Mike, how many rounds would you estimate that RTJ Trail ad drove out of the state?
I don't know.
Aren't the people likely to see that ad also likely to take at least one out-of-state golf trip per year, anyway?
Some will...
Would you also discourage state golf associations without year-round seasons from promoting warm-weather destinations?
Let me ask it this way. If the owners of the course who make up the state association were on the boards making the decision do you think they would be taking ads from competition at times they were open other than in state courses? And promoting a course far enough away to require a flight or overnight travel is a different matter. Also, in Georgia they have several of these large adjoining state places come on as partners. That's BS and owners would not allow such.
Mike--
Per Google Maps, it's a skosh under 600 miles and just less than a nine-hour drive from St. Marys, Georgia to The Shoals Golf Club, the northwesternmost outpost of the RTJ Trail. Would you not consider that journey "overnight travel"?
I looked through almost the entire latest edition of the GSGA publication online before being hit with a paywall, and it looked like roughly half the ads were for GA-based properties and businesses, and half weren't. Of the non-GA ads, there were Srixon and BMW, and then ads for the RTJ Trail, Myrtle Beach, Maggie Valley in NC and the Sheraton Bay Point Resort in the FL Panhandle. FWIW, all of these destinations are far enough from parts of Georgia to satisfy your "overnight travel" exception.
I'm guessing all of those non-Georgia advertisers (I don't have to guess for Myrtle Beach - I know it for a fact) derive the majority of their visitors from drive-in markets, and that Georgia-based visitors are an important part of their business.
This is true whether or not they advertise in the GSGA publication, of course, and GSGA members are going to visit those locales whether or not they see their ads in the magazine. Why wouldn't the GSGA want to get some ad $ - and why wouldn't these advertisers want the extra eyeballs/potential leads - especially if it would help defray the cost of the assembly of the publication and improve the Georgia-centric goals the GSGA pursues?
And if someone sees the ad in the GSGA pub, goes to Maggie Valley and has a great time, don't you think that will deepen that person's affinity for the association on some level?
From the standard rate of $40/year, by how much would you increase your GSGA membership dues if it meant
only GA-based businesses were allowed to advertise within? To $80? $100? $200?
To assert that "taking big ad dollars" from non-Georgia advertisers is necessarily "competing against" GA golf courses belies a narrow and, IMO, inaccurate view of the golf habits of the audience.