Niall
Your colleague Oscar is of course correct. The market outside of your circles is driven by price rather than value - more’s the pity. As is your rather snide ad hominem dig.
I’m not disputing that your preferred golfing model exists. It is however a tiny percentage of Clubs and is not the answer to the problems of the Raglan’s of this world.
We’re all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.
Ryan
There was nothing snide about my comment. My point was that you operate in a different way to the majority and with your relative youth maybe can't recall a time when commercial golf operations were relatively rare at least up here.
My circle, that you refer to, consists of members at fairly ordinary clubs. None as far as I know are Lord's of the Realm. Costs are important to all of them but value more so. They value being a member of a club. Not just because it means on average the cost per round of golf per year is cheaper (although with a few folk I know they would be cheaper not being members given how little some of them play) but for the other things it brings. When you start eroding that and start treating them like retail punters they will act like retail punters, that's the problem.
Niall
Niall
Rather than hanker for the past, (and I’m not sure whether your ordinarily Club’s you frequent were exemp from this) have you approached this discussion from the fact that Scotland has 60,000 less Club Members than it did 10 years ago? The largest decline of any European Country.
Perhaps a more commercial outlook was needed long before now......
You had it right when you said that Club’s need to cut their cloth accordingly, but you’re talking from self interest re: guest fees.
[size=78%] [/size]Burnham & Berrow has a Sub of £1,100. A greenfee of £115. Unbelievably good value for those lucky enough to be a member. Yet you and Sean begrudge a £35 members guest fee or similar. ‘Not how it used to be’.
There are lots of ways to add value to a membership, as touched upon in this thread. A greatly reduced guest fee such as above is good value. Yet despite your Oscar Wilde quote, you’re fixating on the price and ignoring the value.
An amazing thing to grumble about really and to bring it into a thread about failing Club’s and citing it as an example as to why they are, to my youthful mind, shows a detachment to the reality of the wider subject.
The something for nothing mentality of many members, which you display, as well as the something is better than nothing mentality of management in both ownership models, has exacerbated the decline of many Clubs and the migration from Member to nomadic golfer.
Members paying their way, and their Club’s being run in a way that keeps them financially viable doesn’t necessarily turn them into punters either. There is lots that Clubs can do to generate Club spirit and ethos and it costs nothing.