OK, so let's go through some stats. According to the annual Sporting Goods Association Player Participation poll the number of pool players in America is decreasing by an annual rate of about 10%. Their survey says that in 2005 about 39 million Americans classed themselves as pool players. In 2012 that number dropped all the way down to 21 million.
Room owners should look at it as an investment because during the days that are not free or evenings maybe the kids will come back in with parents. Once a month maybe have a youth tournament and giveaway stuff as prizes with a free a entry and make it fun for them. Other countries in Asia groom the youth into the sport but I see little being done in the US. If a junior program contacted all poolrooms and had a proposal for the rooms letting them know about doing something like this on a Saturday or Sunday during the day I could see it really catching on and growing the sport and bringing in new money for the future.Now this is a good idea. The parents can either drop the kids off and know they will be in a safe enviornment or stay and play themselves. Plus the kids will soon want thier own sticks and whatnot so youre creating a little more demand, hell the place can even sell some cheap cues themselves and make up a little themselves.
Maybe word starts to spread and more and more parents drop kids off there and its during the slow time as you said, what do the rooms got to lose ? They will definetly make some on soda sales and chips and whatever snacks they got to push, so its not a total loss.
I am going to mention this to the owner where i play and see what they think.
I think the key to making pool up there again is to make pool cool again.
Here in China the average age of pool players in pool halls are 18 - 40 so it's significantly younger than that of U.S. So the key i'd say is finding what's cool and essential for this group of people.
CJ,
This was my post #12 on this thread...
Ok, I'll start out by saying I know nothing about TV deals. Who pays what and how it gets on TV.
The "Rescue" shows are expanding. There are several restaurant rescue shows, then Bar Rescue came aboard. Now there is a new Tattoo parlor rescue (really?).
So it's time for Pool Hall Rescue. We have a poolroom expert here in CJ who has a TV presence and could be the expert to travel to these halls.
He can get himself a Mixologist expert, a chef expert, and even a table mechanic to go into a failing room and remake it.
The day a juke box entered a pool room was the beginning of the downfall of the game. Only the very young can tolerate the variety of loud music that juke boxes spit out. So with a juke box, you've just kicked out half your pool playing population. The same goes for video games. They only work if they're in a contained area well away from the playing area.
A big part of the problem is in fact, that pool room owners are trying to squeeze out profits from too many sources. Pool tables, a bar, and leagues, with control over the music depending on the time of day and day of the week are a formula that I've seen work.
Management has to be hands-on. They can't just open their doors and then come back later to pick up the cash. They have to put themselves in the mix with their customers and find out what works and what isn't working.
Decent fast food helps as well. I think a full blown restaurant and all the headaches that go with it isn't necessary.
OK, so let's go through some stats. According to the annual Sporting Goods Association Player Participation poll the number of pool players in America is decreasing by an annual rate of about 10%. Their survey says that in 2005 about 39 million Americans classed themselves as pool players. In 2012 that number dropped all the way down to 21 million.
Are there any corollaries? Oh, yes. That 10% drop is about what we lose in poolrooms each year. People who do not have a place to play pool cannot be pool players.
Many pool players are middle aged or above. Some of us remember paying 10 cents a rack to play pool and 25 cents for each beer. So $6 per stick per hour and $4 per beer seems a bit steep. But it is in line with inflation and the fact is that those 10 cent poolrooms were profitable and the ones today are struggling. (At the same time a golf green fee back then was $2 and nobody complains today when they pay $80 or more.)
So the basic problem is keeping poolrooms alive. If they all die the game dies with them.
Room owners I talk to say they need to generate a little bit of profit from many different areas to stay open. A bit from the pool tables, a bit from the jukebox, a bit from the kitchen, a bit from the video games, a bit from the bar and a bit from the leagues.
But some rooms have hit on ways to do much better than the average. Reed Pierce set his room apart with a great lunch menu. It is so good that he had to hire folks to do delivery of all the take-out orders he began getting.
Phil Wyndham (I think I butchered that spelling) of the Chattanooga Billiard Club opened a cigar and brandy section.
So those who think creatively are doing pretty well with their rooms.
If you know of other formulas that work for rooms, tell us about them. We really do need to breathe some life into the foundation of pool, the poolroom.
(Another problem is that action no longer brings spectators to poolrooms in large numbers. Now that the average American lives 2 hours or less away from a casino the casinos have captured the action that was once the property of the corner poolroom.)
You know, there's quite a few places to play pool in my town. None of them uses the tables as their primary source of profit. They are all bars, plus some of them offer food, TV, video games, betting machines, darts etc. Each one of them has music as well if I remember correctly. Still, all those things actually attract customers, which increases the number of pool players. I don't know how things work in the US, but here people will play more often if they can drink as well, and once they get bored with the game, there needs to be other stuff they can do. If they're happy, they'll come back.
Jerry,
I haven't read all the posts but wanted to comment on yours. I created an advertisement magazine for allowing pool room owners to advertise their rooms and was at the juncture where I need photograph and you would think something like this would set people back and say..yeah let me help...oh no....the opposite.
Friend of mine in Greensboro NC has a room and he led the fight against the Smoking Ban and wrote 1500 letters to other bars and Room Owners......0 response.
We hypothesize what has killed pool......Alcohol.....it has set pool apart from an entire generation of players....children....first you have to be exposed to the game like many of us did....in Recreation Centers. The Rec Center is a place kids could go. Pool Rooms aren't when they serve alcohol.
Getting Rooms to do anything is a great idea for some creative, independently wealthy Room Owners but in my opinion bring back the Recreation Center....and you will see pool pick up...just give it about 30 yrs or more....
I believe that pool is going to skip a generation, because somehow I think we lost our direction. It wasn't video games. It was alcohol. If you cant have children involved, you have cut the grass roots of what we are supposed to be about and that is making new players.
I have seen two ideas that work.
The Moose, the Elks, the Eagles, and the VFW are clubs that seem to be doing well in Ohio and in Florida. They have reasonably large numbers of members and several different activities from bowling to golf. In addition most of the clubs I have been in have from two to four pool tables. I think that these clubs for middle aged men and their wives with Friday fish and a standing clientele at the bar are where some players meet. When I played in the leagues we often stopped at the Moose for a beer and a few games before and after dinner. The club had an annual pool tournament for men and one for women that often pack the facility for the weekend. All in all these are good places for a pool enthusiast to generate more interest in the game. At one time some friends (and fellow Moose members) had four league teams that played out of the local Moose.
Here in Florida we are members of the Eagles and this club has two beat up 7 foot tables. At east 20 of the members also play in local pool leagues and it would not take much for someone to show interest and generate a local group within the club. These places have much potential and will support pool when some of the membership gets serious about the sport.
Another model that seemed to work well in Ohio was a biker bar with three seven foot tables that were in full use most nights. There is usually 10 – 20 bikes out front of the bar and the high volume biker bar music plays all the time. In addition the bartenders break empty beer bottles in a 30 gal metal trash can every five to ten minutes. The place is insane but packed nearly every night with pool players, bikers and others. The owner has a standing rule that seems to be the essence of the place. Any fighting results in a life time ban from the bar. He means it and he strictly enforces it. It is a crazy biker bar with all that that entails but everyone feels safe and there are many different types of people from hustlers (who proceed cautiously) to mid level execs out for a meal and to watch the local scene. This place has been open for over twenty years and is going strong . For anyone who is interested the name is State Line Bar and Grill in East Palestine, Ohio on the PA boarder.
BTW most of the clubs I have been in have coin operated tables that cost 50 - 75 cents.
Robin,
If my Dad had not taken me to a bowling alley when I was 13 to introduce me to the game & then to a 'couples only' room where the owner allowed me & my Dad to play, I might never have become a player.
But...I will say this. It is not alcohol that is the problem but a society that thinks it must protect everyone in society with LAWS.
Back in the day a minor could be in a bar so long as he or she was with his or her parent. A minor could even be served alcohol if the parent authorized it.
Now some are saying that children do not belong to their parents & the parents can not raise their children how they choose. They're saying that children belong to society & society should decide every aspect of a child's life.
If that actually happens, you can bet that the children will not be playing pool. Society will not even let them keep score in any sport & they can't play dodge ball.
Someone once said, 'Let the children come unto me'. The children are now under attack from a different entity, so they can be brain washed & then 'enslaved'.
Sorry for the down side subject. I've not yet had my morning coffee.
I hope someone could do what you speak of but with all of the government regulation & law suits I doubt that it will EVER happen. We are living in an ever increasingly sad world.
Best Regards & Best Wishes,
Rick
I assume this was a non-smoking room. I doubt that very many parents would take their kids to a room that smells like a dirty ashtray. I can smell the room I play in when I'm 15' away from the door. The above wouldn't happen there.
Rick,
No apologies necessary. I don't completely agree with you, but I will agree on some of it and we can just agree to disagree on some of it, then after I get my coffee as well we might end up agreeing....
We do live in a sad time but we have to find joy some way. Pool is a great way to do it. There aren't many places that are going to keep kids out, but the kids keep themselves out due to the things around them.
It seems we are on a roller coaster with no brakes.
I think that finding the people that will benefit from the creation of new players is a start.
If we all love it that much, we need to all make it a point to recruit someone into the fold each year and make that a life long goal. Its not always easy to be the guy who can run out trying to bring along a new player, but we need to be.
I know some of the posters in this thread and how shall I say this? Ahh, they have lots of experience having been around pool for quite some time and have a lot of wisdom earned over those years.
I really would like to hear from the 17-35 year old crowd and ask them their opinions and would hope that those that are in that particular age bracket state that.
What does the 17-35 year old crowd think is the problem with pool?
I've heard an interesting comment from Jive about how some of the pool rooms aren't "cool" and I think he is probably more right than some of us. And that makes me wonder how does a pool room owner make his pool room more cool?
Thanks,
JoeyA
I know some of the posters in this thread and how shall I say this? Ahh, they have lots of experience having been around pool for quite some time and have a lot of wisdom earned over those years.
I really would like to hear from the 17-35 year old crowd and ask them their opinions and would hope that those that are in that particular age bracket state that.
What does the 17-35 year old crowd think is the problem with pool?
I've heard an interesting comment from Jive about how some of the pool rooms aren't "cool" and I think he is probably more right than some of us. And that makes me wonder how does a pool room owner make his pool room more cool?
Thanks,
JoeyA