Ben Hogan’s New Play: Factory Direct
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Ben Hogan’s New Play: Factory Direct

Ben Hogan’s New Play: Factory Direct

The curtain came down on the Ben Hogan Company last winter, as the 2-year old venture collapsed under its bloated infrastructure and overly optimistic – some say delusional – business plan when the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Fort Worth, Texas.

It certainly looked like the end of the line for Hogan. Founder Terry Koehler had been ousted/voluntarily retired months earlier, and the company had laid off nearly its entire staff. Market share and sales were virtually nonexistent, but accounts payable certainly were very existent.

Dead and gone. All that was left was the funeral and the slow singing and flower bringing.

No one figured there’d be Third Act in this play.

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Welcome Back, Lazarus

Sometime this week, or perhaps next, you can expect the curtain to come up on Act III of the Ben Hogan Company. Call it Hogan 3.0.

“The company has been sold and refinanced,” says Hogan CEO Scott White. “We have a new business model and business strategy. It’s not novel to commerce, but it’s fairly new to our industry. We’re going to sell premium Ben Hogan products at factory direct pricing.”

What that means is you’ll be able to buy Hogan equipment directly from the company via its new website, and only directly from the company via its new website.

“Consumers will be able to buy ultra-premium Ben Hogan products at dramatically lower prices than they’d ever see at retail. There will be no retail markup.” – Scott White, Hogan CEO

Hogan is cutting out the middle man. There’s no MSRP, no retail partner pricing or margins to protect. White says the current lineup will be the same, forged FT Worth blades and PTx players cavity backs, TK 15 wedges, VKTR hybrids and FT Worth 15 hi utility irons.

TK15-1-3

“They’ll be offered at prices that will allow us to make a decent margin – not a greedy one by any stretch of the imagination – but again, there’s no retail markup.”

White says you’ll be able to buy TK wedges for $95.00 each or a set of FT Worth irons for $665.00. Consider that when it launched, Hogan’s wedges sold for upwards of $150.00 each, and iron sets for well over $1,000.00.

How Did This Happen?

White says management did flirt with the idea of just closing the brand down and calling it a day.

“That was the worse possible scenario. We didn’t want to do that.”

During the bankruptcy proceedings, the Hogan brand was purchased – sort of – by ExWorks Capital of Chicago. ExWorks is, among other things, a capital investment firm and had been listed as a secured lender for Hogan in bankruptcy court. White says ExWorks did a credit bid on the assets and basically bought Hogan for what they were owed.

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Recent court documents show significant changes in the Hogan bankruptcy case. Within the past few weeks the name of the debtor has been changed from the Ben Hogan Company to Eidelon Brands LLC. To get to the bare bones of the story, Eidelon was Terry Koehler’s company (SCOR wedges), which he rebranded into the Ben Hogan Company in 2013. ExWorks has essentially purchased the brand name out of bankruptcy, but none of the debt. Eidelon is now the company of record in the bankruptcy proceedings and has applied to transfer the case from Chapter 11 to Chapter 7. That’s a procedural manuever and means any assets Eidelon has left will be liquidated, and the remaining creditors will get whatever they get.

Perry Ellis, the owner of the Hogan brand, was one of the largest creditors in the original Hogan bankruptcy case. White says Hogan is still a licensee of Perry Ellis, but the structure of the deal is vastly different. Perry Ellis now has an equity stake in the new organization.

The New Hogan

White has been nothing if not consistent about Hogan’s prospects. Back in January, the day most of the staff was let go, White said it’s a reset opportunity. He said the same thing last spring when Hogan started liquidating product, and he’s saying the same thing now.

“We’ve spent a lot of time restructuring,” he says. “We’re in the old Callaway building in Fort Worth, and we’re going to maintain our headquarters here, but it’s going to be a very small structure.”

“One of the challenges we had was our overhead was so out of whack. We’ll have manufacturing, R&D, assembly and a few other functions at Fort Worth, but we’re going to outsource a lot of other functions, like marketing, finance and accounting.” – Scott White, Hogan CEO

We’ve written about how and where Hogan went wrong – and White is very frank about the fact the original Hogan concept was flawed from the get go.

“We’re not going to make the same mistakes we made in the past. Not again,” he says. “ We’re going to be very calculated, very nimble and will grow as needed. But we’re not going to build something and bet that if we build it, they will come. We’re going to do our best to minimize costs and pass the reduced overhead on to the consumer.”

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There’s still a 2-person R&D team in place, and White says you can expect some new Hogan equipment perhaps by the end of this year or early next. The plan is to expand its hard goods offerings – drivers and fairway metals were in the works before the bankruptcy – and add accessories.

“We’re never going to have an enormously wide or deep product line,” says White. “But we are committed to bringing new product to market.”

Will It Work?

Well that depends on what you mean by “work.”

If you’re thinking Hogan will try to rival TaylorMade, Callaway or PING right out of the gate, then no, that’s not going to happen.

And I don’t think anyone in Fort Worth is thinking anything of the sort. This game plan, unlike the original Hogan relaunch, seems a bit more – shall we say – realistic. Start small, keep overhead limited and build slowly, with no delusions of grandeur.

But will golfers buy premium product at a direct-to-consumer pricing? This past spring Hogan tried just that by selling off inventory at, comparatively speaking, bargain-basement prices. White says no one was expecting what ultimately happened.

“Consumers had the opportunity to buy directly from us with no real retail markup,” he explains. “The response was more than we could keep up with. We had to hire outside help to field all the calls and emails we were getting. It really took us by surprise.”

Hogan’s new model of online only with no retail does mean the If-I-can’t-try-it-I-won’t-buy-it crowd will be out of luck.

“The demo and trial thing is something we’re going to have to figure out. In the short term we’re counting on our primary audience of pretty serious golfers. They know us, they know what they like and they know their specs. There will be an issue with people absolutely committed to fitting and demo and trial, but it’s something we don’t have an exact answer for right now.” – Scott White

Consumers are funny beings. Price makes a statement and while it’s not always the case, a high price does carry with it the impression of high quality and premium performance. But with golf equipment high prices tend to heighten emotions. Every time MyGolfSpy runs a story on PXG, for example, we see Torch and Pitchfork Nation screaming with genuine anger in the Comments section about how ridiculous the pricing is.  This new Hogan seems to be taking the opposite approach – offering what the company considers premium product at a lower price by cutting out standard retail markup.

We all might jump at the opportunity to buy a set of $1,200.00 clubs for $700.00. But will you jump at Hogan irons priced to move at $665.00 per set? Would that pricing devalue the clubs in your mind, or make you think of Hogan as a discounted brand?

“That’s something we’re going to have to get over,” says White. “How do you retrain people to understand that when they go into a retail store, they’re paying 40 to 50% markup off the top, for nothing? It’s not a discounted brand if it was never marked up in the first place. This isn’t discounted product. It’s factory-direct product.”

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The new Hogan website should be up within the next few days. White says there are still a few I’s to dot and T’s to cross.

“I had hoped to get it going before The Open starts this week, but there are still some details to figure out. But we’re 90-plus% there.”

Ben Hogan famously said the most important shot in golf is the next one. After being all but dead and buried in January, Hogan’s namesake company is getting another shot, maybe its last shot.

The cynic in you may say Hogan is down its last strike. The optimist may say the curtain is rising on Act III, and we’ll see what happens next.

Which are you?

For You

For You

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John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper living back home in New England after a 22-year exile in Minnesota. He loves telling stories, writing about golf and golf travel, and enjoys classic golf equipment. “The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.” - BenHogan

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      Ron Almeida

      6 months ago

      I’m a current owner of the apex edge pro in steel and graphite shafts. Thank the golf gods that someone had the sense to resurrect the hogan brand again. This time failure is not an option!!!

      s

      Reply

      Steven K Fennell

      11 months ago

      If your going to reintroduce Hogan equipment to the public, I’m in!
      I bought Hogan clubs (driver, 3, 5, 22*, 26*, and wedges) just before they closed. Though I didn’t know that they were going to close, because I ordered my irons last (paid for them) but they never came, and I didn’t get my money back either! I found a set of irons on Ebay, which I bought, and have enjoyed them (I’m trying to get use to the Apex steel shafts)!
      “I’m 75, but have always wanted to own Hogan: It would be great to finally get the irons I wanted in the first place!” Good luck with the reopening of a legion, and I look forward to being a customer.

      Reply

      Jim A

      5 years ago

      I played several iterations of the Hogan Apex irons through the 80’s and 90’s. They were some of the most beautiful and unhittable blades I’ve ever played, yet my love affair with them continues to this day as some are enshrined on the walls of my “golf man cave.”

      And I will never play a Callaway club for no other reason than it has sullied one of the most iconic monikers in golf. When I see “Apex” on a Callaway retail display, it takes every measure of self-restraint to keep from kicking it over.

      Let’s hope Hogan 3.0 thrives!

      Reply

      Dion

      7 years ago

      I am so happy with my hogan irons and wedges. I have always been a Taylormade man when it comes to my clubs. I don’t think I will ever play any other irons.

      Reply

      tom

      7 years ago

      One of the commentators on Golf Channel gave a report on all their clubs (on August 1). I guess this is considered Hogan’s “first commercial.” The report on both the Ben Hogan website and Golf Channel websites.

      Reply

      tom

      7 years ago

      Great news!!! Starting out small is the best way for them to go. Hogan will mail you demos to try (i did last December for my right-handed friends–that’s all they had at the time; left-handers in March 2018s); but they should do demos at golf course. I’ve bought two golf bags (as of today 8/7/18, the tour bags are sold out, so that indicates there’s demand). I’ll have a pro take my measurements then enter them to their site for purchase. They’ll be fine.

      Reply

      Barry Patterson

      7 years ago

      I like the idea about selling directly to the public, in fact when they first started selling off their stock I bought a set of PTX irons. When I got them and started playing them, the quality was better than before. I am in my 60’s. I now play my PTX set of steel tour 90’s, and looked ahead and bought a set of PTX graphite shafts. Now I have 2 sets of quality golf clubs. Thanks Hogan for making them more affordable.

      Reply

      George Hilton

      7 years ago

      I have played them and have never hit a club as well right out of the box as I did with the HI’s and the Hybrids from Hogan. I have tried to not like them because of the difficulty I have had communicating through their new system. So when the offer for free shipping in Aug. came along and the clubs sets were again available I popped for the remainder of my set. I will have a few extra clubs but not bad. I do have hope for Hogan but for selfish reasons, I like these clubs.

      Reply

      mark

      7 years ago

      I guess we will start to see Hogan advertisements on Mygolfspy now, and articles about how every big bad manufacturer is sticking it to you while the amazing hogan irons sell 200 dollars less, disregarding the fact that the big bad mean golf manufacturer actually sells them to a retailer for the same price as hogan sells to the consumer.

      Reply

      B. Moore

      7 years ago

      The Ft. Worth 15’s are great clubs with a soft, almost marshmallow feel when coupled with the KBS Tour 90 shafts.

      Reply

      kenny

      7 years ago

      HUGE fan of the Hogan brand, it is fantastic news they are not done yet

      Seriously, losing the Hogan brand is like losing a chunk of history, once gone we cannot really re claim it

      Reply

      Justin Bordwell

      7 years ago

      Just ordered a forged premium wedge for $95. Steal of a deal considering non forged top names are in the $125 area now.

      Reply

      Mitch Diaper

      7 years ago

      Best irons I’ve ever hit.

      Reply

      Scott Williams

      7 years ago

      I bought one of the first 500 sets of the Ft. Worth 15 irons and then went out and shot the best two rounds of my life with them. I fired 2 rounds of 68 on my favorite course. I then bought a set of the PTx irons and like them even better (although I have not shot the same scores with them yet). I pray that Hogan Golf Co, makes it. their quality is superior and I love the brand. Good Luck Hogan Golf!!!

      Reply

      Mike Eckel

      7 years ago

      As a veteran of the retail world on the apparel and accessories side, the “direct to consumer at a discount” model is nearly always better in theory than in practice. The challenge is two fold:
      1. You need a means of driving traffic to your site to see what you are selling. If no one sees your product, it doesn’t matter how you price it.
      2. In this space, a lot of comments are on the money – the people willing to buy golf clubs, even at a perceived discount, without trying them are few and far between.

      Now, an interesting play for Hogan would be to partner with someone like Amazon to distribute their products and capitalize on the traffic they already drive. That might solve problem one (though at a potentially steep margin hit), but it doesn’t solve the second problem.

      Hopefully Hogan gets it figured out, as by all accounts, the products are good. History tells me the odds are pretty well stacked against them.

      Reply

      sean

      7 years ago

      any word on the left handed segment they were planning to launch before things went south? or really just anything bent my way?

      Reply

      Bob Womble

      7 years ago

      The left handed PTx should appear on the scene next year. If that is well received more will follow.

      Reply

      Tom Stevens

      7 years ago

      I e-mailed the Ben Hogan last week and said March 2018.

      Reply

      Allan Kragh

      7 years ago

      Stating that you pay retail markup ‘for nothing’ is very harsh and unsympathetic imo. If you totally know what you want and don’t like the option of returning if product don’t work for you then yes. But they’ll need some sort of money back guarantee to make this work.

      Reply

      Craig

      7 years ago

      Hell, I am STILL waiting on the wedges I ordered months ago….

      Good luck with getting a response or order that you paid for. Gonna need to have Am Ex go after them to not charge me since I never got my order… Very disappointed. I love the tk wedges…

      Reply

      Hugh

      7 years ago

      I ordered irons then a bag and then a hybrid received them all. The irons took s while but when I called I left a message and received a call back the next day and an email on when they would be shipped

      Reply

      Barry

      7 years ago

      I’m delighted to see this. I still play scor wedgses and think they are great and yes, like others I still have an old set of Ben Hogan clubs. I’,m certainly in the market for some new wedges but they will be bought separately and not as a set. Then I have to wrestle with freight to New Zealand – not sure how that will pan out but good on them for coming back (sort of)

      Reply

      Brian

      7 years ago

      I reviewed the wedges a few days ago on this post and I was using the Scors before the transition to Hogan….you will not be disappointed though, as I posted, be prepared to regrip.

      Reply

      Vincent Donahue

      7 years ago

      As an owner of 2 sets of Hogan Ft. Worth 15 Irons, I was delighted to hear they have restructured and will continue to offer their premium irons via their new direct to consumer market. I bought both my original sets without going to a fitter. The Hogan people at that time ask me a few questions about my age, handicap, how far I hit certain of my previous irons. The specs they recommended have been working spectacularly for me. Never had a better set of irons that have performed so well for me. While I do believe in the value nod club fitting for sure, I think for the majority of low to mid handicap golfers it can be done without an hour fitting session. There is such a thing as too much data and too much fine tuning. So, I think the newly reorganized company can be successful. Their product is outstanding. It will however take a lot of heavy lifting and effective customer communication

      Reply

      Brian

      7 years ago

      Soon to be on my 3rd purchase of hogan wedges…they have a perfect weighting for what I like and the ‘muscleback’ head design allows me to open them up, even in fluffy lies and the heft of the top of the clubhead allows for a solid strike and carry even when it’s one of those ‘I could fluff it lies.’ Remarkably better than the Titleists and Clevelands I’d previously played because of that feature. Hope they hang around for that reason alone. That said, I do have to replace the grip for a favored choice shortly after they arrive.

      Reply

      Tom Duckworth

      7 years ago

      Well good luck to them. I think with a well designed web site they will be able to fit golfers pretty well. I the can offer different shaft sizes and lie adjustments they should be able to fit most golfers who know what they like and what the hit well. I would take a long look at them. If the site was poorly designed and didn’t offer really complete information I will probably be put off by that.

      Reply

      JSFvegas

      7 years ago

      As many have mentioned here, the demo issue will be something they’ll have to do correctly if they want long term success. GigaGolf has been around for about 15 years selling online only. While they may be clone type clubs (Their $30 SGS wedge is a great club btw) they have a online fitting system that is at least a start to getting the clubs fitted to you and they do that for free. They have a 30 day play guarantee, so if you don’t like them you can send them back. While this would cause Hogan to have to sell some ‘used’ clubs as you know not everyone will be happy with them. But think of all the people who will buy them only because they can return them if need be, whom otherwise would not have even thought about purchasing. Best of luck to you Hogan.

      Reply

      Tom Miller

      7 years ago

      I see this as a major problem. If I could pay $30 to rent 3 clubs (used) for 30 days, I would then try them out. If you buy $300 or more, you get the $30 credited to your order. Wedge, 9 iron, and a 6 iron is all I would need to see if I liked the irons.

      Reply

      Stephen Pearcy

      7 years ago

      I’m happy to see them staying as it’s one of the great names in golf. But it will be a tough road for them. There’s a number of direct-to-golfer manufacturers (primarily low priced) and they will have to directly compete with them. An advantage they will have name recognition and none of the “Where’d you get those clubs?”. But being players clubs without fitting and customization may well be more than they can pull off.

      Reply

      robin

      7 years ago

      Toney Penna golf offers big discounts on their clubs. I bought a driver for $ 120.00 sent .
      They probably won’t be around for very long to,but they look like they are trying there best to stay in business with the big discounts .
      Good luck to them to.

      Reply

      Elliot DeBear

      7 years ago

      This endeavor is going to be critically dependent on marketing and advertising. This is expensive understanding the broad geography of golfers. The current and future generation of golfers do not have the relationship with the Hogan legacy like the older folks do, so they are going to need a long term strategy of education regarding quality and craftsmanship. It’s not easy to powerfully differentiate modern club attributes. Direct to consumer pricing is not going to be the driving force to succeed…communicating the value/function relationship to the products will be. I wish them well.

      Reply

      McaseyM

      7 years ago

      So glad to see Hogan re-return again. I think this direct style could work , but
      They will need to figure a demo program, that then takes the price of the demo off the purchase of club(s). Then pricing is right and intriguing, their previous pricing was too much (for me) for something that couldn’t really be tested anywhere. I’ve hit their clubs at a demo day and really liked them and now that they’re more reasonably priced, I’ll keep them in mind.
      I understand the limitations of offerings to keep lean, also so they can build sets and then just adjust specs versus individual irons, but maybe they could sell un-built sets so players can do their own shaft and grip and sell the unused parts as new? I’d love to see them do component options, id pick up some wedge heads for trailing.

      Reply

      Barry Schwartz

      7 years ago

      I agree with many of the other posts that they have a long road to convince people to buy them with no demo. If they really want to be successful, they will sell individual heads that they ship to you along with your choice of Hogan grip. Then you can have them custom fit at your local shop to your specs without spending extra money to buy and remove the stock shafts. Even the old Apex shafts on my 2002 Apex Plus Hogans were made by someone else.

      Reply

      Robert D. Herpst

      7 years ago

      Hogan is an iconic brand. It has always had a quality image. I still have a set of persimmon Hogan woods ( 4 of them no less) hanging in my garage next to some old Mcgregor drivers. If they can offer all of the custom options without the retail markup they can make it with low overhead. In lots of industries, everything is bought and sold on line. Golf should be no exception. If they offer the clubs with the buyers choice of grips from a large range of choices all the better. But they need to find a price point that works. $100 wedges wont work on-line. Also, I hope they put their sets together on a simple basis–sell per club and not per set. My preference for iron sets is 7,8,9 wedge. I use hybrids for everything else that is longer and I prefer to buy my own gap (gaps) , sand and lob wedges. Does anyone really need a 3 or 4 iron who is going to be buying on-line?

      Reply

      Springbok

      7 years ago

      This is my PRIMARY issue. I would be willing to buy a set today, if you could create a combo set. I was willing to do that in the first reorg… but they were not willing to sell single clubs.

      Reply

      Jerry

      7 years ago

      If most people are like me they frequent the Big Box guys who let you browse their racks of brands and hit those clubs in sophisticated booths for free. You get to a/b clubs and even change shafts. Mizuno has a handy dandy device that many claim can accurately tell what shaft to play (there’s a test you could do MGS). Then if you think you’re ready you can do a fitting (for free if you buy a set) if you have confidence in the shop. Many want a blended set with blades on higher irons and cavity backs on lower irons. All these things favor the “middle man” who makes money on the markup but adds value to the purchase. What kills the middleman is seeing a golf shirt or bag in the store then going online and buying it at a 40% discount with free next day shipping and no tax. We may be moving to an online economy but some things require the “process” to work. My first new set of clubs were bought out of the trunk of a car when I was 14 and I had no idea what shaft flex, lie angle or grip size I needed. As my game improved I wanted more and more. Now I am again needing new sticks as my swing has changed with age and my clubs no longer fit my game. The Hogans look nice but I will not take a flyer when I can buy custom fitted clubs I can demo and see on monitors with stats tracking every rpm of side spin and feel in my hands. A shirt that doesn’t look good on me I can send back or give to one of my sons. A set of irons not so easy.

      Reply

      Peter

      7 years ago

      $95 wedge with cheapest shipping option to UK $109.48. Total $204.48. Good luck with THAT!

      Reply

      Deadeye

      7 years ago

      Selling golf clubs based on a famous players name does not have a great history of success. Anyone own a set of Arnold Palmers or Nicklaus clubs? Jack had some success but never gained a sustainable market share. I sure some still play their Tommy Armours or Hogans.
      Mr Hogan sold a lot of the original product back in the day. Mr Palmer had his name on a lot of golf related items, bags,etc, sold by such high level retailers as K Mart which quickly fell apart and were thrown away. I wish the new Hogan brand good luck. Their new approach to marketing may work. My daughter still plays three Scor wedges and I will continue with my famous player Ben Ping set. Didn’t he win The Open five times?

      Reply

      Mark

      7 years ago

      MacGregor’s Jack Nicklaus Muirfield were exception irons and I did own a set of Palmer’s “The Standard” irons, which were superb. Both sets were sold in pro shops back in the day. And yes those SCOR wedges are SO good. I still play them, but recently bought a replacement set of Hogan wedges for next season. I’m rooting for Hogan to turn it around!

      Reply

      Joe Golfer

      7 years ago

      Don’t think the Palmer/Nicklaus analogy is a fair comparison.
      There was no internet back then. Palmer stuff was being sold in KMart and Walmart.
      Folks do know that the new Hogan stuff is high quality. The prior plan was no good because their price point was ridiculously high.
      This may work, but it will be an uphill battle, simply because the average golfer may not read a lot of golf forums and the like, so they may never hear about it since it isn’t in stores.
      I liked the clubs they were selling a year or so ago (except for the price), but I’d want to buy individual clubs (not a full set) since I use hybrids to replace the 3 and 4 irons, and possibly the 5 in the future considering how strong lofts are nowadays.
      If the quality is the same, and they offer free length/lie angle variations, it could work well enough for them to stay afloat while the name and reputation catches on again.

      Reply

      xjohnx

      7 years ago

      Just looked at the site and noticed there are no True Temper shaft options? I’m shocked

      Reply

      Springbok

      7 years ago

      You guys are aware that they are simply using you as a marketing tool right? Whether it is a paid or unpaid marketing tool, I don’t know. This is nothing more than words to sell out existing stock…. and they are using you. Remember, you are MGS… you need to see through that BS.

      You can deduce this logically.

      They are branding themselves as a direct-to-consumer equipment company. YET……. They only allow purchasing of whole sets (4-PW). No single iron purchases allowed. Want a combo set? Tough titties.
      They offer the same 2 steel shafts. No custom shafts allowed.

      This is NOTHING new from what they were offering before…. but at a higher price. Remember it used to be $75 a club in the previous reorg. Now they want $95.

      And for those wanting PTx irons. You are better of going to a PGA Superstore. They have the same thing for $699 ($70 less), and I am willing to bet you can bargain them down $100 or more.

      http://www.pgatoursuperstore.com/ben-hogan-ptx-7pc-irons-w/kbs-tour-v-steel-shafts/1000000009527.jsp?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIrovQup6n1QIV1LfACh32WAMgEAQYASABEgLyJfD_BwE

      Reply

      Mike

      7 years ago

      So you’re saying they are clearing out stock and once everything is liquidated, they’re out for good?

      Reply

      Springbok

      7 years ago

      I am willing to bet the farm on it. You just have to look at what they are doing. It is simply a rewording of what they were already doing. Other than adding a store front… there is literally no change.

      I fully expect a “Ben Hogan finally closes” article soon.

      John Barba

      7 years ago

      I get being cynical, but at some point actual thinking has to enter in to the equation, don’t you think? An awful lot of lies would have to be in place for your scenario to be true. Yeah, this model may work, it may not, but if they’re just trying to liquidate why not stick with the formula from the spring? It was working and it was a hell of a lot less expensive. If you’re liquidating, minimize costs, don’t add overhead – that’s just logic and common sense.

      Court records, contracting with actual marketing people, a re-launched website and new ownership (seriously dude, look up ExWorks Capital and see if you can find “liquidator” among their businesses) indicate they’re committed to a new business model. Success? That’s a different story.

      As we say many times in the Comments section – do your homework before tossing any stones. You’ll be surprised what you learn.

      And don’t bet the farm, the cows might not like the new owner!

      Tony Covey

      7 years ago

      “We’re never going to have an enormously wide or deep product line,” says White. “But we are committed to bringing new product to market.”

      How would you reconcile blowing out inventory (which they did previously to try and avoid bankruptcy), with bringing new product to market?

      If you have no actual plans to bring product to market, why keep R&D guys on staff?

      Reply

      Matt

      7 years ago

      This seems a little naive.

      Jim

      7 years ago

      Sounds a lot like Hopkins Golf’s business plan where they sell directly to the consumer. They are now in bankruptcy as well from what I understand, so again not sure this will work but hope it does. I think most golfers need to test clubs before buying them and without that being available I’m not sure most people would buy these clubs. Again hope it succeeds.

      Reply

      xjohnx

      7 years ago

      I understand that golf (and golf marketing) is more focused on fitting than ever but, if the prices are right this can and will work.

      The bicycle industry has been flipped upside down by a handful of factory direct brands over the last few years leaving a lot of the big names and local bike shops in a precarious position.

      Reply

      Jon

      7 years ago

      Great news! I know how I will be spending my Xmas bonus to replace my 1999 Apex set.

      Reply

      Dan

      7 years ago

      Interesing read guys. Not a bad idea per say, but it works for Snell & Vice for a couple of reasons… balls are a consumable, it’s easy(ish) to compare performance on a like-for-like basis (& therefore establish value) and it’s not too much of a financial stretch to buy a doz & see if they’re any good for yourself. Clubs… not so much. While the direct model may sound promising, a direct performance comparison is harder to make for clubs. So then the real value of the Hogan model comes into question… while comparativley cheaper, it’s still a chunk of change to spend on something you havent really tested. I wish them well, but I would fear just a straight ‘direct to consumer’ play will end with a similar fate.

      Reply

      Kevin

      7 years ago

      I was looking forward to the re-return of Hogan, but this is a terrible idea. Cutting out the middle man ultimately hurts ALOT of people who work in the industry and Hogan has just given a big middle finger to everyone.

      Reply

      Mike

      7 years ago

      I’m not sure they’re in the position to be philanthropic. Time to look out for themselves and try and stick around.

      Reply

      Jon

      7 years ago

      As far as I’m concerned a good share of the middle guys in the industry need the middle finger as the ones I have dealt with could give a fat rat’s ass about my needs and wants. Maybe I’m just being cynical since both of my “custom” fittings have delivered less than desirable results. I have taken it upon myself to learn how to make the needed adjustments to suit my game and I no longer have a need to pay the middle man an extra $400 for a retail set of irons plus whatever else they charge for a “custom” fitting. $665 for a new set of irons? Hell yes!

      Reply

      Carolina Golfer 2

      7 years ago

      A lot of what Trip said. This is a first, a major brand name of high quality going consumer direct, with the pricing to match. I think the knowledgeable golfer, that knows their specs will not hesitate in the least to get premium clubs at less than retail price.

      I wish them luck, and while I’m not in the iron market now, I certainly will be keeping an eye on their progress.

      Reply

      Ike

      7 years ago

      Ft Worth 15 irons were in my bag until this spring and they were very fine. Custom built to my specs and still in use by another local who equally likes them. Factory made? Not so sure that concept will fly with everyone. Fitters and builders can do a fine job if given the opportunity, but why waste the shaft and grip if you have to discard what the factory wants to sell? Time will tell if this is a good concept.

      Reply

      MrHogan

      7 years ago

      This is a great story and I am thrilled to hear the Hogan brand is alive and well. I have been playing the wedges for year now and absolutely love them. As much as I like the irons, I could not justify paying the price. Now with the new pricing, I will definetly be getting myself an early bday gift. Thx for the great news MGS.

      Reply

      Shankster

      7 years ago

      This is great. I hope they can thrive on their little chunk of the market. I’ll be looking there direction.

      Reply

      TR1PTIK

      7 years ago

      I’d be more than happy to pull the trigger on some Hogan irons or wedges when I’m ready to make a new purchase. Their products have received plenty of good reviews. I think this offering is significantly better than that of say Bombtech or Hopkins so I think they’ll do quite well if they figure out the demo thing. That’s really not the most difficult issue to overcome either.

      Bombtech has long offered a guarantee on all of it’s clubs so buyers can feel more secure in their purchase. Bridgestone had (and maybe still does) offered demo sets that you could rent for a certain amount of time and then return. I don’t remember the prices being the most friendly, but who says Hogan would have to do this for a full set? They could easily send out 3-4 clubs for trial purposes and maintain a page with listings for used clubs so they could still make some money off those demos and any customer returns.

      Ultimately, I like the decision they’ve made.

      Reply

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