View Full Version : Good Golfer Rewards and Drawing for Priority Membership
xkeowner
07-25-2016, 04:11 PM
While waiting for our tee time at an executive course this morning I saw an ambassador pull up to a group of eight ladies also waiting to tee off and present each of them with the entry cards. I have to wonder what it is you can do before ever teeing off to demonstrate care and respect of the course which is above the normal?
rhood
07-25-2016, 04:18 PM
Haven't seen that done in several years. Used to happen often.
Medtrans
07-25-2016, 05:31 PM
So now we're questioning why someone is doing something nice?
Mikeod
07-25-2016, 07:32 PM
I guess the fact that those certificates are supposed to be given out to reward players seen taking a little extra care of our courses and these people got some for doing nothing obvious is what bothered the OP.
Most of the players in the groups I'm in make it a point to repair multiple ball marks, rake not only their damage in the traps but also some others (you know they're there!) and fill in not only their divots but others. I've seen them do all this with an ambassador sitting in his cart watching. Nothing. I've spoken to GMS about this a couple of times and they tell me they are handing out more of them each year.
I think they are missing a great opportunity to reinforce good course conduct. I joined a group as a single one day and after the group teed off, I grabbed the sand bottle and filled in about 5-6 divots on the tee. An ambassador drove over and gave me a certificate. The other players asked about it and he spent a minute telling them about caring for the course from tee to green. It was as if they were hearing this for the first time. For the rest of the round, they filled in divots, repaired ball marks and raked sand traps. If they rewarded people for doing even a little repair work, I would hope it would snowball, resulting in better conditions in areas the players can affect.
kcrazorbackfan
07-25-2016, 09:37 PM
Wow, sounds like some are in kindergarten where some have to get a trophy (good golf reward) for participating (repairing the course when that should be a natural thing).
In the 14 months I've lived here, I've repaired hundreds of ball marks (87 during one 18 hole round), use at least 2 bottles of sand every round and raked countless bunkers (all because the privileged/entitled won't do any of these); I always say "no thank you" to the ambassadors when offered the "rewards" certificate because leaving a golf course better for the next player was something I learned long ago. But, if you need to be rewarded to do these things, bother the ambassadors with your accomplishments.
Polar Bear
07-25-2016, 09:51 PM
Wow, sounds like some are in kindergarten where some have to get a trophy (good golf reward) for participating (repairing the course when that should be a natural thing).
In the 14 months I've lived here, I've repaired hundreds of ball marks (87 during one 18 hole round), use at least 2 bottles of sand every round and raked countless bunkers (all because the privileged/entitled won't do any of these); I always say "no thank you" to the ambassadors when offered the "rewards" certificate because leaving a golf course better for the next player was something I learned long ago. But, if you need to be rewarded to do these things, bother the ambassadors with your accomplishments.
My congratulations and appreciation for doing your part.
Why you feel the need to belittle the reward program escapes me though.
kcrazorbackfan
07-26-2016, 04:30 AM
My congratulations and appreciation for doing your part.
Why you feel the need to belittle the reward program escapes me though.
It's not the reward program I've dissed, it's the people that think they have to get that "pat on the back good golf reward certificate" to fix ball marks, repair divots and rake sand traps - something that they should do without hesitation. It's the "LOOK AT ME, I'VE FIXED SOMETHING, REWARD ME" attitude that irks me.
rubicon
07-26-2016, 05:03 AM
The rewards cards being handed out previously accomplish two things reminding people to do their part on keeping the course pristine and propping up sales.
If you noticed there is no longer sand available on the tees. They stopped that a few years back. And of course we have the competing factors of speeding up the golf game vis a vis properly maintaining it. There are also other factors but ...and the beat goes on
Actually I don't need no stinking reward card to rake a trap or repair a divot :D
Polar Bear
07-26-2016, 06:16 AM
It's not the reward program I've dissed, it's the people that think they have to get that "pat on the back good golf reward certificate" to fix ball marks, repair divots and rake sand traps - something that they should do without hesitation. It's the "LOOK AT ME, I'VE FIXED SOMETHING, REWARD ME" attitude that irks me.
Fair enough.
stan the man
07-26-2016, 07:39 AM
It is my understanding in the future the ambassador will be giving out "free" stickers for your mailboxes. This will be the award for being a good golfer and rake the sand traps, and still keep a good pace of play
Topspinmo
07-31-2016, 09:54 PM
Good golfer" very rare, very rare!:boom:
I think the guy just wanted to chat up the ladies:thumbup:
outlaw
08-01-2016, 06:55 AM
My congratulations and appreciation for doing your part.
Why you feel the need to belittle the reward program escapes me though.
I believe residents, at least priority members, automatically get 10% off anything in the pro shops. I feel it is a little disingenuous to offer a "reward" for a good deed, when it really isn't anything we already get. It is like a store offering a customer 10% off everything in the store for "being such a loyal customer", when anyone walking off the street gets the same 10% off on that particular day. It's just a marketing ploy. I don't blame the ambassadors. They are employees that are told to pass these "rewards" out as part of their duties. I would much rather see the ambassadors call out people who don't rake the bunkers after they mess them up.
DonH57
08-01-2016, 08:39 AM
I gotten many of those certificates for staying off the golf course!
renrod
08-01-2016, 11:00 AM
It is my understanding in the future the ambassador will be giving out "free" stickers for your mailboxes. This will be the award for being a good golfer and rake the sand traps, and still keep a good pace of play
They could give them out at the mailbox facility to those who are carrying a poop bag when they leave the station and not deposit it in the trash.
OH NO, I can't believe I said that.
ColdNoMore
08-01-2016, 12:18 PM
Wow, sounds like some are in kindergarten where some have to get a trophy (good golf reward) for participating (repairing the course when that should be a natural thing).
In the 14 months I've lived here, I've repaired hundreds of ball marks (87 during one 18 hole round), use at least 2 bottles of sand every round and raked countless bunkers (all because the privileged/entitled won't do any of these); I always say "no thank you" to the ambassadors when offered the "rewards" certificate because leaving a golf course better for the next player was something I learned long ago. But, if you need to be rewarded to do these things, bother the ambassadors with your accomplishments.
It's not the reward program I've dissed, it's the people that think they have to get that "pat on the back good golf reward certificate" to fix ball marks, repair divots and rake sand traps - something that they should do without hesitation. It's the "LOOK AT ME, I'VE FIXED SOMETHING, REWARD ME" attitude that irks me.
And yet you went into great detail (I mean seriously, who counts how many ball marks they fix or how much sand they use in a round? :rolleyes: ) to describe your own 'good behavior?'
I have received about a dozen of these coupons in the last few years, but keep forgetting to turn them in. :oops:
I don't do it for the coupons (or to keep count), I do it because it's the thing that a considerate golfer does without even thinking about it.
As to the OP, I think it is left up to each Ambassador and it is more the 'luck of the draw' if they see something or choose to give you one.
Please don't stop doing the right thing though.....as the rest of us really appreciate it. :thumbup:
ColdNoMore
08-01-2016, 12:19 PM
I gotten many of those certificates for staying off the golf course!
They could give them out at the mailbox facility to those who are carrying a poop bag when they leave the station and not deposit it in the trash.
OH NO, I can't believe I said that.
Excellent! :1rotfl: :1rotfl:
pqrstar
08-01-2016, 11:17 PM
I believe residents, at least priority members, automatically get 10% off anything in the pro shops. I feel it is a little disingenuous to offer a "reward" for a good deed, when it really isn't anything we already get.
I think the reward coupon entitles the bearer to an additional 10% off.
I used one reward coupon several years ago and I think I got the 10% plus an additional 10%.
But that really doesn't add up to 20% off, because the additional 10% comes off after the original 10% is deducted.
THAT MATH REALLY WON"T MAKE SENSE TO A LOT OF PEOPLE!!!
They think a "sale" item that is 25% off and marked down another 50% gets them 75% off. NOT TRUE
kcrazorbackfan
08-02-2016, 10:33 AM
And yet you went into great detail (I mean seriously, who counts how many ball marks they fix or how much sand they use in a round? :rolleyes: ) to describe your own 'good behavior?'
I have received about a dozen of these coupons in the last few years, but keep forgetting to turn them in. :oops:
I don't do it for the coupons (or to keep count), I do it because it's the thing that a considerate golfer does without even thinking about it.
As to the OP, I think it is left up to each Ambassador and it is more the 'luck of the draw' if they see something or choose to give you one.
Please don't stop doing the right thing though.....as the rest of us really appreciate it. :thumbup:
People do different things to stay loose and I stay loose by helping keep the courses better than what I find them and not engaging in meaningless chitchat while playing. One can only take so much of listening to someone drone on about their complete medical history while playing so I fix marks, divots and traps to pass that time; don't worry, I don't hold the group up or slow groups behind me when doing this tidying up.
Bonny
08-02-2016, 10:44 AM
People do different things to stay loose and I stay loose by helping keep the courses better than what I find them and not engaging in meaningless chitchat while playing. One can only take so much of listening to someone drone on about their complete medical history while playing so I fix marks, divots and traps to pass that time; don't worry, I don't hold the group up or slow groups behind me when doing this tidying up.
Sounds like you don't enjoy the people you golf with. :(
spring_chicken
08-02-2016, 11:58 AM
And yet you went into great detail (I mean seriously, who counts how many ball marks they fix or how much sand they use in a round? :rolleyes: ) to describe your own 'good behavior?'
I have received about a dozen of these coupons in the last few years, but keep forgetting to turn them in. :oops:
I don't do it for the coupons (or to keep count), I do it because it's the thing that a considerate golfer does without even thinking about it.
As to the OP, I think it is left up to each Ambassador and it is more the 'luck of the draw' if they see something or choose to give you one.
Please don't stop doing the right thing though.....as the rest of us really appreciate it. :thumbup:
LOL, I noticed the same thing. And found the "look at me" accusation quite ironic.
alancusa
08-02-2016, 01:30 PM
Fair enough.
And the bottom line is you get a 10% discount on merchandise that is outrageously over priced.
Bogie Shooter
08-02-2016, 01:38 PM
And the bottom line is you get a 10% discount on merchandise that is outrageously over priced.
Like all country club pro shops.............................
kcrazorbackfan
08-03-2016, 08:57 PM
Sounds like you don't enjoy the people you golf with. :(
Some I do, some I don't. I just go out and focus on playing the best I can.
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