Jeff Silverstein looks at the golf business model in a manner similar to our group....at its simplest a golf operation should be:
18 holes of a fun golfing experience at a reasonable cost
Small pro shop/locker room to collect fees with mininaml staff
BBQ grill at the turn for quick hot meals at a reasonable price
"player assistants" (volunteers who are pais little but play golf for free) to control pace of play and act as the starter.
A facility fairly easy to find and get to located within 30 miles of a reasonably populated area - this will generate approximately 30,000 rounds/year; in areas where the golf season is not 12 months; as this will cover the cost of operations - any round above 30,000 begins to generate profit ( for areas not in the Sun Belt/South where the metrics are different dure to a 12 month season...12 month golf season clubs need closer to 40,000 rounds to cover the additional added expense of really operating the addional 3 months/year to break even operationally.
Someone opined earlier that a 50% operating margin was generous....an example follows:
$2,000,000 in gross sales
$1,000,000 in operating expenses (course maintenance, salaries, etc.)
$300,000 fixed costs - equipment leases, property taxes , water purchases, office equipment leases, etc.
$700,000 in NOI/EBIT
$600,000 - Debt Service ( on $6.0 million of debt to build/acquire a facilitty)
$100,000 Net Annual Income on an investment of minimally $8.0 million (see above debt of $6.0 million + $2.0 million in equity as banks will only let you borrow 70% cost of a project maximum) is a 5% annual retun on your $2.0 million equity investment.
Looking at the above example, now you can undersatnd why acquiring existing facilities at a discount; which are failing operationally; makes economic sense. Reduce the $8.0 million outlay by 25%-50% and a $100,000 return on an equity investment of $500,000-$1,000,000 gives you an annual return of 10%-20%, which is respectable.