Golf Clubs have Captains. Some have multiple Captains - Club, Ladies, Seniors, Junior and Gents. Most clubs actually struggle nowadays to get a Club Captain let alone any others, but when they do, what is their role?
There is a belief that a Club Captain should be the face of the club, the sounding board for the secretary or manager and/or is the person who chairs meetings. This differs from club to club but what is consistent is that the person elevated to this honoured role often becomes an 'expert' in their own mind, in something of which they have no experience. There are countless examples of clubs everywhere having a club Captain who wants trees removed, bunkers filled in, tees built, changes made to governance and so on, all because that is what that club Captain wants!
Pity the poor employees as they then have a transient 'leader', no consistency to their working life, where some of those appointed are feared due to, for example, incompetency and bullishness, some are liked but most are kept close! In what other line of work would you find this - absolutely none. Golf clubs are businesses, like it or not, as they all have to, at worst, break even, therefore books need balanced. This has always been the case yet, how many times have you heard the phrase 'this used to be a club'? It still is a club, always has been a club, only now it might be professionally run, without disrespecting those who did so/do as volunteers, or as an honorary position, as was mostly the case.
Imagine the time served joiner having an apprentice pitch up and tell him to change his 'working practices' as the apprentice doesn't like them. Duck the flying chisel!
There are any amount of examples that could express the complete nonsense of the way club Captains often believe it is their 'turn' to run the club. If employees at clubs were allowed the free will to speak, which most either fear or just won't, then they would surely ask said club Captain 'How would you like it if I told you how to do your job'? That is probably when the club Captain calls an EGM to get rid of the outspoken upstart.
Make no mistake, there are mostly superb club Captains, and almost all of them have the club at heart and want the best for the club, but why oh why do a minority feel it's their right to batter and cajole the employees into working practices that make no sense, go against common sense and usually against the will of the membership? EGO.
Again, there are many excellent club Captains and some have no choice but to assist running the club, mostly through financial restrictions, and many of those without financial restrictions have Captains who are simply outstanding. They understand parameters, devolved responsibility, when to contribute and when not, and mostly, respect for the employees.
Clubs need Captains but these Captains need to know what their role is. Mostly they are not there to run the club and should stay as far away as possible from that before they make an inevitable mess. Let the managers manage, let the Captains be the figurehead and enjoy their period of being the sounding board. If you see a Captain running your club then you've either got financial restrictions or someone who just loves to be in control, the latter often being more dangerous and damaging than the former.
Will this blog change that pattern - we doubt it, we'd hope it would, but you could share this with your members and see what feedback you get?