because of Mill River, but it is NOT a good program. As a result, the pro shop carries very little merchandise and turns into a mail order business. I would not recommend it”.
My club had one before I was there and it was mismanaged by the pro at the time. Three clubs in town have them and I like the concept, but to your point, two of the three have almost no selection, and work as a quasi mail-order outlet, while the other has a healthy supply of clothing/bags, putters, wedges, and a few drivers and hybrids...and NO IRONS (which is smart).
With normal mark-up, a Mill River plan or buyers club, after charging the member $100, is a good deal....only if you spend upwards of $500-600. That is break-even best I can tell.
To answer my own questions:
1. Probably $500. Mostly gloves, balls, and a few shirts and a pullover. I did get a new bag this year so my number was a bit higher than normal. I buy quite a bit from our local Edwin Watts store, especially used clubs. They usually have a great selection and the staff locally is fantastic. My club can’t spell launch monitor, and as such, can’t help me with shaft/proper club specs.
2. Change the logo. It is hideous. It has the obligatory shield, always placed on the left breast, 2-2.5 inches in size, has our clubs name spelled out, and the date we started. It has to be one of the busiest you will ever see. Clubs have no idea how bad an ill-designed logo hurts them in my view.
3. As I discussed, we do not have a buyers club or Mill River plan, but I would use it alot. I WOULD treat it like a mail-order catalog.
4. I do feel a need to support the club with purchases, however, our pricing has always been on the high side compared with other clubs in the area. On the other hand, we have traditionally not been competitively priced. I hate to ask for a discount or to price match at the club, but have no problem at EW. I guess it is perception?
Mr. Johnson you also said,
“It is unfortunate that some staff's key financial remuneration is dependant on selling things. I'd rather you raise my dues $40 a month and give the staff a raise than asking me to support a business which is not competitive.
An examples -- a former club of mine used to have a beautiful formal dining room, which was used 3-4 times a year. It was a money pit. Instead, we tore it down and replaced it with a less formal room with a pizza oven, pasta bar and great views of the 9th and 18th greens.
Same goes for a pro shop-- if it doesnt do much business, reduce its size and reallocate space to something that does.
I know in my club, the pro shop does 50%+ of its business on Monday outings. That's fine, let it make some money and reduce my dues”.
I would rather pay a little more on dues as well than feel obligated to pay more than I “should” for merchandise I could easily buy for less at TGW.
I believe the Pro Shop should be run as a service for the members, and not a high margin profit center. It is too easy today to buy discounted clothing/goods online these days. I also believe the Pro Shop is or should be viewed as a marketing arm for the club. The club should make it easy for members to wear club logo’d merch, and have a decent enough price/logo that out of towners/monday outing guests will want to purchase a memento.