Insolvency firm warns golfing clubs to treat their organisations like businesses

In the wake of several closures of golf clubs, committee members have been warned to treat their clubs more like a business by insolvency experts MLM Solutions.

Insolvency firm warns golfing clubs to treat their organisations like businesses

Photo credit: Walnut Hills Golf

MLM Solutions recently managed the sequestration and sale of Eastwood Golf Club in East Renfrewshire and of Mount Ellen Golf Club in Gartcosh, Lanarkshire, two victims of financial pressure on the sport.

Experts from the firm have warned golf clubs that they risk closure unless their committee members become more business-like in the financial management of their clubs.



Despite the affluence often associated with golf, the majority of golf clubs are run by members’ committees comprising of volunteers.

MLM has accordingly warned that unless the club is an independent legal entity, committee members could be held to account for debts of such organisations, despite their volunteer status.

Maureen Leslie, director of MLM Solutions, said: “Golf and other sporting clubs run by volunteer committees, are facing testing times. There’s significant evidence that subscriptions are falling, yet costs may be staying broadly the same. Office bearers need to be very careful to protect themselves, should operating figures no longer add up.”

Director Leslie told how the volunteers on one bankrupt club’s committee were pursued for money by a catering supplier.

She added: “This is not the norm and it would be tragic if individuals were to be put off volunteering on the basis of personal risk. However, it is a salutary lesson for office bearers, who need to be mindful of their personal standing under the law. A worrying run of insolvencies recently is a wake-up call for clubs to remember they must be run as a business in order to survive.”

Barry Mochan, director of MLM Solutions, added: “The first signs of danger appear in cash flow – where falling membership or reducing subscriptions lead to difficulties in paying bills. At that stage, office bearers need to be tough and accept that they cannot keep offering services at traditional levels if income has been reduced.

“Many clubs resist the idea of restricting bar hours to profitable periods, for example, and see themselves crippled by unsustainable staff costs as a result. Similarly, there are deals to be done on leasing equipment, rather than buying it, which can save cash-strapped clubs a lot of headaches. Most of all however, clubs need to be creative in responding to changing social demographics. There’s plenty evidence that the ‘old’ norm of taking four hours on a golf course is less suited to the faster pace of contemporary life.

“Expensive memberships fall away as many golfers opt to spend larger amounts on playing elite courses occasionally, over buying annual subscriptions they might not be able to use. This becomes a vicious circle for local clubs who have less to spend on maintenance on facilities and can become even less appealing over time.

“It’s been a torrid time recently for golf clubs and other community institutions. The fabric of society is undoubtedly changing but we would all be poorer without places which encourage fellowship, leisure and social interaction, as well as opportunities for exercising outdoors. This is a time for actively managing change – not for giving up on the game.”

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