A New Approach to Weddings
Weddings and events have long been viewed by many golf facilities as supplemental business that is nice to have, but secondary to the core golf operation.
In recent years however, that mindset is changing quickly.
Today, more operators are recognizing weddings, catered events, corporate outings, and social gatherings as meaningful revenue drivers capable of generating value across the entire property. And as the golf industry continues evolving into a broader hospitality and experience business, events are becoming increasingly important to the long-term health of many facilities.
Golf Courses Already Win at Weddings
The opportunity presented by weddings and large scale catered events is significant.
According to
Golf Course Industry
, roughly 8% of weddings in the United States are now held at golf clubs, tapping into a wedding industry valued at nearly $60 billion annually.
For many facilities, weddings have evolved from occasional bookings into highly profitable business segments with some courses reporting that ROI from weddings can even eclipse golf revenue.
When evaluating deeper, the profitability and success of these event types at golf courses isn’t surprising. Golf properties already possess many of the elements couples and event planners are actively searching for:
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Scenic outdoor environments
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Built-in food & beverage operations
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Indoor and outdoor flexibility
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Ample parking and gathering space
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Turnkey hospitality capabilities
The Rise of Experience-Driven Weddings
Modern wedding trends are also shifting in a direction that naturally aligns with golf facilities.
Today’s couples are increasingly prioritizing experiences over traditional one-day ceremonies. Multi-day celebrations, curated guest experiences, welcome parties, golf outings, cocktail receptions, and weekend-long itineraries are
becoming more common
.
That evolution creates a major opportunity for golf operators who are uniquely positioned to offer just such experiences because a golf course wedding doesn’t just offer a ballroom rental attached to a course. Increasingly, it’s becoming:
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A full weekend experience
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A destination event
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A hospitality package
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A reason for guests to spend more time (and more money) on property
For facilities with clubhouse space, food and beverage operations, outdoor event areas, and lodging options, the ability to create premium experiences is already built into the business.
Weddings As a Strategic Revenue Center
Across the industry, operators are beginning to view weddings and events differently.
In discussions around golf course profitability, many operators point to weddings, banquets, and catered events as some of the most important non-golf revenue streams available to facilities today. Perhaps most importantly,
this trend is not limited to private clubs or destination resorts.
Public, municipal, and semi-private facilities are also exploring how events can:
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Diversify revenue
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Increase utilization of clubhouse space
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Create year-round business opportunities
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Reduce reliance on golf-only revenue
As operational costs continue rising across the industry, diversified revenue streams are becoming less of a luxury and more of a necessity.
The Future of Golf Facilities Encompasses More Than the Tee Sheet
Of course, growing an events business successfully requires more than simply making space available. The facilities seeing the greatest success are treating weddings and events as intentional parts of the business by:
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Investing in the guest experience
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Creating strategic packages
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Building operational workflows
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Leveraging purpose-built event technology
That’s part of what inspired
The Golf Course Wedding Playbook
, a guide created alongside
Aisle Planner
and
Total Party Planner
to help operators think more strategically about the role events can play within the modern golf facility.
Because increasingly, the most successful golf properties are managing tee sheets as part of building a strong experience-driven business.
