Phil McDade,
Of course you're correct...every club wants to "sell like Amazon". It's pretty clearly an over supply issue don't you think? Eliminate one of those clubs in Madison and the whole entry process changes, right?
Maybe -- but maybe not. All markets for this kind of product (private country club membership) are unique, and not static. And I'd guess in most communities (some, of course, more than others) the private golf clubs exist in a market that's offering varying degrees of the same thing -- broadly speaking.
Since I moved to Madison 25 years ago, there has been one private club added to the roster of the four well-established clubs in town. The big growth has been in daily-fee courses -- nine 18-hole courses built in that time (one is a 36-hole operation -- 18 on the main course, a 9-hole youth/senior/executive course, and a 9-hole down the road a bit), plus another well-established 18-hole course adding a full-scale 9 holes. They range from cheap and not very good to pretty good, with the UW's University Ridge the most prominent of those. That was on top of the Madison muni golf system, which offers 72 holes at four courses conveniently located around town, and a few other modest courses around the area.
On top of that, Wisconsin has seen a boom in high-end courses, well-known here on GCA and in the golf world -- Kohler's quartet near Sheboygan, Erin Hills, Nicklaus' Bull near Sheboygan, a few others.
My guess is lots of folks (I know a few, actually) -- looking at the golf landscape here -- just say: "Forget it; I don't need the private club model, and its bothersome dining minimums and boring dinners/lunches; I can just get a discounted rate membership at URidge, join my buddies for some charity outings at some local courses for variety, and make a special trip or two every year to Kohler/Erin Hills/Sand Valley
." It might even be cheaper.
In short, if one of the privates in Madison were to suddenly close, I'm not sure all of those folks would flock to the other four and tighten the market. And I think the privates get that, as much of their marketing of late (at least from what I can tell) has been aimed at family-like activities (swimming, tennis, co-op memberships with fitness and dining clubs, strong junior programs) that aim to keep the lone-wolf golfer like Sweeney tied to the club.
Interestingly, to switch gears here, the old-money club in town -- the Maple Bluff Country Club -- has scads of information on membership available for anyone to peruse on their website. I was actually pretty impressed when I looked it up today:
https://www.maplebluffcc.com/Club-Info/Membership-(1)/Invitations.aspx