May 2008

Fitting End

As we end our Callaway Golf Month Annika Sorenstam, Callaway's best staff player (in my opinion) has announced her retirement. When there was no Phil, no Big Easy, when Charles Howell II and Ty Tryon had yet to prove their worth, Annika was showing the Callaway Tour staff what playing like a champion looked like.

In 2003 Annika was arguably the best golfer in the world. She has been a credit to Callaway from the day she joined their staff. Her use of the 2-Ball putter was possibly the strongest endorsement that product could get and was very instrumental in its success.

I know from experience that our customers have paid attention to Annika's career. Unlike just about any other woman player in the LPGA, Annika has garnered the respect of male golfers who admire her consistency, her athleticism and her ability to win. They know she plays Callaway and have admitted trying the clubs she uses.

Morgan Pressel may develop into the kind of player Annika became. Paula Creamer has the spirit to win and Lorena Ochoa is certainly as talented. They, along with a few other women are making the LPGA interesting to follow in 2008. They all owe a big THANKS to Annika for giving us a reason to watch the LPGA events during the years when she was the only great player out there.

Callaway Ltd Edition Bags are HOT!

In early April we got the Callaway Golf Ltd Edition Masters Staff bag. It was put in front of our display window and someone bought it one week later. The Masters bag was really beautiful and the customer added matching Kelly green iron covers, along with some other green & white accessories.



Callaway Masters Staff Bag

We just received the U.S. Open and the PGA staff bags, and will get the British Open staff bag soon. I was able to get photos of the bags directly from Callaway. Our website might be the only place you can see what these bags look like without some awful background.



US Open PGA British Open

The limited edition bags sell for $399 each and shipping is only $15 UPS ground. They are collectors' items, great for display or take them to the course and look like a Staff Pro.

May is Callaway Month

Callaway Golf's brands are featured all the month of May at Klees Golf Shop. Here are some of the deals we are offering:

--$25 off the price of any FT-i or FT-5 driver

--$25 off the price of the Hyper X driver

--15% off the price of any Callaway golf bag or pair of shoes

--$2 off the price of a dozen Callaway Golf balls

--Free shipping on any Callaway bag bought from our website

Between May 15 and June 15, Callaway Golf will offer a $100 AmEx gift card with the purchase of any FT-i, FT-5 or Hyper X driver. Plus, because we participate in the Trade Up Trade In program any Callaway clubs you trade in at Klees Golf Shop for a new Callaway product get the best deal (other than selling these clubs yourself).

Many of Callaway Golf's products are featured on our website, although you have to call to order the specs you want. (Our shopping cart is limited right now, but will be fully serviceable by June).

How the Outside Rep can make or break a Brand

This is strictly a “Golf in the Family (Business)” entry about the role field sales reps play in the way we do business. For better or worse, our experience of a vendor and its brands is colored by our relationship with that vendor's sales rep.

Doing business with a major (or minor) golf company includes dealing with the inside customer support team, credit department, warranty and repairs, and in some cases, the marketing department. Charlie has always claimed that he could do business just fine with any of our vendors without an outside sales person. He's probably right.

Yet, the outside sales rep can be a big help for managing inventory, turning orders around quickly, implementing promotions and addressing problems. He can make all the difference in how we perceive a company's policies even when I know that our perceptions are biased.

In a former life I was an outside sales rep selling direct marketing services to mostly large companies. I did not recognize the influence I might have had in my client relationships until after I left that career and became a customer.

Now I see that how I feel about a sales rep affects how I see everything he stands for. Does that sales rep keep his word? Does he tell a straight story about his company's marketing, production and pricing policies? Does he take care of problems in a timely way? Does he make and keep appointments, respond to email and confirm pre-booked orders before they get shipped? Does he share close outs and product deals with us?

There are often big differences between the ways one company operates internally from another. Occasionally, a company will establish a standard for doing business because its practices or products are so clearly superior in the minds of the customer.

Klees Golf Shop benefits from a vendor's good image and we have to respond when customers request a brand because of this. However, the brands we carry, promote and repair are largely influenced by the opportunities we have to make money in what has become an extremely competitive market. And this is where the sales rep can help.

2008 is shaping up to be a year of great challenge for many industries, especially the golf business. Bad weather, high gas prices, job instability and a credit crunch are affecting almost everyone in some way, mostly bad. Given this scenario I can only hope our vendor reps step up to the challenge and do what they can to help us get through this year.