The price of customer service
Bryce Alderton
Tucked away in one of the few remaining secluded spots in Orange
County lies a golfing jewel that has begun alluring new members from
surrounding cities, including Newport Beach.
Shady Canyon Golf Club in Irvine is nearing its second birthday in
January, but in its short time, the course designed by Tom Fazio --
architect of Pelican Hill Golf Club in Newport Coast -- that sits on
300 of the gated community’s 1,070 acres, has established a
reputation of customer service and top-notch golf that rivals some of
the most exclusive clubs in the world.
People are noticing.
Retired baseball slugger Mark McGwire won the men’s club
championship and is building a custom home on a bluff overlooking the
course. Former major league pitcher Mark Langston is also a member.
About 40% of Shady Canyon’s membership hails from Newport Beach,
Corona del Mar or Newport Coast, according to Robert Leenhouts, the
club’s general manager.
Newport Beach -- with 20% -- has the highest percentage of any
city making up Shady Canyon’s membership. Irvine is second at 19%,
with Newport Coast at 13% and CdM at 7%.
An event introducing the club at the Four Seasons Resort in
Newport Beach in the spring of 2001 kicked off the marketing
department’s push to advertise Shady Canyon, developed by the Irvine
Co., but Leenhouts said word of mouth has been the best marketing
tool.
“Word spreads quickly in the social circle as to the quality of
the club,” he said. “[The club’s opening] wasn’t broadcast. We didn’t
take out full-page advertisements in newspapers.”
Initiation fees for golf memberships start at $185,000 for those
who have purchased property and jump to $220,000 for non-property
owners. Monthly membership dues are $795. Social memberships are also
available.
News of the club reverberated throughout Orange County, especially
among folks at Big Canyon Country Club in Newport Beach.
Of Shady Canyon’s 200-plus members, 12% came from Big Canyon, the
highest percentage among clubs. Newport Beach Country Club came in
second at 11%.
Leenhouts credits proximity, as well as a certain level of
service, as to why golfers have migrated from the Newport-Mesa clubs
to Shady Canyon.
“Big Canyon is a higher-end country club, much like we are,”
Leenhouts said. “Big Canyon is the closest private club to us in
terms of service and initiation fees. People are attracted to us.”
Big Canyon General Manager David Voorhees said there is no
competition between clubs for members because Orange County offers so
many golfing choices.
“So many people like Orange County and they have the wherewithal
to join private clubs,” Voorhees said. “There are more options for
golf in Orange County than there were five years ago. We are not
competing with other clubs for members.”
Membership at Big Canyon, also owned by the Irvine Co., has even
increased in recent months, Voorhees added.
Both Leenhouts and Voorhees characterized relations between Shady
Canyon and Big Canyon as warm. The clubs held the first Canyon Cup
golf tournament last month where club champions from each venue were
paired against one another for a round.
“It falls back to being the new kid on the block,” Leenhouts said.
“A Tom Fazio-designed course is a draw and then the quality of the
facilities and services, that would be the main draw.”
Jerry Anderson, general manager at Newport Beach Country Club,
said Shady Canyon’s prices could also be a deterrent, making other
area clubs more attractive to those who might not be able to afford
the higher rates.
“It hasn’t hurt us. The members would have left anyway,” Anderson
said. “It is like moving from a Ford to a Mercedes.”
An element of stability and friendships are two reasons why
members might stay at their current clubs -- even if they can afford
Shady -- instead of jumping ship, Anderson added.
“People like the golf course and the camaraderie with other
members,” he said. “At well-established clubs, people know everybody
and they know the pattern of the club and how it operates.”
It is hard to argue though, that Shady Canyon’s draw radiates to a
large extent from its ability to cater to members and guests from the
moment they enter the parking lot.
Shady Canyon’s staff greets golfers when they park their cars,
politely asking if they can put the clubs on a cart.
On the driving range, an attendant has a towel ready to wipe off
the grass and mud draped on the clubs. Range balls are Titleists and
they are arranged in a pyramid-shaped pile as seen at professional
events.
You can order lunch at the ninth tee to be ready when you make the
turn and it doesn’t even require picking up a phone receiver.
Club management discourages tipping. An employee could be fired if
they are found to have taken any money.
Newport Coast resident Brian Hirth and wife Lori became members at
Shady Canyon in April 2002, moving from Marbella Country Club in San
Juan Capistrano.
Shady Canyon staff members gave the Hirths a tour of the course
and Brian Hirth said the decision to join the club came soon after
that tour.
“It was and is just a beautiful golf course,” Brian Hirth said.
“Meeting some of the staff and seeing the professionalism, the type
of clubhouse and a lot of the amenities the club provides all became
the deciding factors. Besides the course itself, without a doubt, the
staff is the finest anywhere.”
The 43,000-square-foot, Spanish-styled clubhouse features a golf
shop, men’s and ladies locker rooms with private lounges and card
rooms, a casual grill, a fine dining room, a dining terrace and a
boardroom.
Fazio designed the par-71 course, which measures about 7,000 yards
from the back tees, behind outcroppings of boulders, along Shady
Creek and through scenic elevation changes. The fairways meander
through giant sycamores and oaks while climbing and descending among
the native chaparral. One can see clear across the valley to
surrounding Newport Coast and further west to the Pacific Ocean.
“I looked for a course I knew I would enjoy playing day-in and
day-out,” said Hirth, who plays about three times a week. “There is
nothing worse than getting bored with a course. It’s difficult to get
bored because every time is like the first time you played it.”
Several different tee options provide golfers of any skill level a
challenge.
Director of Golf Brian Gunson held the same position at Turnberry
Golf Club in Ayshire, Scotland, for four years before coming to Shady
Canyon in 2002. Golf Digest ranked Turnberry, which has hosted the
British Open and European Open, as one of the world’s top 20 golf
destinations.
The 300-acre course at Shady Canyon includes large areas of
permanently protected open space, including 63 acres of protected and
maintained coastal sage scrub. The course takes up just 80 of the 300
acres.
Shady Canyon has also been certified as an Audubon Cooperative
Sanctuary for its wildlife and habitat management, chemical-use
reduction and safety, water quality and conservation efforts.
But Hirth, a textile contractor who produces clothing and T-shirts
for large manufacturers, came back to service and how valuable the
staff makes him feel as the main reason he has enjoyed his membership
at Shady Canyon thus far.
“I look for service and personnel, how I am treated and how much
the staff respects working for the club,” Hirth said. “They go way
above the call of duty and that goes for guests you bring.”
As for the price of a certain level of customer service and golf?
“It’s all about what you choose and what you can bite off,”
Anderson said. “Choices are good, healthy. There is nothing wrong
with them.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.