A Q&A With PGA Professionals: Maximizing Tournament Sponsorships
This installment of GolfStatus’ PGA Q&A blog series dives into how your tournament’s host golf facility can help maximize sponsorships. Hear from in-house PGA Professionals Cash Dinkel, PGA, and Jason Meininger, PGA, about sponsorships based on their experiences running outside events at golf facilities.
Q: How can the golf facility assist with providing sponsor exposure at our tournament?
Cash Dinkel: The facility can help a ton because they control the flow of the day and the “real estate” sponsors want. The biggest thing is allowing and coordinating sponsor touchpoints in the right places, like registration, practice areas, cart staging, on-course holes, and post-round space, so exposure points are high and everything still looks clean and professional.
Jason Meininger: Most courses will help events give sponsors more exposure by adding logos to scorecards, cart signs, and the live leaderboard. Plus, you can put logos on pin flags on every hole, hole signs on tee boxes, and banners in high-traffic areas (which course staff can help identify).
Q: What are some ways we can work with the golf facility to get creative with sponsor exposure?
Cash Dinkel: Beyond standard tee signs, you can tie sponsors to moments golfers actually remember, for example, “Lunch Presented By,” “Range Presented By,” hydration stations, cart signs, contest holes, photo backdrops at awards, or a sponsor presence at the turn. The key is making it feel natural for the facility and not cluttered.
Jason Meininger: Ask course staff where the highest traffic areas are, so you know where to display materials for the most exposure. Also, be sure to ask about the ability to put logos on golf carts, beverage carts, the driving range, practice green, etc. These are all great spots on the course to sell sponsorships.
Q: Can the golf facility provide recommendations for the placement of signage or displays to maximize exposure?
Cash Dinkel: Yes, they should. The staff knows where golfers bottleneck, where they hang out, and what areas get repeated traffic. A quick walk-through with the tournament contact and a simple placement plan usually makes a big difference.
Jason Meininger: Yes, besides the tee boxes, the practice tee and practice green are excellent spots for signage. If they have a bag drop or snack bar area, these are also great locations.
The golf facility can provide suggestions for placing signs and banners in high-traffic areas.
Q: How does the caliber of the golf facility affect sponsorships?
Cash Dinkel: A higher-end facility can make sponsorships easier to sell because the event feels more premium, and sponsors like being associated with that brand. But I’ve also seen average courses crush it when the cause is strong and the tournament is well organized. Execution and a full field matter just as much as the name of the facility.
Jason Meininger: It really depends on the demographic you are targeting. You may be able to ask more for sponsorships at a higher-end or private facility, but it really depends more on the capacity of your event’s target audience and networks.
Q: How does the tournament management platform play into selling sponsorships?
Cash Dinkel: It helps a lot because sponsors want more than just a sign; they want visibility before and after tournament day, too. A solid platform gives you digital placements (website, registration, emails, pairings, scorecards, cart signs, and leaderboards), makes the event look polished, and makes it easier to sell and deliver on sponsor promises confidently.
Jason Meininger: It gives sponsors a digital presence on the event registration site as well as in-app during live scoring. GolfStatus also offers no-risk sponsorship opportunities (we only assess a fee if they sell), which can help organizations raise more money. Plus, events can use the platform at no cost, which helps to increase their overall sponsorship income.
A dedicated event website simplifies sponsor onboarding and provides digital exposure before, during, and after the tournament.
Q: If a sponsor is interested in engaging with golfers on tournament day, what or where are some good opportunities to do so?
Cash Dinkel: The best engagement happens where golfers naturally gather, and it doesn’t slow play, so places like check-in, the range/putting green, the first tee, the turn/halfway house, a contest hole, and the awards reception. If they want real interaction, pair them with a contest, on-course game, giveaway, or food/beverage moment.
Jason Meininger: A good option is to set up a table and/or tent at a hole or near the clubhouse to interact with players, or on a designated hole. It’s also a good idea to give higher-dollar sponsors time to speak during the welcome or any post-round meal and the awards presentation.
Q: What have you seen work well for sponsor exposure—signage, digital exposure, or a combination of the two?
Cash Dinkel: The best results come from a combo. Signage gives strong day-of visibility, and digital gives repeated impressions before and after tournament day.
Jason Meininger: The more exposure, the better, so definitely both. Having sponsor logos in both places ensures that golfers see their brand in more than one place.
Ask the Pros!
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