I suppose this symposium was a good thing. It does make me chuckle that the golf business has come to the point of requiring such a symposium.
It is interesting that my father, Gary, made a career out of designing affordable golf course that many, many players have enjoyed but never really got much credit for it. His work wasn't flashy or high budget enough for the magazines and his courses weren't so far out that they caught the golf media's attention. His mentor, Bill Diddel designed and built many golf courses that were W.P.A. projects during the depression. Bill instilled the appreciation of the every day golfer into my father's philosophy. There were plenty of unheralded golf course architects that designed a lot of great, affordable and relatively unknown golf courses.
Now that the golf business realizes that it shot itself in the butt by hitching its star to real estate, glossy magazines and country clubs for a day, etc., etc. it might be too late to recover but will have to remake itself. I agree that bringing kids into the game is paramount. But after years of operators ringing the cash registers and not paying attention to fueling the future of the game the golf business is up against it.
Today technology drives culture. Kids shape their lives around technology that helps them, to a point, elude reality. Golf is a healthy dose of reality that takes time, effort and dedication. I'm not sure there are enough kids interested in the game for its future to be anything but suspect. Having golf be a part of family life is one idea, but the way families are wired these days I don't know if it is possible.
IMHO there will be a huge correction in the golf business where many people in the business are already seeing enormous life changes. It will take a while; change doesn't happen quickly.
An old golf pro that I knew for years told me a long time ago that golf was really a lousy business but there wasn't a better way of life. It is too bad we lost that perspective.
Good luck with future symposiums.