Yes, there is a second undiscovered web site opportunity that is potentially more valuable to a superintendent than the well-documented highly respected personal career web site.
Properly prepared, managed and updated on regular basis, a "maintenance program" (MP) web site's attainable objectives are to promote the superintendents' "brand" in the following ways:
To educate course officials/players to the basic elements of the maintenance program.
To educate re: the role and job descript
I have this voice stuck in my head. It talks to me every day on the course. Buddy says if I retire it will go away. I don't know how much more I can take . . .
Every fall, the floodgates open and the soil tests come rolling in. I love soil tests. Probably because I actually use them for what they are intended for. Information. Not sales.
A long time ago when I decided to form a business around testing soil and consulting based on those soil tests, a ton of people said that I was crazy. Charge for something that the fertilizer industry usually gives away for free? It made no sense.
When I exposed bad testing or perhaps better said, cheaper tes
Two totally independent national surveys that mutually support each other's findings tell a frightful story about the careers/lives of golf course superintendents:
FIRST SURVEY: Indicates that only about 20% of golf course superintendents enjoy the security of a written employment contract, while roughly 80% of PGA and CMAA members enjoy this privilege.
Few people in the world give thought to the devastation wrought upon families when a superintendent is summarily dismissed - which is n
I stumbled across an interesting question on Twitter a while back. Posed by consultant John Bladon, it read:
It was an interesting post to me for a few reasons. I know that business is business, but I always liked to think that on the turf side of things our shared trials and tribulations overshadow our differences. I love that when I ask a question on TurfNet or hit up a local super at the conference seminar there is no hesitation with an answer... turf guys just want to help.
Alas
This is the first in a series on building career websites for the turf industry. We will cover all aspects of content, page building, imagery, and more.
Let's start with some facts. There is still a bottleneck at the top of our industry in trying to attain a Superintendent position at a quality club. If you are applying blind to a position where you have no connections to the club at all, a standard cover letter and resume will not get it done. With dozens upon dozens of applicants, you hav
The blog series now switches to Contract Negotiations.
Too many job applicants once told by the search committee that they are being offered a job drop their guard thinking the task of pursuing their next job has been successfully concluded.
Unfortunately, this is a fundamental mistake because receiving a job offer is simply an 'invitation' to be the first or next in line to have the opportunity to negotiate an employment agreement.
Candidates should realize when offered a job that
With the recent high profile chainsaw accidents involving Greg Norman and Peter McCormick, it might be time for Mickey McCord to devote an entire training series to chainsaw safety. While we're waiting on Mickey, I'll reveal the Three Rules of Absolute Chainsaw Safety.
My entire GCS career was based on the chainsaw. The only golf courses that would hire me were the courses in trouble and they were in trouble because of trees--and bad business practices--but mostly trees. The previous supe
A couple of years ago, we released a short film about the insidious movement to replace the TurfNet Dog Calendar--The First and Still Champion Golf Course Dog Calendar--with a more diversified version.
Our film was suppressed by a relentless campaign of modern PC brainwashing, using guilt to claim less fortunate animals on the golf course were being ignored.
Quote
. . . a conspiracy to force TurfNet to add cats
Brian Nettz led a push for the inclusion of goats, Mark Hoban advocated a
What Is The Best Way To Plan To Win?
Simply stated, the best way to plan to "win" is to out-prepare the field of candidate competitors. The few that do get job offers.
Earlier blog messages in this series that addressed matters such as the best use of cover letters, stress-free interviews and submitting job applications electronically should be reviewed.
FYI: Three of the more effective concepts that best exemplify commitments to excellence that separate winning candidates from the b
Successful interviewing is all about continuing to take the initiative that started with the cover letter. (See July 2nd blog.)
Questions designed to help candidates take the initiative during job interviews:
Prior to an interview, does it help to practice job related Q&As (especially regarding salary issues) with family and associates?
Of course! Go to Google to find dozens of categories of questions traditionally exchanged at job interviews.
When is the best time to raise t
This is a confession: I have been the curmudgeonly, gruff old guy relentlessly holding on to the traditional, classic elements of golf. I have resisted the latest trends, marketing fads and new technology since the appearance of the golf cart. I fought the insanity of growing bent in The South, battled real estate course design, azalea overdose and the maniacal pursuit of stripes, checkerboards and argyle patterns burnt into bermuda choking overseed in lines so straight that astronauts notice
I recently had the good fortune of attending the movie The Giver with my oldest daughter, Maria. We had both read the book a couple of years back and were excited to see the show. Thankfully we were not disappointed. The story examines the basic human condition and how we go to extreme lengths to shield ourselves from pain and suffering. The lasting impact of this is that whenever we work hard to shelter ourselves from the pain of our emotions, we also end up cutting ourselves off from the best
Recently I have been working with the MetGCSA in rebuilding their online presence and ran across a great article from their award-winning Tee to Green publication archive. It deals with how technology has both saved and added time to the duties of the golf course superintendent.
This started me thinking about the daily routine of today's superintendent. Due to my work I am almost always in front of a computer all day, every day. I see a new technological advancement as saving me time. But f
Possibly, the two most consistent patterns I have noted through the years when participating in candidate interviews as a consultant to employing clubs have been:
Candidates devote roughly 80% of their submitted documents and interview presentation times to focusing on their past job performances.
Unfortunately, this leaves these same candidates only 20% of their interview time to effectively advise what they would do if selected for the vacant job; i.e.- the most vital information a search
The bad news is that due to inexperience many job applicants are not comfortable taking the initiative through the interview process. They are not used to talking about themselves nor of their value to others. Accordingly, they generally pay a price for this shortcoming.
However, the good news is that this is a correctable situation. Interviewing can be a stress-free process that candidates can learn to control from start to finish.
There are two separate approaches to quality-controllin
Each year I grow in respect and admiration for golf course superintendents as professionals. They are problem-solvers, perfection-seekers, nature-lovers, or avid golfers with interest in producing a golf playing surface. From Florida to Vancouver, Portland to Portland and beyond the border in Canada, Europe, Australia and South America, golf course superintendents are getting it done.
As an homage to my superintendent pals, I see trends in management and golfer demands that bug me. I know fo
Time for some agronomy. Talking and thinking about bent/poa or poa/bent greens here.
Maestro McCormick gave me a pointer to a good discussion going on in the TurfNet.com Forum. Here it is. And a special shoutout to topic starter Chuck Barber. Being brave enough to post your thoughts is how one gets max advantage out of this whole thing. I don't love lurkers. Posters get kisses. Topic starters who actually engage with real thoughts are big time crushes of mine. What I love is the diversity of
Mike Young is a golf course architect gifted with a realistic view of the golf business and a straightforward manner guaranteed to make the various alphabet organizations uncomfortable.
Mike's common sense approach will be familiar to a number of TurfNet members who lean toward a pragmatic, grass-roots sensibility in dealing with the current hysteria surrounding the health of golf.
"Straight Talk and Common Sense" is a Rockbottum CC series aimed at countering the storm of ad agency propa
Throughout my 25+ year career only about one in four of the 100+ plans of action I have reviewed for my client clubs through the years passed muster and earned their job applicant authors short-list hiring consideration.
Yet, all 37 candidate superintendents (i.e.- 100%) that I have personally counseled through the job application process and who submitted quality action plans were hired -- competing against fields that averaged +/- 35 job applicants. How does this universal record of succes