One of the most common questions from golf course operators is:
“How much should I be investing in marketing?”
The answer depends entirely on your goals. Whether you want to grow rounds, fill more events, increase membership, or build a stronger brand presence, your marketing budget should be sized to support those objectives.
There’s no one-size-fits-all number. But for planning purposes, it’s helpful to compare how other industries invest in marketing to guide your thinking and establish a baseline.
How Other Industries Approach Marketing
Here’s how several service-focused industries typically allocate marketing budgets:
| Industry | Average Marketing Spend |
| Retail | 4% to 10% of total revenue |
| Restaurants | 3% to 6% |
| Hotels | 4% to 8% |
| Fitness/Wellness | 5% to 10% |
| Golf (Typical Public Course) | Often less than 2% |
Many golf courses spend less on marketing than other experience-driven industries, even though they face similar challenges: filling time-based inventory, navigating seasonality, and driving repeat visits.
Underinvestment in Marketing is one of the most common barriers to growth.
Let Your Goals Drive Your Budget
Your marketing spend should be directly tied to what you’re trying to achieve:
- Looking to maintain current performance and stay top of mind? A modest investment may be enough.
- Focused on increasing rounds, tournament participation, or memberships? A larger, more proactive spend will be required.
- Competing in a busy market or trying to expand into new segments? You’ll likely need to invest aggressively and consistently to gain traction.
In other words, your budget should reflect the size of the outcome you’re aiming for.
Why Measurement Is Critical
No matter how much you invest, what matters most is how well you measure the impact.
Not every campaign will have direct attribution, but when it can be tracked, it should be. Measurable conversions allow you to calculate a “floor” return on your spend, helping you:
- Identify which marketing channels and campaigns are performing
- Reallocate budget away from underperformers
- Justify increases in investment based on data
- Improve cost-efficiency over time
For example, if a $2,000 campaign drives $6,000 in clearly attributable revenue, you now have evidence to support reinvestment. And since not all influence is measurable, the true return is often even higher.
Start Small, Prove It Works, Then Scale
You don’t need to go all in on day one. Start with a focused budget that aligns with your highest-priority goals. Run a few well-targeted campaigns. Track every response and conversion. Then scale up the areas that deliver.
Growth becomes easier and more predictable when your marketing is backed by performance data, not assumptions.
The Risk of Doing Nothing
Courses that fail to invest or track marketing performance often face:
- Underfilled tee sheets and events
- Weak online visibility
- Low customer awareness or engagement
- Increased reliance on discounting
- Little insight into what’s working or not working
Even a well-run course with excellent service can struggle if potential players don’t see it, remember it, or understand its value.
Final Thoughts
There’s no magic number when it comes to marketing spend. Your budget should reflect your goals, be guided by performance data, and evolve as you learn what works.
But here’s the reality: marketing isn’t easy.
It takes strategy, creative execution, data analysis, consistency, and time. That’s why Teesnap doesn’t just give you tools, we give you a team. Our Marketing by Teesnap packages include:
- A dedicated strategic advisor to guide your plan
- A website specialist to ensure your site is modern, mobile-friendly, and optimized
- A graphic design expert to create promotional materials that stand out
- An email marketing specialist to drive bookings and engagement
- A social media specialist to keep your brand active and visible
All of this is included at a fraction of the cost of a full-time employee, with none of the overhead or management burden.
And perhaps most importantly, it lets you stay focused where you’re needed most: on the course, with your team, and in front of your customers.
Because at the end of the day, the best marketing is the experience you deliver. If you’re spending your time managing Facebook posts or formatting emails instead of improving pace of play, customer service, or the quality of your events, it’s worth asking, is that really the highest and best use of your time as an operator?
Let us handle the digital experience. You handle the on-course experience. Together, that’s where growth happens.
Want to learn more about how Teesnap’s marketing services can support your goals?
Let’s build a plan that works as hard as you do.