The name of ‘Carr’ is as synonymous with
Irish golf as Peter Alliss is with Open Championship commentating. And while Alliss’s
career is coming to an end, Carr Golf is accelerating into an ever brighter
future.
I met Shane Derby, the company’s new Business Development Manager, and asked what Carr Golf was all about and what it offers Irish
golf clubs… as well as Irish golf.
Q. Can you give a little background
on Carr Golf?
Shane: Carr Golf Services was founded by JB, Marty and John Carr in 1990.
Dublin County Council had recently purchased land for golf course development
at Clondalkin
and Dunsink. Carr Golf led and managed the consultancy, design, construction, grow-in and development of the golf operations themselves for these two projects. The venues in question are of course Grange Castle and Elm Green Golf Centres. Interestingly, these projects were one of the very first examples of public private partnership in Ireland.
and Dunsink. Carr Golf led and managed the consultancy, design, construction, grow-in and development of the golf operations themselves for these two projects. The venues in question are of course Grange Castle and Elm Green Golf Centres. Interestingly, these projects were one of the very first examples of public private partnership in Ireland.
Having initially cut our teeth on these
projects, other opportunities presented themselves in the form of running and
operating the golf operations requirement for both Corballis and Stepaside.
Incidentally some 24 years later we still operate the golf side of the
Corballis and Elm Green operations on behalf of Fingal County Council.
Various opportunities have materialised
over the last 26 years, both in Ireland and internationally. These experiences
and learnings have enabled us to develop robust, detail-driven, golfer-focused
solutions to managing both golf course maintenance and clubhouse operations,
facilitating superior course presentation with the associated benefits of
member retention and attraction and a competitive advantage for our clients.
The par thee 4th at Corballis Links. |
Notable projects include Sawgrass in
Florida, home of the Players Championship, Dromoland Golf & Country Club,
Old Head Golf Club, Mount Juliet, Carton House, and working with Tullow Oil in
Ghana. These projects included
either management and maintenance services, consultancy services, sales &
marketing support, design and master plan development, construction team
selection or associated services.
In 2010 we completed a large research
project of the Irish golf industry in conjunction with the GUI, ILGU, Fáilte
Ireland and FGS. The study found that many of the surveyed golf clubs had no
definitive strategic plans, little or no sales and marketing and also had
ageing fleets of greens equipment. The results were published in the
benchmarking report which we launched during our Road to Recovery Conference, hosted at the National Convention
Centre in Dublin, and attended by almost 400 delegates.
Q. Why
did Carr decide to move into maintenance/management?
Shane: The whole team here at Carr Golf are nuts about golf. You’d have
to go a long way to find somebody who’s more of a ‘golfaholic’ than I am. We
are all committed to the long term competitive advantage of Irish Golf and the
special place our golf product has in people’s hearts right around the world.
Quite simply we moved into maintenance and
management to provide new and innovative solutions and approaches, focusing on
the little things. We believe in driving the success of Irish golf directly
through the golfers’ experience. We understand that the success of any
organisation is based on their underlying financials and that superior course
presentation can drive the whole operation.
Change is a constant and it is often
difficult to know how to react to a changing competitive environment. Our
approach provides our clients with the right information at the right time to
enable informed decisions.
Q. What
has stimulated Carr’s growth in recent years… and how has the company evolved
to deal with the last decade??
Shane: The company grew 42% in 2015 alone. We have embraced technology,
strengthened our core team and have invested significantly in the business,
focusing on systems, processes, training and skills development.
The biggest factor that stimulated our
growth has been our committed team of experts who have tirelessly focused on
refining and honing our methodologies, frameworks, management philosophy and
planning processes to drive the success of our clients’ operations.
Q. What
makes Carr Golf good at the services it provides?
Shane: There are five distinct areas that have directly influenced our
customers’ success stories:
- Our commitment to innovation
- Our team of committed experts
- Our data driven approach to operational best practice
- Our responsiveness to change
- Our focus on exceptional customer service
We now employ over 200 people throughout
the wider Carr Golf group, which makes us the largest employer within the Irish
golf market. Before Christmas we moved into a new purpose built headquarters in
Parkwest in Dublin and recently announced 2015 turnover figures of €7.5
million. Our aim is to reach €25 million turnover by 2020. We will invest €1.3
million in greens capital equipment this year as part of our ongoing commitment
to our customers. We’re here to help in an independent capacity. More and more
clients are seeing that there is a better way and that way is the Carr Golf
way.
Q. Why
should golf clubs consider using Carr Golf’s services?
Shane: The Irish golf marketplace is a competitive arena and advantage is
hard to win and equally as hard to hang on to. Our approach is based on the
competitive advantage of superior course presentation and improved performance
in every other aspect of the operation: sales and marketing, income and
profitability, efficiency and reporting.
Transparency and trust are the cornerstone
of our daily interactions with our customers, our systems, procedures and
reporting protocols have been designed to provide the correct data to all
decision makers in a timely manner in order to facilitate informed decision
making.
Golf in Ireland is fairly traditional in
its outlook and structures, the ‘we’ve always done it this way’ strategy is
often employed as a default. Adopting this approach leads to either competing
on price and a race to the bottom or accepting the status quo and following the
pack instead of leading the way.
Engaging with Carr Golf gives customers
access to a suite of proven operational systems, procedures and management
philosophy not to mention the sum of our individual expertise which most clubs
just simply could not afford on a standalone basis.
Q. What
is your role at Carr Golf?
Shane: I lead the Business Development function within the Services
Division of Carr Golf. I like to think of myself and the chief story teller
here at Carr Golf (although Marty does a really good job with this brief
too!!). I am exclusively 'focused on meeting with prospective clients to
introduce them to our services, approach and philosophy. I am also involved in
the first steps that we take with any new client through our consultancy
service and Independent Business Review process. So in short I am the first
point of contact that any new inquiry will have with Carr Golf.
The company has grown significantly over
the past number of years and we have expanded the Services team by 30% over the
past 12 months to respond to the market demand for our approach. We have big
plans for Carr Golf and I’m here to ensure that we reach for the stars when it
comes to new business…… no pressure!!
The par three 2nd at Charlesland Golf Club |
Shane: As a ‘golfaholic’ who previously worked with Open Fairways in
Belfast some years ago I have been keen to return to the heart of the golf
industry. When I saw the job specification for this Business Development role I
knew that I fitted it like a glove… thankfully my now colleagues recognised
this. I suppose it takes one golfaholic to spot another golfaholic!
Q. What
do you believe you can do for Carr?
Shane: Somebody new can often bring a fresh approach to opportunities. I
hope that my first four months with the company has provided this fresh
approach to doing the same things… just a little bit differently!
Q.
Address the three biggest misconceptions about Carr’s services/modus operandi.
Shane:
Sure.
1. Carr Golf only take over struggling golf
operations.
We do not discriminate
when business opportunities arise and work with a number of very successful,
profitable and high profile clubs. It is true to say that we have been engaged
to reenergise under-performing properties and also true to say that these
properties have been transformed under our stewardship. Our partnership
approach ultimately drives the best golfer experience within the scope of a
tailored fixed price contract.
2. Carr Golf will come in and run things with no
consideration for what the club wants!
We are focused on your
success. Our primary focus is on delivering the best and most consistent golfer
experience within the budgetary scope of each contract. Ultimately we assist you
in developing your standards and procedures using our systems to drive your
vision. We are the operational arm that ensures that these specific key
performance indicators are consistently reached and surpassed.
3. Carr Golf are going to come in, fire our
superintendent and roll out pay reductions for the remainder of the course
maintenance team.
We don’t want to fire
anyone, in fact our approach aims to support and grow your existing team’s
capabilities, expertise and knowledge base to the benefit of the operation.
We will benchmark the
terms and conditions of your full staff complement with industry best practice
as part of our initial Independent Business Review. We may recommend amendments
to same as appropriate, but the final decision on terms etc. always rests with
the club.
Q. What
are your final thoughts on the ongoing evolution of Irish golf?
Shane: There are a number of generic challenges that face all clubs
irrespective of where they are ranked, the most recent GUI/ILGU figures still
suggest that there is an oversupply of product with a reducing affiliated
golfer population.
This suggests that Darwin’s law of
evolution may once again be pertinent to consider:
"It’s not the strongest of the species that will survive, nor the most intelligent but the one most responsive to change."
"It’s not the strongest of the species that will survive, nor the most intelligent but the one most responsive to change."
The first time I sat through our sales
presentation I was blown away by what I did not know. I’ve already outed myself
as a ‘golfaholic’ so if I didn’t know all of that, then perhaps some committee
members in golf clubs are in the same boat?
Change is a constant and so is competition,
let’s change the record, start competing on superior presentation and the
golfers’ experience and the large collection of ‘little things’ that
successfully drive this.
And on a more personal note:
Q. How long have you been playing golf and what’s your handicap?
Shane: I was first introduced to golf by my grandfather at
the age of 6 or 7, when he used to take myself and my brother to play the pitch
and putt golf course in St Annes Park in Dublin. Mick Murphy the club maker was
a neighbour of my grandad's in Clontarf and I distinctly remember a cut down
John Letters 7 iron as one of my first clubs...happy days. I currently play off
a handicap of 5.
Q. What’s your favourite Irish golf course?
Shane: I'm going to give three answers if that’s allowed. My
favourite Irish links course is Royal Portrush, my favourite heathland course
is Carlow and my favourite Parkland course is Belvoir Park.
Q. If you could meet one person in golf, who would it be and why?
Shane: I'd like a round of golf with Padraig Harrington.
I've been fortunate to meet him on a few occasions and he is probably my number
one sporting hero. I'm intrigued by his honest take on the world, himself,
gadgets and his willingness to let his guard down during interviews and
conversations which I think is both admirable and great value. I'd love to see
his short game up close and personal and to tap into his experiences and
stories from the wider world of golf.
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