Golf Isn't Optional if You Want to Play Bigger in Business
Deals happen on the course. Relationships are built there. Access is created there. If you’re not in the foursome, you’re not in the conversation.
The Thing No One Says Out Loud
Men have been using golf to build relationships and move business forward for decades.
Not because they’re better at golf and yet because they understand how to use the environment.
Women?
We’ve either been:
- left out
- unsure how to step in
- or told “just get better at golf” like that’s the answer
It’s not.
This isn’t about your swing.
It’s about:
- how you show up
- how you handle yourself
- how you build connection
- and whether you know what to do with the opportunity once you’re there
The 4-Hour Advantage You're Missing
In a world of rushed meetings and constant follow-up…
Golf is still one of the only places where:
🔹people slow down🔹
🔹guards come down🔹
🔹real conversations happen🔹
You get four hours with someone.
Not 20 minutes.
Not a Zoom call.
FOUR. HOURS.
And what you do with that time matters.
– Let’s Be Clear –
You don’t need to be great at golf.
However, you do need to:
➜ not feel awkward showing up
➜ not spiral after a bad shot
➜ not sit quietly hoping someone talks to you
➜ not leave thinking “I should have said something…”
Because that’s where the opportunity gets lost.
The Numbers Tell the Story
The income gap between women who do and don’t golf.
Fortune 500 CEOs who play golf for business.
Women who say they feel left out because they don’t play.