As daily fee golf courses try to balance their need to attract new golfers with the equally important goal of reducing expenses, every marketing dollar is precious.  The balance is even more delicate for those courses in far flung northern areas where the season is short and the competition intense.  It demands special creativity to attract new blood to their golf courses.

        An ad in today’s USA Today shows that some clubs don’t get it and are throwing good money after bad.  A club called Manistee National, which I had never heard of, took a quarter-page ad in the national  paper today at a retail cost of probably $25,000 or so.  At the minimum rate that Manistee advertises for green fees, that is the equivalent of 297 rounds of golf.  The ad squanders many opportunities.   It mention’s only the club’s web site and phone number under a single “wow-‘em” line, “Golf Package Special” starting at $84.

        The ad makes no mention of Manistee National’s location; it could be in Canada, or Zimbabwe for that matter.  A check of the web site indicates the golf club is in Northern Michigan.   Are they ashamed of the location, or afraid folks won’t go to their web site if they indicate “Northern Michigan?”  If that is the case, do they think a person who visits the web site will change her mind about a trip that likely includes a few changes of planes to get to Muskegon and then a drive of about another hour?

        If this ad was produced by its ad agency, Manistee National should fire them.  If Manistee’s own people produced and placed the ad, well, you know the old line that the man who represents himself in court has a fool for a lawyer.  The same is true for advertising.

        Ironically, at least I now know what and where Manistee National is.

TowerRidgegreenwithtower

The Heublein Tower stands guard over Tower Ridge Country Club.

 

        Tower Ridge in Simsbury, CT, is one of those country clubs whose best days are behind it, a former private club whose quirky but always smartly conditioned Geoffrey Cornish layout attracted a small but fiercely dedicated group of members.  But faced with a declining economy and too much local competition from other private clubs, as well as the threat that half its 18 holes would be closed and turned over to a new housing development, Tower Ridge could not staunch the outflow of members.  As so many other clubs have done to survive, the club opened its course to outside play a few years ago.

        My son and I have played Tower Ridge many times, as both a private and public golf course, and a return the other day was both nostalgic and heartening.  The course was not crowded on a Monday afternoon, but there was enough traffic to give a positive little jolt to those pulling for the course’s survival (and a number of people showed up after work, as we were leaving).

        Conditions had not slackened because of the economy and budget cuts; indeed, the greens were in mostly mid-season form, although they could stand a slightly tighter cut.  The vistas from the top of the course out to the Farmington Valley are as we remembered them, a panorama of green interrupted only by the occasional white church steeple and a few other landmarks.

        The Heublein Tower, a symbol of solidity, stands sentinel above the course.  It was built by the founder of the alcoholic beverage company and, of course, gives the golf course its name.  We only hope the Tower gives the golf course some of its stability as well.