Ping Golf Club Serial Number Lookup
The cynic will say that the main goal of any golf company is consumer cash extraction. If a company doesn't make money, then it doesn’t stay in business. Desire for profit may be a common golf company motive, but I hold out hope for more. What if a golf company realized that it was making equipment for people to play the hardest game in the world, and realizing this, merged the desire to be profitable with a true desire to help golfers play better?
In other words, is it possible for a company to take the consumers money while actually still really caring about helping the consumer play better golf? Baixaki Livro Como Conquistar As Pessoas Pdf. Could PING be such a company? PING has been in the golf business a long time, and yet as I traveled with Tim to Phoenix, I felt that I didn’t have a solid read on them as a company, nor where they fit in with the other major golf companies. Thus, my simple goal from the visit was to answer this question. What is PING Golf all about?
Sep 07, 2012 Hi I wonder is there anyone on the board that can check Ping serial numbers. Ping Serial # Authentication. There is for human beings but not sure about golf. May 30, 2012 ping serial numbers. I3s the company changed its method of inscribing serial numbers on its clubs. Like Golf Galaxy have access to Ping's. GOLF CLUB REPAIR FORM Order. Serial Numbers: The PING Repair Department will contact you via telephone or email with repair charge information after your.
I think that many of us have impressions of what the major companies in golf are all about. • TaylorMade is the goliath in the industry, whose marketing and product releases have made them the one to catch in recent years. • Callaway is in a #fiveyearwar to be the next number one company, and they have used social media very effectively to increase sales and to keep the golfing consumer aware of their master plan and equipment sorties. • Cobra’s youthful, and colorful palate, targets the younger golfer demographic, while also dramatically improving their products in recent years.
• Wilson Staff shares the longevity of PING, and has recently made strides to place them back in the equipment conversation. Well at some point the deep pocket giant will really invest time and capital in the golf industry, and when they do, the whole landscape will be covered in swoosh. But where does PING fit in?
Is PING a covert-op company, working on market domination outside of the public scrutiny? Is PING the steady market tortoise, with the others more erratic hares? While the other companies battle each other for market supremacy, is PING just out in the desert following its own agenda? Or, is PING about something else altogether? Tim and I intended to find out.
Dawn in the Desert As you can see from the schedule below, our day at PING was going to start very early in the morning. My workday normally starts early, but 7:00 was even a little early for me to get the gears rolling. We rallied though. Lots to see, lots to do, and only one day to see and do it. 7:00 AM – 7:45 AM: Travel to PING HQ & Breakfast When we drove into the PING HQ lot, the size of the golf operation at the Phoenix plant became impressively apparent.
Karsten Solheim established the Phoenix HQ with one building back in the 1960’s. To say that it has grown since then is an understatement. That first building is the little gray one at the intersection of West Desert Cove Avenue and 21 st Avenue. As their operations and the company grew, Karsten purchased additional buildings and properties adjacent to the original shop.
Now, decades later, the PING facility takes up two whole city blocks. From Google Maps After signing in, our guide pointed out Karsten Solheim’s first Bridgeport milling machine, transported to Phoenix from PING's Redwood City origins. While it was cool to see the old machine, the story that goes with it is that this machine was cooler. Karsten borrowed $1100 to buy this machine, and that was the only time he ever borrowed money for his business! Not having to borrow to fund growth seems like an amazing, and very uncommon business plan. Maybe other companies have followed similar financial paths, but I kind of doubt it. On our way to the cafeteria for breakfast, we passed through cubicle pods, all arranged by workgroups.
Though the workspace looks a lot like a typical cubicle farm, there are also touches of PING history here and there, covertly (or maybe overtly) celebrating the milestones of Karsten Solheim and his company. It may have been 7:30 AM, or so, but there were lots of people already working. Maybe this is a scheduling plan to beat the AZ heat, or maybe it reflects that PING is a global operation and customers have needs at other locations, and times worldwide. Probably both. Our quick bagel breakfast in the PING cafeteria was tasty and efficient.