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Club Membership

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Club Membership European Trends, Attracting & Retaining Members Presented by Jerry Kilby Clients 85% of golf clubs in Europe are semi-private Customers are a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Club Membership


1
Club Membership European Trends, Attracting
Retaining Members Presented by Jerry Kilby
2
  • Clients

3
  • 85 of golf clubs in Europe are semi-private
  • Customers are a combination of
  • Members
  • Local keen golfers
  • Local casual golfers
  • Green Fee customers
  • Golfers within the area
  • Golfers from around the country
  • Golfers from other countries

4
  • Numbers of golfers in Europe

5
  • Numbers of golf facilities in Europe

6
  • Average numbers of golfers per club

7
  • From too few golf facilities to perhaps too many
    in 20 years
  • Over supply is great for consumers
  • as prices are cut and there is plentiful supply
  • But not good for clubs
  • revenue under pressure, budgets are being cut

8
  • Do golfers need to join a club ?
  • Golfers see it as an advantage to play a variety
    of golf courses
  • A handicap certificate is no longer required to
    play golf in most countries in Europe
  • Young and middle-aged adults see club membership
    for those over 60 years old
  • Work and family pressures leave little time to
    play golf
  • Golf competitions not important for many club
    members
  • An increasing number of golfers are therefore not
    joining clubs

9
  • Golfers playing habits
  • Infrequent 1-6 times 21
  • Occasional 7-12 times 14
  • Core 13-26 times 15
  • Keen 17-52 times 24
  • Avid 53-104 times 19
  • Mad 104 times 7
  • Source Golf Australia Data May 2009

10
  • To achieve 25,000 rounds a year, you might need
  • Golfers Rounds
  • Infrequent golfers (3x) 1,500 4,500
  • Occasional (10x) 500 5,000
  • Core (20x) 300 6,000
  • Keen (30x) 100 3,000
  • Avid (80x) 50 4,000
  • Mad (125x) 20 2,500
  • Total 2,470 25,000

11
  • To achieve 25,000 rounds a year, you might need
  • Golfers Rounds
  • Infrequent golfers (3x) 1,500 4,500
  • Occasional (10x) 500 5,000
  • Core (20x) 300 6,000
  • Keen (30x) 100 3,000
  • Avid (80x) 50 4,000
  • Mad (125x) 20 2,500
  • Total 2,470 25,000
  • Members 970

12
  • How far will people travel to play golf ?
  • No more than 10km 7
  • 11-20km 23
  • 21-30km 21
  • 31-40km 19
  • 41-80km 17
  • Over 80km 13
  • Source Netherlands Golf Federation

13
  • How far will people travel to play golf ?
  • No more than 10km 7
  • 11-20km 23
  • 21-30km 21
  • 31-40km 19
  • 41-80km 17
  • Over 80km 13
  • Source Netherlands Golf Federation

70 of golfers will not travel more than 40km
14
Marketing outwards
15
  • Why do people join clubs ?
  • In 2001 and again in 2006, a total of 31,000 club
    members from 17 countries were interviewed to ask
    why they joined their club
  • Here are the top 3 reasons.

16
  • They were invited to join
  • by friends and colleagues
  • they were honoured to be invited
  • the sense that they had been chosen when others
    could not get in
  • They wanted to be a member of the club
  • - Joining people of high stature in the
    community
  • They wanted the camaraderie
  • Belonging to a group of like-minded people

17
  • Other reasons were
  • Prestige and exclusivity
  • Social enhancement (new and existing friends)
  • Business Enhancement (new contacts)
  • Name recognition in a service environment
  • Made to feel special, welcomed, comfortable

18
  • More reasons
  • Fun
  • Investment (in some cases)
  • Convenience of location
  • They feel that they deserve it
  • To enjoy facilities the club has to offer

19
  • Find out why your members joined your club
  • Surveys
  • Focus Groups
  • Face-to-face

20
  • Why do people leave clubs ?
  • Again, there are many reasons why
  • What do you think is the main reason why someone
    leaves a club ?

21
  • Main reason
  • Poor customer service
  • Other reasons
  • No time
  • Quality of facility
  • Price
  • Convenience
  • Needs changed

22
  • A complaint is a Gift
  • You have 30 seconds to deal with a complaint
  • Only 1 in 25 customers complains (but they will
    tell others)
  • 91 of unhappy customers will never return (solve
    their problem fast and 85 will buy again)
  • Develop a fair and efficient procedure
  • Apologise and compensate when a mistake has been
    made

23
  • Find out the reasons why members leave your club
  • Exit interviews are essential

24
  • What are the benefits of joining your club ?
  • Tangible benefits
  • Play the golf course
  • Discounts in bar, restaurant and shop
  • Intangible benefits
  • Friendships and community
  • Prestige and status
  • Spin-off benefits
  • Health, fitness and relaxation

25
  • Retention why bother ?
  • Loyal members are more profitable
  • Finding new members can be expensive
  • Happy members spend more
  • Unhappy members tell others !

26
  • How do we measure success in membership marketing
    ?
  • Number of new members joining ?
  • Length of waiting list ?
  • A low number of people wanting to leave ?
  • Your clubs membership churn ratio will help.

27
  • How to calculate your membership churn
  • The Churn Ratio is 80 divided by 740, or 10.8
  • Go back perhaps 5 years and calculate churn for
    previous years (if possible)
  • The annual trend is more important than the
    percentage number itself

Membership at start of year 800
New members joined during year 20
Members left during year 80
Membership at end of the year 740
28
  • Go back perhaps 5 years and calculate churn
  • It should look like this

29
  • What would you do if it looked like this ?

30
  • Retention important reasons why
  • A 2 improvement in retention is worth a 10 cut
    in costs
  • The cost of recruiting a
  • new member can be
  • 20 times more than
  • keeping an existing one
  • Stop the leaky bucket !

31
  • Tips to reduce membership churn
  • Get members to tell you what they want
  • Focus groups will provide genuine feedback
  • Make all members feel valued and important
  • Write to them by name (not Dear Member)
  • Recognise and reward long-term members
  • For example 20 year club
  • Encourage membership referrals
  • You are unlikely to leave if you have introduced
    a friend

32
  • More tips to reduce membership churn
  • Remove the barriers that are causing members to
    leave
  • Listen carefully to exit interviews
  • Make members feel special
  • Free lunch on your birthday
  • Sell the intangible benefits of membership
  • Prestige, friendships, status
  • Massage your waiting list
  • Keep them involved and informed
  • Invite them to join in certain functions

33
  • Attracting new members
  • Member get Member schemes
  • Existing members are your richest source
  • Make it a members responsibility to introduce a
    friend
  • Transparent incentives for both the existing and
    new member
  • Credit for food beverage / shop etc
  • Reduction in following years subscriptions
  • Grand prize draw for all existing and new members
    that join in a period (holiday)
  • Free golf lessons

34
  • Strategies for member-get-member schemes
  • You would not have joined if a friend had not
    introduced you to the club so introduce one of
    your friends to the club and enable them to enjoy
    the club as you have done
  • Open Day invite the local community to come
    along
  • Member/guest golf day
  • Ensure our club has a prosperous future. and
    introduce someone new to the club

35
  • Should a club incentivise the management and golf
    professionals at the club ?
  • They are the first point of contact for a visitor
  • They should always be talking up the benefits
    of membership
  • They should understand the potential lifetime
    value of a golfer

36
  • Offer flexible membership categories
  • Weekday memberships
  • Weekend memberships
  • Off-peak memberships
  • Junior, student and interim memberships
  • Social memberships
  • Distant memberships
  • International memberships
  • Trial memberships

37
  • Build a relationship with your visitor
  • A new category of member
  • Affiliate Associate Friend Partner
  • Encourage repeat visits with incentives
  • Special events for visitors
  • Develop a relationship with local driving ranges,
    to feed golfers to your club

38
  • Remove the barriers
  • Denim The apartheid of cloth
  • Time 9 hole competitions and social events
  • Cost Flexible membership options
  • Quality Invest in your clubhouse facilities and
    course

39
  • Get active in your local and regional media
  • As a responsible employer
  • Custodian of the environment
  • Bringing business into the region

40
  • Communicate like crazy
  • Start on your doorstep
  • The road to your club, your neighbours
  • Door drops, letters, leaflets
  • The nearest villages and nearby towns
  • Local newspapers and radio stations
  • And then work outwards
  • Nationally
  • Newspapers, sports and lifestyle magazines
  • Internationally
  • Travel magazines, golf magazines

41
  • It is not the strongest of the species that
    survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one
    most responsive to change
  • Charles Darwin

42
  • Thank you for listening
  • www.kandagolf.co.uk
  • jerry_at_kandagolf.co.uk
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