Results: 2019 Golf Equipment Brand Perception (One Word) Survey
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Results: 2019 Golf Equipment Brand Perception (One Word) Survey

Results: 2019 Golf Equipment Brand Perception (One Word) Survey

A few weeks back, we posted the 2019 edition of our One Word Survey. This is the second time we’ve played this particular word association game. The idea was to get you to choose the golf equipment brand you most associate with each of the words we presented. Figuring some of you might have other brands in mind or that a given adjective wasn’t applicable to any brand, we also gave you a none of the above option. For the sake of consistency, we left the survey unchanged from the original. That’s almost a shame since I’d love to know which brand is succeeding in convincing you it’s the fastest.

It’s not lost on us that the one word one approach doesn’t leave much room for nuance. For me, that’s part of what makes this exercise so interesting. It’s an approach that means we don’t have any idea what your second choice might have been, so we can only look at the frequency at which each brand was chosen.

Frankly, I’m not sure what the results suggest about the equipment we buy. The idea was to get a sense of how you perceive the brands we cover day in and day out. Whether or not perception aligns with reality is often, for better or worse, inconsequential. What I find most telling in the results is when a smaller brand moves the needle for a given word. We would reasonably expect that the leading brands would be selected more often for both positive and negative words, so when a challenger brand factors significantly in the results, it’s something to talk about.

For each chart, I’ve included my general observations along with some of my interpretations. I would encourage you to do the same and share those thoughts in the comment section.

Before we get to the charts, just a few quick notes.

  • For comparative purposes, we’ve included the results from 2018 (grey) along with our 2019 results (gold).
  • The original survey data was based on a bit more than 5300 completed surveys. This year, we had just under 9000 surveys completed.
  • The original survey was completed in December of 2017, but for the sake of continuity, we’re referring to it as the 2018 survey.

The Really Quick Demographics

Let’s start with a couple of quick bits of demographic data.

What is Your Age?

Pretty basic stuff. It’s an interesting spread in our readership with the largest group being 30-39. Yes, the bars for 60 or older are longer, but that’s a 30+ year range. We should probably narrow that, but in general, the year-over-year trend suggests our audience is getting a bit younger.

What is Your Handicap?

In line with what we see in our other survey results, the typical MyGolfSpy reader is an above average golfer, with the sweet spot being in the mid-low to mid handicap range.

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The Good

With that out of the way, let’s get to the survey data beginning with our positive words.

Performance

It’s not any particular surprise that the 4 biggest brands are among the leaders. PING is up significantly (nearly 6 percentage points – enough to pass Titleist), and since this is a survey of our readers, that’s likely partially attributable to the company’s strong performance both in Most Wanted testing and our annual Buyer’s Guides last year.

Callaway was up slightly as well, while TaylorMade, Titleist, and Mizuno dipped a bit. Mizuno is the outlier here (as it often is in our surveys), significantly overperforming relative to its market share. Finally, while Cobra wasn’t a significant factor, it’s worth noting that it was selected 45% more often for Performance than last time around.

Innovation

The first and obvious takeaway is that Callaway has cemented itself as the innovation leader. Score one for Flash Face. Not only was it selected most often, it, along with Cobra, showed the most significant year-over-year increase. PXG dipped significantly, PING and TaylorMade were selected a healthy percentage of the time, though PING was down, and TaylorMade was up only slightly compared to the previous survey.

It’s notable that both Titleist and Mizuno were selected with significantly less frequency than either was for Performance. Titleist has a reputation for being slow (some might say plodding) in implementing new technology (particularly on the club side), while Mizuno, despite several innovative breakthroughs over the years, isn’t generally regarded as an innovator. As we’ve discussed previously, this is almost certainly related to its lack of traction in the driver market.

Engineering

As we would expect, PING was the top choice by plenty. Callaway was up by a few percentage points, Mizuno and TaylorMade were largely consistent with 2018, though TaylorMade did climb just a bit.

The curiosity here is PXG. While the company dipped a bit from 2018, it’s notable that it overperforms relative to its market share, and was chosen more often than both TaylorMade and Titleist. Continuing an overall positive trend, Cobra was again up.

Leader

Callaway was again the predominant selection and was actually up from last year. I think this speaks to the retail performance of the lineup from the driver to the golf ball. And speaking of the golf ball, Titleist was a strong second choice, receiving 27% of all selections. Attribute that to its #1 Ball in Golf status and the fact that it has the most played fairway woods, hybrids, irons, wedges, and ball on tour, and has frequently traded the #1 driver spot on tour with Callaway this season.

TaylorMade dipped by 2.25% points, while PING was up by roughly one and a half percentage points.

Integrity

What’s perhaps most interesting in this chart is the disparity between the leaders and the rest of the field. PING was chosen most often, and by a healthy margin. Titleist was a significant factor, while Mizuno again overperformed relative to its position in the market for a descriptor that I believe is core to the brand’s identity.

While Callaway faired slightly better (its bars escaped the whitespace), it’s certainly notable that both it and TaylorMade (which was selected less often than Cobra, Wilson, and Srixon/Cleveland) found little separation from the challenger brands.

Quality

The survey data suggests there may be some correlation between the perception of Quality and the perception of Integrity. While the order was reversed, the same three brands (Mizuno, PING, and Titleist) were selected most often. The reputation of its iron offerings likely explains Mizuno’s position, while PING and Titleist have justified reputations for doing things the right way.

While the frequent selection of Titleist is likely at least partially attributable to its position in the golf ball market, I’ve been in the build shops of all three of your top choices (and many of the others), and while I might haggle with the order a bit, this is one where I’d agree that perception is reality.

While the other industry leaders faired a bit better, it is again notable that both Callaway and TaylorMade failed to register in any significant numbers.

Trustworthy

I’m starting to sense a pattern here. PING, Mizuno, Titleist. Integrity, Quality, and Trustworthiness. While the approaches may differ, each has built a reputation based on quality and integrity. Those two are likely the cause, while this (Trustworthy) is likely the effect.

Callaway was more of a factor this time around. TaylorMade (3.33%) didn’t climb out of the white, and only .62% of respondents chose PXG.

Modern

To a degree, this chart is the inverse of the last several. PXG was selected most often, while Cobra was selected with a slightly higher frequency than Callaway. TaylorMade was also chosen by a significant percentage of respondents.

PING is often regarded as steady, sometimes innovative, but not necessarily modern. Mizuno and Titleist aren’t known to push the envelope, though I suspect both would factor heavily if we included words like traditional, classic, or timeless. I think I said the same thing last year.

Humble

Industry leaders frequently speak of staying humble. By the looks of it, you’re not buying it. Callaway finished near the bottom (just ahead of TaylorMade and PXG), though I suspect all of the above are good with whatever perceptions you have, so long as you keep buying their stuff.

For the first time, we see Wilson and Srixon/Cleveland pop. Mizuno (27%) and PING (25%) again topped the chart, though it’s reasonable to surmise that Humble might be interpreted as a synonym for quiet. Callaway and TaylorMade make a lot of noise both in terms of Hype and moving the market, so there’s an argument to be made for staying humble, just not too humble.

A word about Cobra

For those looking to spot any sort of quiet trend; note that Cobra was the only brand to receive a higher percentage of selections for every positive word in the 2019 survey than it did in the 2018 survey. All the good things…it’s up across the board.

The Bad

With the positive stuff out of the way, let’s dig into our negative adjectives. Again, we expect that bigger brands will register with greater frequency. It’s when smaller brand emerge that real questions emerge.

Hype

TaylorMade on top here isn’t any particular surprise, though with 40% of survey respondents picking the brand, it’s fair to wonder if it’s inching closer to the wrong kind of tipping point. Callaway at 20% is reasonable given its market position, while PXG at over 25% is overperforming, though perhaps not in the most flattering way.

Flipping things a bit, PING, and Titleist are notable for being among the industry leaders and apparently avoided an association with some of the negatives that often accompany success in the golf market.

Gimmick

To a degree, visible technology and gimmick have become synonymous in golf, so we’d expect the brands with the moving parts, twisted faces, and screws to factor heavily in the results. While I’d argue that it’s not a gimmick if it works, the degree to which any of latest generation of eye candy has any significant impact on performance is certainly open to debate.

Marketing

Perhaps unfairly, marketing is a bit of a dirty word in the golf equipment industry. I suspect it started with smaller brands selling their warez on the premise that they put ALL of their money into R&D, while the big guys spend much theirs on marketing. Oh, the horror. Math working as it does, 5% of a massive budget is still significantly more than 20% of almost no budget, but I digress…

The two leaders on the club side account for over 80% of responses, is roughly the same as it was in the 2018 survey. Titleist and PING are both below 10% again, followed by PXG around 5%.

Follower

The good news for the industry as a whole is that you again choose None of the Above. All things considered, the responses are relatively balanced with the exception of Wilson who jumped up significantly from 10.5 percent in 2018 to 16.5 percent this time around.

We may have cause to talk about this again, but I believe you can chalk this up to what I call the Cortex Conundrum. Driver vs. Driver 2, and the final product that came out of it (the Cortex), inarguably raised brand awareness. The downside is that the final product was a driver that inarguably resembled every TaylorMade driver dating back to the SLDR. For challenger brands to make an impact, they need to distinguish themselves and there’s a case to be made that while the TV show helps the company do that that, the final product doesn’t.

Deceptive

Score another one for None of the Above. TaylorMade ticks up a bit from 2018, while Callaway ticks down by a more significant margin. PING and Titleist again barely register, while PXG (down a bit from last year), still factors more than you’d expect given its limited time in the industry. I suspect that many remain skeptical of the brand, and so perceptions will likely continue to be more negative than positive until such time as it proves itself. For what it’s worth, the GEN2 lineup is absolutely a big step in the right direction.

Inferior

I’m just speculating, and I’d love to hear from you as to why you chose who you chose. My thinking here is that this is almost entirely cost driven. Both Wilson and Tour Edge make good equipment. Like everybody else, some products are better than others, and some years are better than others. That said, both have finished on top in Most Wanted tests at one time or another.

Building on the idea that price point might explain things, it’s notable that Wilson priced the Cortex at $500, seemingly in an attempt to shed the cheap label it got ostensibly by selling box sets at Walmart. Tour Edge is heading the other direction. It’s embracing lower prices and actively seeking to serve the serious golfer on a budget. Is that inferior or just sensible? The reality is that performance is often equated with price, and so stuff that costs less is sometimes assumed to be lower performing.

Dishonest

It’s an admittedly fine line between Deceptive and Dishonest, so it’s not surprising that this chart is a toned down version of the Deceptive chart. None of the Above wins again.

Uninspired

There’s quite a bit unpack here – in fact, this may be the most interesting of all the results. Wilson is down a bit from last year, which is nice, but, in your eyes anyway, remains in need of inspiration. I believe things are moving in the right direction, but it’s going to take some time before those efforts reach the mainstream.

Tour Edge and Srixon are both above 10%, while Titleist is notable for being the most uninspired of the big brands.

The one that intrigues me most, however, is Bridgestone. After a leadership change, the company seems to be on the right track. It has Tiger and Bryson on its roster, and a new and improved ball fitting platform can only be good for the brand. Oh, and based on the chatter we’ve heard, something big is coming for next season.

That said, I think golfers – at least our readers – want Bridgestone to, as my grandmother used to say,  shit or get off the pot with its club offerings. With the exception of its blades, its most recent run of metalwood and iron releases have been mostly meh. The ball is great, but I’d like to see the company do something or nothing with the clubs. This in-between stuff is, well, uninspired.

Arrogant

$400 (each) irons, an unproven track record, and boisterous billionaire telling you his clubs are The Duck’s Nuts; even if I don’t agree with the group assessment, I understand where the perception comes from. The result isn’t a surprise, though it’s interesting that PXG ticked up just a bit this year, even after it lower metalwood prices (though I’m not sure everyone realizes that happened).

TaylorMade climbing past Titleist is a surprise. Both brands have made significant changes in over the last couple of years. Today’s Titleist is more accessible and open (dare I say, likeable) than it has been in the past, and while the observation of a less stuffy brand may be lost on the average golfer, the drop is nevertheless interesting. TaylorMade appears to be undergoing a transformation of its own, and while I can’t say exactly where this perception comes from, my feeling is that as its competitors have actively engaged consumers in an attempt to forge genuine relationships, TaylorMade has remained disproportionately focused on its tour staff, and itself. There are signs that things are changing, however. Whether perceptions will change as a result remains to be seen.

The Trends

Positive vs. Negative (Year-Over-Year)

Finally, we wanted to take a look at the trends from 2018 to 2019. Which brands received a greater percentage of the results for our positive descriptors, and which saw an uptick in the negative.

Positive Trends

I suppose we can squash any notion of brand fatigue, as the results show that Callaway’s share of the positive responses increased by 9%. PING climbed by 7%, while Cobra (22%) and Tour Edge were up significantly, though, in Tour Edge’s case, its share of the positive responses was still below 2%.

Wilson dropped by 22%, Bridgestone was down 30%, which, allowing for Tour Edge as the outlier, could suggest that the market place is becoming increasingly more challenging for smaller brands. PXG (-13%) also dipped by double-digit figures.

Negative Trends

Look at trends on the negative side, Bridgestone received 27% more responses to negative descriptors than last year. I’m hard-pressed to explain it, other than to wager that the positive steps it has taken over the last several months haven’t trickled out to the market just yet. Wilson (17% change) and TaylorMade (13% change) also received a greater percentage of the responses to words with negative connotations.

Turning negatives into positives, Cobra was selected 17% less often for negative words, while Callaway and Titleist were chosen 14% less often. PING, and somewhat surprisingly, PXG, each dipped, which I suppose is the same as improved, by 9%. In the case of PXG, it could suggest that the brand is becoming a little less polarizing.

The YOY Data

Because the chart above is admittedly a little cluttered, here’s the table view of the same data.

What Do You Make of the Survey Results?

What surprised you and to what do you attribute the performance of certain brands? Let us know in the comment section below.

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

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      Ben

      3 years ago

      I know I’m a bit tardy to the party, but great article! Thought all of the data was equal parts interesting and somewhat predictable. I’d love to see another survey for the 2019-2020 seasons to see where companies like cobra and Cleveland went. I’d also like to see a chart with specific clubs and what brand comes to mind for each type. Like drivers: ? Irons: ? Wedges: ? Putter: ? Hybrid: ? Apparel: ? Etc.

      Reply

      Morse

      5 years ago

      More credit to Wilson, please. They may be “uninspired,” but for myself, and the others I know who use their equipment, it all works. My c200 irons strike incredibly well, and my D300 3-wood can put it on a green from 200+ out with ridiculous regularity – easy to hit and accurate.
      From my perspective, a lot of the “innovation” is merely marketing. Just my opinion, but I’ve found that investing in less-expensive clubs and parlaying those savings into a quality lesson or two… or three… makes a world of difference, if you truly want to improve. (Oh, and a lot of practice.)

      Reply

      JIMM

      5 years ago

      It’s always tough for the little guy to compete, in any market. And it’s especially difficult to penetrate the golf market without widespread access to your product(s). To my mind, this survey supports that opinion. This, I believe, is what hurts Bridgestone, Tour Edge and, to a lesser extent, Srixon. I did a lot of review reading and research before I started hitting different manufacturers’ hybrids in 2017. In my case, the finalists were Tour Edge and Ping. The Tour Edge Exotics EX10 hybrids beat out Ping’s G hybrids. I play Ping i200 irons (which replaced my Ping i20 irons) and was replacing a set of Ping G25 hybrids.. The Tour Edge hybrids are simply awesome. They’re long, forgiving and can dig the ball out of any lie. The ball really pops off the face. I believe they did it by utilizing their design success in producing outstanding Fairways. In any case, they did it. IMO, these are simply the best hybrids around. I believe that if more people had the awareness of, and the opportunity to test drive, Tour Edge clubs, TE might have difficulty keeping up with the demand. The EXS driver did well in the 2019 Most Wanted Driver tests. Maybe I’m missing something, but I don’t see how 1 mph in ball speed, 100 rpm in spin and 2 yds in carry justifies the additional $200-$250 for the M6 or Epic Flash. Good luck Tour Edge and keep up the good work.

      Reply

      Tap In

      5 years ago

      I’m not too surprised by most of these results. I was a little shocked by the amount of love handed to PING. They are a great company and make good products but I have a hard time chalking some of these results up to anything other than brand loyalty. Another thing that jumped out to me is the demographic in relation to the results. Most respondents are decent golfers over 30, and as such aren’t looking for the value set of clubs and generally don’t even consider that segment of the market. This puts Wilson, Bridgestone and Tour Edge at a disadvantage and perceived as having uninspired products even though most people have never played them. That said, I think that MGS is doing a lot to change some of those perceptions with the testing and reviews. For example, how many would have bought the $100 Tommy Armour putter before it topped the Most Wanted list? Well done MGS.

      Reply

      mackdaddy

      5 years ago

      I think people are missing the boat an several of the lesser seen brands. I find it funny that Mizuno is seen in so much more positive a light than Srixon. I think the Srixon irons have the same amazing soft double stamp forged feel and playability, they have a great look with the same thin top line. The Cleveland wedges are amazing. They have better hollow filled long irons than Mizuno. I am a huge fan of Mizuno and Srixon irons. I play KZG irons but I just got fit for a 5 and 6 iron replacement from Srixon Z U85’s They feel like butter and are far more forgiving and at least 7 yards longer than the sticks they are replacing with the same lofts.

      Reply

      Spitfisher

      5 years ago

      Not much love for TM , yet their products time and time again are right there in price, volume and high performance rated. Is it the brand people “love to hate” but still buy. But still can’t argue with the performance?

      This survey is interesting to look at, decipher and read into. However if the survey was say on automotive brands/models. I can assure you would see the same bar graphs involving certain popular brands in both a positive and negative light. This survey is emotional based. which is fine.

      In summary older guys age 39+ with decent game 6 to 15 handicap. Both groups own the lion share of opinions and perception. So all the negativity towards say a brand like taylormade could very well be based on experience for 10-15 years ago and not so much in the present. Our negitive preceptions stay with us for a very long time. And yet if you look at some of the clubs that ranked high in innovation, they all share many of the design influences that taylormade pioneered thru “go to market” strategies.

      Reply

      Shankster

      5 years ago

      Man… no love for Taylormade. I don’t think their schedule or quality is any worse than the other big brands, and my dealings with their customer service were nothing short of top notch.

      Reply

      THOMAS

      5 years ago

      I’m in the market for a new set. Always have played Titliest, never looked at any other brand, but after this survey reading I am now exposed to other brand manufactures. I better lokk around , especially Wilson and Exotics
      Great Stuff – Excellent work
      Thanx Tony

      Reply

      Dave S.

      5 years ago

      How did you get “I better look at Wilson” out of this survey? If anything, it’s saying the opposite.

      Reply

      Andrew

      5 years ago

      Whether or not he got it from this survey (and why would this survey matter in one’s choices- it’s a consumer PERCEPTION survey!) Wilson is definitely a brand to look at, from ball to driver, bag to glove, Wilson products perform with or better than the others. FG tour V6 anyone?

      Brad

      5 years ago

      This is mostly in line with I would expect and is similar to my own perception of the marketplace. With the one exception being the “inferior” label attributed to Wilson and Tour Edge by readers in the survey. Both of these companies make some very high quality gear, and also have lines in lower price brackets – unlike some other major brands. But I wouldn’t label their equipment cheap or inferior. It is most likely a price-quality relationship influencing opinions here, as was suggested.

      In Wilson’s case, they also make some quite inexpensive equipment targeted at beginners or the rank amateur who might play a handful of times a year and doesn’t have much money to spend. This is a market that very much needs to be served or new golfers simply will be unable to enter, or will have yet another entry barrier to the game beyond the normal time constraints, access to clubs, rules complexity, dress codes, etc. that new golfers often have to deal with. If other golfers look at a set of Wilson clubs and scoff at the “rubbish” they’re playing with, that would really be a shame. That’s what incorrect perceptions can do though.

      We all need to support companies making inexpensive equipment with reasonable levels of quality, even if they aren’t our preferred brand, by not saying derogatory things about them just because they don’t make irons that sells or $250 per.

      Otherwise, we might find participation in golf just falls right off a cliff in 20-30 years.

      Reply

      Morse

      5 years ago

      Well said.

      Reply

      Pkcpga

      5 years ago

      TaylorMade having the most negative perception doesn’t surprise me, their new clubs seem gimmicky and they seem to push their tour pros and ads on you. While other manufacturers seem to offer free professional fittings and try to prove results with professional fittings over your current clubs. While Taylor would rather advertise and show tour pros instead of showing you why it’s a better club in a free fitting.

      Reply

      Spitfisher

      5 years ago

      PKCPGA, you need to get out more, every brand offers “free” fitting at some compacity at local clubs, ranges, big box stores and mstand alone golf shops. These fittings days are not limited to high population or urban areas either. Taylormade, Callaway, Titleist perhaps are the most visable in this area of fitting, all invest a ton of money to training sales employees, staff-pros, PGA professionals, & field techs.

      Seriously where have you been?

      Reply

      Vince

      5 years ago

      Sure they do but it’s utterly useless if all they are doing is trying to fit you with only their clubs, a subset of what’s actually available from all manufacturers. Same with ball fittings, they only (theoretically) identify which of their products works best for you. These fitting scams are going to be of little benefit to the 15 indexer that rarely makes two identical swings in a row and rarely makes center of face contact.

      News flash – these manufacturers are not in the business of fitting you, they are in the business of selling equipment. Take TM for example, the M1 and M2 were now the greatest innovation that TM has ever come up with. Of course, that was until they came up with M3 and M4, which twisted your face to better drives. But wait, TM has a better idea now, just a few short months later, it’s injecting sound dampening material into the club head and calling it a “dial back the COR” move. What horse movement.

      You might comment that fitters like Club Champion, Cool Clubs and others do a better job because they aren’t brand-specific but the reality of it is that they want to sell you clubs, not identify the best club for you. I won’t say which, but after 3 hours of fitting at one of them not a single person their could tell me why the 475 dollar shaft they wanted me to purchase was that much better, or better at all, than the stock shaft in my driver, which in fact worked well for me according to the launch monitors. Now 7 or 8 years later than the last one I again went for fitting, this time bringing my G400 and G400 Max heads, stiff and a regular stock Ping shafts, several other quality shafts by other manufacturers, and the originally recommended 475 dollar shaft that I bought a year later for less than half the original price. My instructions were clear – to test and find the best combination of what I already have in my possession. They were falling all over themselves trying to come up with some way to sell me something that really had no measurable effect on my game.

      Claims of 20+ yard increases in distance post fitting are a fallacy, there’s not a single major manufacturer making clubs that don’t already perform at the max COR, it’s swing speed that increases distance, period, and unless the driver or shaft is increasing your swing speed by 10 MPH, you are not going to get these gains, period. You’d get better results getting resistance bands and working hard with those to increase flexibility and when you’re done with that, take some lessons.

      Best way to test clubs? Find a retailer like one of the Worldwide Golf Shop associated stores or PGA Tour Superstore or any other that offers 90 day store credit on money back. Then purchase and test the club for up to 88 days against your current equipment and if there’s no appreciable change for your efforts then there’s no reason to change anything. Unless you have some need to drop 500 dollars every 6 months on the latest hype.

      mvpmich

      5 years ago

      I was interested to see how low Callaway rated against Titleist in the Integrity, Quality and Trustworthyness categories. Additionally, they are rated more disceptive than Titleist and equal when it comes to the Inferior rating. Having owned both brands and having to deal with warranty and customer service rep from both companies, I can say from experience that it’s the direct opposite. Callaway customer service is second to none.

      Reply

      Dave B

      5 years ago

      Excellent survey, and I enjoyed participating. You should be gratified by the participation rate — it shows people respect MGS and have strong opinions about OEMS. My only quibble is the absence of an “all of the above” response. Good job, guys!

      Reply

      Mac

      5 years ago

      Like a few have said, I’d love to see some of the data broken out by age. Is the PING love a result of older golfers? What age group prefers PXG. Etc.

      Reply

      Heather D

      5 years ago

      How many of your respondents were women? You should split that data out.

      Reply

      Spitfisher

      5 years ago

      Less than 10% of all golfers are women, although important the survey is emotional based. Males buy far more clubs and are exposed to more brands than women. Even the OEM advertising is steered towards male’s wallet. This isn’t a slam against women but much of that 10% has limited exposure to the brands themselves resulting in a lot of “not sures”, ” I don’t know” “never heard of them”. ” my boyfriend plays them” ” my mom passed me down a set of Lady king cobras 20 years ago”…etc. IMO the rest of the women who are in tune with current brands, clubs and experiences would respond simular to their male counter parts picks. In otherwords PXG would still get the arrogance award for both male and female. The lion share of the respondants were 39+ older and lower handicap players the results would be the same IMO.

      Reply

      Heather D

      5 years ago

      Spitfisher – no offense, but your 10% is low. According to Golf.com (May 2018) 24% of the 23.8 million golfers, were female (5.8 million).

      Mike

      5 years ago

      The Wilson point is interesting to me. They are the MGS comeback company of the year, and their responses lean toward the negative. Tracking their equipment performance, its clearly on the rise.
      Is this rise in “negative” response a net positive, because more people are thinking of them, or is it because they just aren’t following through with the marketing story to support their better equipment?

      Reply

      The Sheriff

      5 years ago

      and that is why I buy Ping. great products, customer service second to none!

      Reply

      Francisco

      5 years ago

      Seeing the positives vs negatives, PING is the real winner here. Toping in nearly every positive word and not scoring on the bad ones.
      Clap clap!

      Reply

      TC

      5 years ago

      Very well done.

      Future idea – would like to see a survey on where modern players buy their equipment and why. For example, I’m the habit of buying recently released equipment from online retailers that offer full credit on returns within 90 days.

      Reply

      drb1956

      5 years ago

      I am currently playing a 10 year driver and my irons are not far behind. I’m one of those who does not buy into the hype year in, year out. Clubs come and go, as do the ball models. I am currently looking at a new driver, and will probably not buy my current brand. Tour Edge has peaked my interest, as in tech, as well as value. I can’t afford to buy at the retail that the big companies charge. I will get fitted for this driver, and will try other brands, but the best value for the money will win out.

      Reply

      Spitfisher

      5 years ago

      You really ought to try some new equipment, there have been huge advances in every area especially for recreational golfers. You don’t have to buy new, a year 2 or 3 still new in the wrapper & it will be fairly cheap. Good luck.

      Reply

      Timbo

      5 years ago

      I love this content! I get super geeked out about it. As a marketing and brand leader consulting for a wide variety of companies it is so fun to dive into this. I’d love to have access to the raw data to throw together a bunch of other charts comparing based on age and handicap demographics.

      While I’m not loyal to one golf brand myself there is no doubt brand perception plays a role in what I’ve tested and not tested for sure. Other factors like accessibility might also play into trying out new equipment and trying what can lead to changing an individuals POV. I think brands like Bridgestone, Wilson, Tour Edge and the likes might see perceptions shift when someone can hold, feel, test their products.

      Reply

      John

      5 years ago

      Srixon is incredibly underrated. They make great products. Lack of ability seems to hurt them.

      Reply

      Hartrick11

      5 years ago

      Interesting read. Happy to see Cobra moving up the charts! Their equipment is the real deal and has been for a while now. I think the hate may have gone to far on Taylormade though. Seems like they are still paying for past sins…

      Reply

      P.J.

      5 years ago

      I find it interesting that Taylormade is seen as gimmicky. The steel head driver, weighted ports and adjustable lofts were all called gimmicks – yet now they are the standard. Face slots in irons, speed slots in driver/woods, inverted cones in the faces, etc have all been adapted into other company designs.
      Maybe the ‘speed foam’ that Taylormade is doing now won’t work or pan out like they say it does – but you do realize that it’s the same thing that Ping i500’s have in their irons, right?!? But since Ping is doing it, it’s not gimmicky – only the way Taylormade does it?
      And no, I’m not a 100% Taylormade guy – I actually play Mizuno irons and wedges. Just find the opinions and perceptions … interesting and entertaining.

      Reply

      ANDREW

      5 years ago

      i500 is 100% hollow, no “foam”.

      Reply

      P.J.

      5 years ago

      I stand corrected, PXG 0311 have foam injected.
      The Ping’s have the same screw-type opening as the TaylorMade 790’s, but no injected foam.

      Chilly Dip

      5 years ago

      100% fresh Scottsdale air!!!

      FrankP

      5 years ago

      PXG was the first company using the foam injection system for the irons. TaylorMade “stole” the technology from them and use it on their P790 irons.

      Reply

      Spitfisher

      5 years ago

      Frank, wrong on PXG, go look it up.

      Ed

      5 years ago

      Speed slots came from Adams which TaylorMade stole the idea. TaylorMade purchased Adams to avoid the lengthy lawsuit.

      Reply

      Spitfisher

      5 years ago

      Speed slots came from wilson, way ahead of Adams

      DRMock1

      5 years ago

      It’s because Taylormade over plays its technology by over hyping its benefits! It’s not foam injected, it’s “speed” foam injected. “Everyone gets faster” Every driver is 20 yards longer. I don’t mind as I play the older SLDR. Soon I will be purchasing a new driver and it will be the one the performs best for me. Not who plays it on tour or any marketing.

      Reply

      JasonA

      5 years ago

      “Gimmicky” also refers to how technologies are marketed.

      For example tight manufacturing tolerances is a beneficial technology. Bright red face screws marketed as “Speed Injection” is very gimmicky. Especially as those are actually is “slow goop injection ports”.

      Reply

      JasonA

      5 years ago

      Also Google for “taylormade speed slot problems”.

      Are Taylormade doing enough engineering for their annual release cycle? Or do they always need to release the next “new thing” regardless of robustness?

      They very clearly highly *prioritize* having some “gimmick” in their design and engineering process. To the degree that would compromise durability? I’d feel so.

      Reply

      Mike in Pittsburgh

      5 years ago

      I went away from Taylormade because of their constant churn. Every year they claim some huge improvement. I buy clubs more frequently than I should, but it would cost a fortune to keep current with their latest, greatest, much improved hype. In short, they denigrate their own brand by implying that the set I bought last year must be inferior to the flavor of the month model they are flogging this year. If so much improvement is possible, their previous models must be junk by their own words.

      Reply

      ChipNRun

      5 years ago

      I have played solid clubs from several brands the past 10 years. I probably have my most experience with Callaway and Tour Edge. Everyone knows about Callaway, so I will focus on Tour Edge.

      TE makes great clubs that few know about!

      Onetime tour pro David Glod founded TE in 1986 with the goal of providing well designed clubs to the everyday golfer with its Bazooka line. In 2006, TE launched the Exotics line as an innovator in fairway woods and hybrids.

      TE/Exotics tech innovations included pioneering use of steel maraging and combo brazing of long-club heads to remove dead weight from the hitting area. Also came the titanium cup-face design. This helped deliver FWs with a reputation for being “hot” (long) but easy to hit.

      Most recently, Exotics has delivered the $298 EXS driver, which gets rave reviews despite its lower price.

      For a long time TE did not use player sponsorships – pros that wanted to play Exotics gear wrote TE a check. This has kept prices down, but also clouded its image in the marketplace.

      The past year, TE has signed Champions Tour players Tom Lehman, Duffy Waldorf and three others as Tour Edge Staff players. I’m not sure what all this entails, but it is a move to boost its image.

      Tour Edge has a loyal – almost cult – following among its Exotics FW players, and offers a lifetime warranty for people who buy their clubs. Also, TE has bolstered its Hot Launch line by offering full HL fitting kits to dealers, just as they do for the Exotics.

      Tour Edge makes solid clubs, it’s just a matter of how to increase awareness among golfers amid the 10 other companies in the survey.

      =====================
      Other notes: TE’s David Glod became president of the Web.com Tour in 2017. He had served as the Web.com’s chief of operations since 2014.

      Reply

      Mark

      5 years ago

      With about 58% of people taking the survey over 40 years of age, I am not surprised that Ping is so loved. IMO, they seem to be loved by older ones (The G400 drivers and woods are amazing though). That also seems to correlate with the hate for PXG. I bet most people have never hit a PXG but hate them.

      Taylormade is getting what is coming to them. They do have the best players with their stuff, but that comes down to pay to play.

      It is sad that Wilson cannot get some traction in image. They are turning around, and they do make good stuff now…Perhaps the damage is done when they left the high quality market segment for a while….

      Srixon is a very underrated company, and it may just be lack of availability that makes them obscure. They are amazing.

      Mizuno is really getting it with irons (as they always have) and now the driver is really good.

      I will say this, Callaway is doing it right. They still have too short of a product cycle, but their stuff is the real deal. I never thought I would own a callaway driver or hybrid, but that was the best for me….just wish I would have waited a few months to try the epic…

      I would be curious to see the breakdown between under 40 and over 40. I think there is a huge difference of opinion in those generations in what they think about golf.

      honestly, any one of these companies make great stuff. It comes down to look, feel, and performance to your swing. Anyone who hates a golf company needs to let it go. They are all after our business.

      Reply

      Terry

      5 years ago

      Wilson just needs to come out with a different name, and not something generic like “Tour Edge”

      Reply

      Andrew Han

      5 years ago

      Love the graphics behind each chart that highlights the winner’s product. Those little touches make a difference.

      Reply

      chuck harvey iv

      5 years ago

      I would like to try Wilson , cobra, & others but no outside range to see ball flight etc.. I now play Srixon clubs & sometimes my old Palmer standard blades from 70’s.

      Reply

      Bob D

      5 years ago

      Nicely done Golfspy! The data was very interesting and in some aspects very supersizing.The topics that stuck out to me were the results on quality and integrity. Ping scored well in all those categories, maybe because the fly below the radar and don’t make so many claims that are at best not achievable by the common golfer.

      Reply

      Mark

      5 years ago

      Golf technology and prices have gone through the roof. My first (new) set of golf clubs cost me around $130 in 1981, from K-Mart, Lee Trevino irons and laminated woods, next set was Spalding Executive and then Wilson 1200LT. Inexpensive, but did the job for a beginner, I was 21 when I bought my first set. There needs to be quality inexpensive golf sets for people beginning to play, so they can learn the game of golf without it costing an arm and a leg. This is especially for the kids, who have their parents spend $500+ to get started.

      Reply

      Mark

      5 years ago

      Using an inflation calculator, your 130 back then is 320+ now, we sell 6 different package sets from 199-399 in my shop so I don’t think its too off base to say golf is way out of wack, compare the R7 Quad at 499 in 2002 and Rac os irons at 699 the same year and prices are actually less now than they were then using the cost of inflation. How easy we forget.

      Reply

      Andrew Han

      5 years ago

      A beginner can buy used, plenty of stores now, or get Callaway set from Costco. I did the latter.

      Reply

      T McKinnon

      5 years ago

      I must agree that there is a lot of great lightly used equipment in the market place. The depreciation of most golf equipment is crazy. I have purchased used clubs that are just a couple years old, put new grips on them and they are just like new and cost less than half that of new clubs. I have also sold some nice clubs with custom premium shafts and after just a couple of years of light use, they are only worth 25 to 30 % of what was paid for them. The point is those new players to the game of golf don’t need to spend a fortune to get really good equipment!!! Example, I put together golf sets for my daughter and son-in-law with used equipment from the lost and found bins at the local golf courses – customized the lengths to fit, put new grips on the clubs, got nice bags at the second hand store and presto, for next to nothing they both have nice starter sets for less than $100.00 each.

      Kenny B

      5 years ago

      “…the year-over-year trend suggests our audience is getting a bit younger.” Yes, because we are dying off.

      Interesting results, and I agree with most of them. It also tells me that I’m screwed! I play Wilson Staff at the top of the bag and Bridgestone irons. Guess I just know how to pick ’em! They are both good performers for me though. I can appreciate the results for Bridgestone. They have very little to no presence in stores, at least around here, and their online sales attitude doesn’t inspire confidence. When more companies are going to a trial period to get clubs in people’s hands, Bridgestone discontinued it’s TestDrive program 2 years ago. Not a winning sales approach.

      Reply

      David

      5 years ago

      Bridgestone actually brought back their test drive program this year. It’s a start…

      Reply

      Jerry

      5 years ago

      I don’t agree. Tour Edge got low ratings because people who had no familiarity with them voted their feeling and not experience.

      Reply

      Walter

      5 years ago

      I agree with you 100%. If people have never tried any Tour Edge Exotics woods or hybrids they don’t know what they are missing.

      Reply

      T McKinnon

      5 years ago

      Love! Love! Love! my Exotic fairway woods. They are longest lasting clubs in my bag and I have no interest in playing anything else. I will only give them up when they pry my cold dead fingers off the grips when I’m dead! Period.

      John

      5 years ago

      Having just purchased my first Cobra clubs, I wish I would have taken the survey after experiencing the difference that these clubs have made in my game. Definitely opened my eyes about why I’ve been reading so many good things about Cobra. The best way to describe them is they are a real “sleeper” and will no doubt get overlooked by those who believe all the marketing hype of the big OEMs. Try them and see what you’re missing.

      Reply

      Berniez40

      5 years ago

      It was a fun survey to take, and I find the results interesting, but I imagine that certain makers are frustrated with the results. Seems like Srixon/Cleveland, who make excellent products, got whacked more for their indecision of marketing the Cleveland Brand rather than the actual quality of the clubs. Wilson, who had something really going on there for a while, and I suspect once the D7 stuff has its impact on the market, (hopefullly) they too will no longer be viewed as inferior, Tour Edge, G*d love ’em, came out with some of the most innovative clubs of the year, but man did they get whacked. My game has done nothing but improve over the years, and I play Tour Edge Hybrids, Srixon Irons, and a Wilson Staff ball. I guess” inferior” is in the eye of the beholder, after all, I was fitted for these clubs, and they are not off the rack specs…..and though the Wilson Duo Spin ball is not on everyone’s “must have” list, I find it flies straighter, and gives more consistent performance than almost all the others I have tried.

      Reply

      Rob

      5 years ago

      Thanks for following up with this. Just about every category came out almost identical to how I voted.

      You asked about Wilson and Tour Edge’s high showings in the inferior category. I voted none of the above for that category, as I truly believe every company listed makes quality equipment in at least one segment. That said, i did give some thought to Tour Edge mainly due to past perceptions. I have not hit any of it’s new clubs, but when I think of them it’s hard to shed the first thought that comes to mind the Bazooka line. Same with Wilson, I’m aware enough to know it makes some very good irons/putters and wedges right now, but again the image of Wilson box sets, while a distant memory in my mind,I KNOW is still front and center from other golfers I talk to that aren’t as in-tuned to equipment advances.

      This was an interesting and fun read. The whole thing seems to break down like a playground See Saw to me, with PING/Mizuno on one end and TaylorMade/Callaway on the other with it’s respective up and downs.

      Reply

      Jesse Ross

      5 years ago

      What I see is a positive trend for Ping and Mizuno, which I totally agree with. It would also seem to me that Callaway has still got people fooled but Taylormade is now on the trend that it deserves. Both come with new clubs far too often (why buy now when you can wait a month and get a newer version). Being 75 years old I guess I bitch too much but it is Mizuno, Ping and Titleist for me. At my age I’m sure I scare the other companies very much (ha ha)

      Reply

      Terry

      5 years ago

      Good work Tony. I am not brand loyal and I agree with all of these.

      Reply

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