Skip links

Keeping Pace at Conway Farms: Adopting Technology for a Traditional Game

Conway Farms Golf Club (CFGC) in Lake Forest, Ill., features a 7,288-yard, 18-hole Tom Fazio course that opened in 1991. The mission to which the club has remained steadfast—to continuously advance the traditions of golf, including fast play, no tee times, walking the course with a caddie, respecting fellow participants, and supporting championship golf—is a prominent facet of the club’s culture and success.

According to a 2016 USGA Survey, 74 percent of golfers believe that pace is crucial to the enjoyment of their round, and Conway Farms fully agrees. To support their mission, while ensuring an enjoyable, seamless golf experience for members and guests during the 18,000 rounds played each year, Conway Farms recently began using Tagmarshal’s golf intelligence technology to monitor pace of play, enhance player experience, and maximize staff efficiency.

Initially, Head Golf Professional Andrew Adamsick, PGA, wasn’t convinced that the course really “needed” pace-of-play technology, but, seeking to stay ahead of the curve in providing members with the best golf experience, he set his skepticism aside and researched some of the products in the market. Ultimately, they decided to go with Tagmarshal, and the unobtrusive GPS tracking tags and easy-to-use data analytics have made adopting the technology into their operations a simple, gratifying process.

How it Works

Tagmarshal’s on-boarding team remotely maps courses as a three-phase process. A high-end course map gets designed and rendered with 3d effects. In the system’s background the course gets zoned inflow zones per hole and including key course areas, so the geolocation data gets context attached. This is normally around 70 zones. Lastly, the on-boarding team checks course flow and times with actual on-course calibration data against the information provided by the course operator and system generated flow scenarios. [CV1] 

The Tagmarshal technology applies algorithms that are based on findings and trends from 900 million data points tracked across the more than 200 courses partnered with the company. The entire CFGC course was mapped during a weeklong “calibration period,” whereby data was collected, and the course flow and player movement on the course was identified. This calibration also checked per-hole times and zone times against set-up information provided by CFGC staff, and corrected any assumptions based on the data reality. Within 30 days of signing with Tagmarshal, the set-up, training and calibration were complete, and the full system went live.

CFGC has 40 Tagmarshal tags, which are GPS trackers that they clip onto the caddies’ bibs before the round begins. Members know that rounds are expected to be completed in about four hours, with an official course goal time set as four hours and six minutes. Conway Farms staff can access the live map from computers, tablets and phones and track caddies as they walk the course. Based on course algorithms, on-screen icons will change colors to inform the group and the marshal of their pace. A green indicator means on-pace, orange indicates delayed play due to a group ahead, and a red tag indicates a slow pace.

“Our staff is now armed with real, objective data about the pace for each round, which eliminates subjectivity from the equation when caddies or marshals need to encourage golfers to speed up. It’s easy to show the player real-time data on the course map,” said Adamsick.

“Our members actually are pleased to be accountable and the tags encourage self-regulation and self-awareness,” Adamsick explains. “It’s not a policing mechanism, but an investment we’re making to ensure our members are having a successful golf experience.”

Data-Driven Efficiency

The Tagmarshal mapping allows staff to see where bottlenecks occur, what holes are the slowest, what times of day see the quickest or slowest rounds, and how long people spend in the halfway house. All of this data can be used to improve operations, staffing and overall course management.

The data is broken out into a report containing data points and corresponding action points for any given time period. For example, Conway Farms ran a report tracking rounds from April 22 through July 31. The 1,274 rounds showed information on 3,949 players and yielded an average round time of three hours and 56 minutes and 51 seconds, which is below the target goal time.

Among other things, the analysis looks at daily distribution by breaking down a week’s play by performance clusters compared to goal performance as well as tee time distribution by breaking down each day’s performance. Sunday is the slowest pace day (30% materially slow) and Monday was the fastest pace day (11% materially slow). Additionally, on any given day, tee times between 11:00 a.m.-12 p.m. are the slowest (43% more than 10 minutes behind) and tee times before 8:00 a.m. are the fastest. The recommended action for Conway Farms is to consider optimizing staff efficiency by reallocating marshaling hours from faster, less busy days/tee times to where slow play is evident to ensure an improved experience at equal or reduced cost.

“The data and statistics collected from Tagmarshal on pace of play prepares you for your board meeting,” says Todd Marsh, CCE, COO at Conway Farms Golf Club, noting the value of having a complete understanding of play on the course.

Peace of Mind

Optimizing staff at peak hours, confirming operational efficiencies, and giving staff the data to manage the pace of play in a professional and objective manner are immediate benefits of using pace-of-play technology. Adamsick points out that there is also an element of security that comes with being able to track every group on the course. Within the first month of adopting Tagmarshal, he was away from the course at a family party when his weather alarm went off indicating lightning strikes were quickly closing in on the course. From the party, he was able to remotely locate golfers on the course map and monitor the carts as they swiftly brought all golfers to safety. “That peace of mind and the ability to quickly get members to safety in an emergency situation like that has been an immeasurable benefit of the Tagmarshal technology,” he noted.

 

What Do You Pay to Speed Up Play?

There is no up-front cost to partner with Tagmarshal. Clubs enter a three-year partnership with a monthly service fee. Investment depends on the number of devices a club requires and starts at $490/month for a 40-device walking course and $1,200/ month for a large cart fleet, 27-hole facility on the Tagmarshal premium product.

 

Club Trends Summer 2018

X