Great point Ken.
A very famous 3-star michelin restaurant known for its customer service used to require all of its servers and bus staff to eat their free of charge quarterly. The reason -- you cant appreciate world-class customer service unless you experience.
The same applies here. Any good Super should be playing the course. And not just by himself, but with member to understand playability issues and to hear concerns.
And the club should support the super playing the course.
Ten years ago, in my first year as super at my present course, I played eighteen holes on a weekday with the GM at his request to discuss work. I put this down in my monthly schedule as a day worked.
I received written notice from the club president that this would count as a vacation day, as I was, as he put it, “taking advantage of the club facilities.”
I all but stopped playing my own course. I’m sometimes out there working for thirty days straight, and when I do have a little free time, I need a change of scene. Besides that, I have a family with small children, and I’m not giving up my limited time with them to go back out and play the same course I know like the back of my hand. It’s much more interesting to go play someone else’s course, where I might learn something useful.
Playing the course is most useful in the first two or three years of a super’s tenure. After ten years, there are no surprises. On the odd times I do play the course, it plays exactly as I expected from looking at it. Club members’ comments become equally predictable.
Now, if the management came to me and said, “We want you to play at least once a week, but it will count as time worked.” Then I would have no problem with that.