Duncan the problem with no joining fee is guys are joining a club intending to be there for two years. They max out on the golf and leave after two years to do the same elsewhere. The course gets loads of use but your revenue per round drops.
I came to golf
after the demise of the joining fee at most clubs. When I started playing, I looked round for a local club to join and simply picked the one with the most interesting golf course and which didn't have a joining fee.
There is no way that I, as a beginner player, would have stumped up a fee to join a club when I didn't even know whether I was going to take to the game (or the club). More importantly, I didn't need to as 90% of local clubs had no joining fee.
In the subsequent years, I have become increasingly happy with my choice. There is not a local club that I would rather be a member of because we have by far the best course. Even members of the posher clubs (the ones with joining fees) freely admit that Reddish Vale is a better golf course than theirs.
We have our share of vagabonds who join for a year or so and then move on. The vast majority of new members however, stick around for exactly the same reasons as I do - the quality of the course we enjoy every week and the camaraderie we share as like-minded spirits and serious golf addicts. I've not seen too many people leaving for trivial reasons or simply to save a few quid elsewhere.
If Reddish Vale had had a joining fee in place seven years ago I would not have joined. I am pretty sure that none of the 100 or so members we have recruited and retained since then would have joined either. The club would now be bankrupt.
The idea that a joining fee promotes 'loyalty' and aids member retention might well have had foundation 20 years ago when golf was booming and all clubs had full memberships, but times have changed dramatically for most.
I often hear the argument that all golf clubs should have banded together years ago and retained joining fees
en masse. There may well be merit in this line of thought, and maybe clubs would have been less driven to chase visitor income, avoiding the downward spiral in green fees which has led to club membership becoming an even less attractive proposition to most occasional golfers.
Or maybe clubs would be finding it even more difficult to attract new members than they currently are.
Whatever - i
t didn't happen!As in all other areas of life, there is in golf a widening divide between the elite clubs and the rest. It is all very well for a member of a Top 100 (or 500) club to declare that joining fees are essential to shore up the reserves and to ensnare members for life, but among the other 3000 or so clubs in the UK there
are no reserves and life has simply become a battle to survive the year.
For the majority of clubs, joining fees have gone and there is little prospect of them returning. Any club trying to re-instate a joining fee will find that they recruit no members.
I am amazed that so few golf clubs have gone out of business so far. Consolidation in the UK golf industry is long overdue.
I expect to see many suburban golf courses become housing developments in the coming years. Maybe joining fees among the remaining clubs may then make a return!
Edited to add;
What about the idea of a one-year 'trial membership' period? Full benefits of membership at the normal price for 12 months, with the joining fee applicable upon renewal. The fee could then be spread over the next 3-5 years. This would at least get over my initial objection to the joining fee - "How do I know whether I'm going to want to stick around?"
It is then up to the club to ensure that the experience of those on the scheme is so good that they want to pay the fee in order to remain.