Golf isn’t just growing. It’s booming. Course participation in the U.S. just hit its highest point since 2008, with the biggest single-year increase in over two decades.1 New and returning players are flooding the fairways, and they’re bringing 2025-level expectations with them.
From bag tags to bandwidth, today’s golf experience is as much about the systems behind the scenes as the swings on the course.
Guests might not see the tee sheet software talking to the POS, the mobile app syncing with the loyalty system, or the Wi-Fi stretching to the far end of the driving range, but if any of it fails, they’ll notice fast.
That’s because golf, and the hospitality industry as a whole, has officially joined the club of experience-driven sectors where integrated IT is essential to delivering guest satisfaction and operational efficiency. For course operators, that means rethinking how infrastructure, data, and service platforms work together—or don’t.
Modern golf isn’t just about getting players on the green. It’s about delivering a seamless guest experience across every touchpoint—from booking and check-in to mobile payments and post-round follow-ups.
That means your golf course isn’t just a destination. It’s an omnichannel business. And that shift demands something many courses still lack: an integrated IT strategy—where systems, data, and guest interactions work together to create a secure, frictionless experience. Meeting modern expectations requires a unified, tech-enabled foundation supporting both staff and guests.
What a fully integrated experience looks like:
For course operators, an integrated IT environment not only streamlines staff workflows and reduces manual effort. It also eliminates redundant systems, improves uptime, and maximizes return on infrastructure investments.
As more courses adopt integrated systems, many are layering in AI to analyze swing patterns, holing trends, and guest behaviors in real time, turning data into actionable insight.2 AI is quickly becoming a powerful on-course assistant, enhancing both the player experience and operational decision-making.
Because no matter the technology, on or off the course, every interaction feeds the next. And only integrated IT makes that possible.
Too often, golf course owners and operators are burdened with fragmented platforms: one vendor for tee times, another for POS, a third for payments, plus a patchwork of Wi-Fi, printers, and on-site support that barely talk to each other.
Without an integrated IT strategy, the impact goes far beyond the guest experience. It drags down staff productivity, inflates costs, and exposes your brand to risk with:
That’s where NexusTek ESP comes in, with fully integrated, hospitality-grade IT services that unify your golf operations, IT infrastructure, and guest technologies into one secure, streamlined ecosystem.
The result? Better guest experiences, more efficient staff, and smarter IT spending.
What we bring to the course:
Golf courses that embrace integrated IT aren’t just upgrading tech. They’re building loyalty, boosting spend, reducing downtime, and gaining the agility to adapt to whatever comes next. Because the best courses don’t just manage play, they manage the full experience.
Reference
1. Golfdom, NGF’s 2025 Graffis Report Shows Golf’s Continued Growth, January 2025.
2. Golf Business Monitor, How Can the Golf Industry Harness the Power of AI Technology to Succeed?, February 2024.
Founder, ESP, a NexusTek company
Jason Pullo is a seasoned technology entrepreneur with a passion for transforming the hospitality industry through innovative IT solutions. As Founder and CEO of Enterprise Solutions Providers, he leads the company’s vision and growth, helping hotels navigate everything from new builds and brand transitions to large-scale renovations. Since launching the firm in 2003, Jason has played a key role in the technology strategy behind more than 1,000 hotel acquisitions. His journey began at just 18 years old as an IT manager for a trade show company, and he’s since led major projects like a multimillion-dollar hotel renovation in New York City, delivering guest-centric technology with measurable business impact.