Delivering a pro shop refurb on a budget without losing the wow factor

Hallamshire’s budget-friendly shop refurb shows how smart thinking can elevate first impressions and strengthen the entire club experience.


A pro shop refurb can be easy to dismiss as a cosmetic project or a retail play. For many golf clubs, it sits awkwardly in the investment hierarchy: highly visible and central to the member and visitor journey, yet difficult to justify purely on retail margins.

At Hallamshire Golf Club in Sheffield, however, the recent transformation of the pro shop was driven by a broader goal. The aim was not simply to sell more products, but to strengthen what General Manager James Glover calls “the Hallamshire experience” — ensuring the club makes the right impression from the moment someone arrives.

“The pro shop is the first port of call for so many people visiting the club,” he said. “You only get one chance to make a good first impression. If the first thing people see is something that feels mediocre, you’re on the back foot straight away.”

The refurbishment forms part of a longer journey at Hallamshire. Since arriving as GM in 2018, Glover has overseen improvements across the club’s facilities and services, from the clubhouse environment to golf course presentation. The aim has been to ensure the entire operation works at the same standard.

Before returning to Yorkshire, where he started out as an Assistant Pro at Rotherham, Glover spent time at Royal Portrush and almost nine years at Queenwood, rising to the role of Head Pro. Those experiences helped shape his thinking around standards and consistency.

“There’s a difference between experiencing great service as a customer and understanding what goes into delivering it operationally,” he explained. “Working in those environments helped me develop that understanding.

“For a club to operate properly, all the key elements have to work at the same level. There’s the golf course, the clubhouse services and the golf services. If one of those is operating well below the others, it drags the whole experience down.”

That was the challenge Hallamshire eventually faced with its shop. While other areas of the club had been upgraded over time, the retail space had not evolved at the same pace.

“Whenever you improve something, the things you haven’t improved start to look worse,” Glover said. “We’d improved the clubhouse, the catering, the course presentation, but the shop hadn’t kept up. You almost had to wait to be impressed.”

Rather than presenting the issue as a problem, the club’s leadership approached the project with a clear vision of the outcome.

“We sold the vision rather than bemoaning the problem,” he said. “The conversation was about how the shop could match the rest of the club and complete the overall experience.”

One of the biggest hurdles many clubs face with refurbishment projects is cost. Early quotes for a traditional pro shop fit-out quickly highlighted that challenge.

“Some of the quotes we saw were eye-watering,” Glover acknowledged. “When you’re looking at £60,000 or £70,000 before you’ve even started adding anything special, that’s very hard to justify for an in-house shop.”

Instead of abandoning the project, Hallamshire simply reconsidered how it could achieve the desired result.

“The first thing a lot of people do is search for specialist golf shop refurbishment companies,” he explains. “They do a great job, but they’re expensive. For a normal members’ club you’ve got to think differently.”

The club instead built much of the shop’s retail structure using modular display units from a mainstream low-cost retailer, then combined them with bespoke finishing touches, lighting and a redesigned counter to create a more contemporary layout.

“It was about parking the preconceptions of what a golf shop refurb should look like,” Glover said. “When you focus on the layout, the presentation and how the space works, you can achieve something really good without spending huge money.”

The entire project was delivered for under £10,000.

“When you compare that to some of the numbers we’d seen initially, it suddenly becomes a very different conversation,” he said.

Just as importantly, the approach allowed the club to move quickly and flexibly. By using readily available materials and drawing on expertise within its membership, the refurbishment was completed without lengthy lead times.

“Golf clubs often have a lot of expertise sitting within their membership,” Glover said. “If you’re willing to talk to people and bounce ideas around, you can often find really good solutions.”

The early response has been positive. Retail performance has improved, helped by better visibility and merchandising of stock. But for Glover, the wider impact is the real measure of success.

“It’s not just a pound, shillings and pence return. It’s how people feel,” he said. “If someone walks in and the environment feels bright, organised and welcoming, it immediately puts them in a good mood.

“When people feel good about where they are, they relax and enjoy themselves. That might mean they buy something in the shop, but it might also mean they stay for lunch or have another drink after the round. Those knock-on effects are very real, even if they’re hard to track and measure.”

The refurbishment has also improved the working environment for the professional team running the shop.

“The lads working in there now have a space they’re proud of,” Glover said. “It’s cleaner, brighter and better organised, and that naturally feeds into how they present the shop and welcome people.”

Hallamshire’s delivery of an eye-catching club shop refurb on a smart budget shows that making such improvements does not necessarily require a major capital outlay.

“You don’t need massive budgets to raise standards,” Glover said. “If you’re clear about what you want the experience to be and you’re prepared to challenge a few assumptions, you can create something that really works.”

And in his view, the importance of the club shop goes far beyond the retail figures.

“It’s not just retail,” he concluded. “It’s the start of the whole experience — and if you get that right, everything else flows from it.”


Key Takeaways

  • Sell the vision, not just the problem
    Showing what a space could become can be more persuasive than simply listing what needs fixing.
  • Challenge assumptions around refurbishment costs
    Creative thinking and off-the-shelf solutions can deliver excellent results on modest budgets.
  • Remember the shop’s role in the overall experience
    A strong first impression can influence spending, enjoyment and perceptions across the entire club visit.

By GCMA Content Team

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