As you may have noticed, we’ve published more limited-edition golf ball stories this season than any year prior. Callaway has been exceptionally busy. TaylorMade has contributed its fair share. Vice and Bridgestone have dropped a few as well.
And Titleist? Well, unless you want to count Left Dot and the AIM stuff, Titleist has been mostly Titleist, which helps explain what the other guys are doing.
Somebody cares
While some of you comment that a given design is cool, we also get comments like “nobody cares” and “nobody is buying this stuff.” Anecdotally, a good bit of the negative comes from Europe, so there may be a cultural component to this.
Look, guys, we have links in our stories and we’re able to track clicks and purchases. While it’s fair to say none of these limited designs is going to end the existence of plain white balls any time soon, it’s also objectively false that nobody buys them or nobody cares.
You may not care, but you are not the market as a whole.
Do any of these designs matter?
The short answer is “yup.”
For brands like Bridgestone, Callaway and TaylorMade who have near-total control of their production lines, the cost to create limited-edition designs is relatively minimal and limited only by each brand’s individual printing capabilities (and the occasional licensing cost).
Simply put, it’s not hard to crank out limited-edition designs and that leaves brands with a lot of freedom to tap into absolutely anything that could resonate with the golfer.
Are you a fan of major championship golf? There are a lot of balls for that.
Canadian pride? Yup, you betcha.
American pride? Hell yeah!
1980s-era video games? Why not?
Pizza (see above) and beer and more beer (and wine, too)? Of course.
Aliens, sharks, slasher films, dinosaurs? It has absolutely been a year.
Regardless of the design, the intent is singular. It’s to tap into something—absolutely anything—that resonates with you enough to entice you to buy a ball you may not have tried previously.
The real strategy
Because that’s the thing. Whether it’s a new driver or a new golf ball, if a manufacturer can just get you to try it, there’s a decent chance you’ll like it. Maybe you’ll even love it. And, in either case, that means you might just buy more (and, by extension, not buy somebody else’s product). Many of you tell us you can’t tell the difference between balls anyway so why not play something fun?
Said another way, limited-edition seemingly goofy designs create a never-ending stream of opportunities for challenger brands to get their foot in the door.
Titleist is still the nearly uncontested leader in the golf ball category. While no single limited-edition design is going to change that, challenger brands see them as an opportunity to slowly nibble away at market share.
One hot dog-themed ball at a time.
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