I have been in the golf course industry for almost 20 years. My positions have been at every financial level of club. Municipal to pga major championship host and in between. I have seen a little bit of every level. With that said, there is sooooooo much waste at many clubs/courses. Not just from million dollar clubhouse renovations, but mostly in club hierarchy, roles, and salaries. It’s a slow death by a thousand cuts because a club thinks that it’s the way it’s “supposed” to be, or has always been. In my professional opinion, many times the role of GM is the biggest waste of money in a clubs budget. I think that superintendents, in many instances, are more qualified in this role, but they aren’t typically looked upon in this light. The few courses that I have seen that made their superintendent the GM also (and did away with this position), have been WILDLY successful and turned the club around financially in a fairly short time. I have never seen a situation where this wasn’t beneficial and helped the club financially. All things equal, and as long as the super has a good assistants on course, the superintendent is more qualified to act as GM and can do it well. The money saved on salary promoting the superintendent can be used for club CapEx’s and general upkeep as opposed to shelling out money for an extra position. This change could turn around many clubs. Of course, every super isn’t interested in this or good enough to wear two hats, but the ones that have, have done nothing short of extraordinary work in helping the club improve.
The brain of a superintendent thinks completely different from a golf pro or a GM. At the end of the day they know the “Golden Goose” is the golf course and it must be protected at all cost. Not the newest and greatest driving range gadget, or million dollar clubhouse addition, but the golf, first and last priority!
The reputation in the eyes of many people and members is that supers aren’t trained or qualified to be GM, but that is so far from the truth. At least in the circle I am familiar with. Many supers I know have minors, to accompany their BS in agronomy, in business administration or some other financial area. It just a common misconception that grass growers only know how to grow grass. This must change in order for some clubs to hold on. Roles need to changes in order for clubs to stay afloat, but again many people resist change especially golfing members.
A perfect example I recently ran across is a medium to upper end private club was paying the GM close to 400k and the club was losing their ass. The super got his budget cut and the pro was promoted to director of grounds!!!! WT actual F?! The pro and GM don’t know the first thing about growing grass, but they sure as hell made sure the clubs members thought they did. This was just an example of many more of the same ilk I have seen over the years.
Bottom line is that if a club is struggling they should strongly think about promoting the super (if he’s good enough) to the role of GM. Give him a bump in salary and budget. Use whatever is leftover for CapEx and other miscellaneous upkeep items. It CAN be done successfully! Many clubs could keep their doors open only if they thought outside the box instead keeping the status quo. End of rant.