I think my story is reasonably well known, but after 3 1/2 years with the Dyes, I quit my job with Perry Dye at age 25, without any idea of what to do next. I started writing a bit more for GOLF Magazine, and also started writing what became The Confidential Guide. I went down and spent a day in Tom Fazio's office, not to ask for a job really, but just to see what they were about.
The next spring, I just started traveling to see courses again, and get back to some favorites. One of those was Crystal Downs, which I'd seen while I was in college, but on a horrible day. I stayed a few days with the golf pro, Fred Muller, and really got to know him. Two weeks later, another golf pro, Doug Grove, called Fred and asked his advice on who to recommend to a friend who wanted to build a course in Traverse City, and Fred responded, "He was just here."
Seven of my first eight jobs came directly as the result of a recommendation like that, from someone I'd met while I was traveling around to see courses in college. [The other one, Black Forest, came off the back of High Pointe.] It's really just luck when that happens, but the more people you know, the luckier you are likely to be. And it really helped that all of them met me when I was just a student, rather than somebody trying to sell them something.