Business Services Industry

Golf guru sees greens in Japan: a media entrepreneur tees off

Japan, Inc., Nov, 2004 by Jaemin Kim

MANY individuals only dream about quitting their jobs, moving abroad, and indulging full-time in a favorite hobby. Gordon Simmonds actually made a living out of it.

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SIMMONDS HAS LOVED the game of golf since he was a small boy growing up outside Edinburgh, Scotland. His zeal grew into a full-time career about a decade ago. He gave up practicing corporate law in London, began life as an expat in various Asian cities and started spending his days making a business out of his devotion to golf.

"It was not just an interest, but a passion for the game," he explains from his home office in western Tokyo. Indeed, Simmonds is so immersed in the sport that in the course of conversation, he skillfully linked golf to topics ranging from former US President George H.W. Bush to women's roles in South Korea.

Unlike his former profession as corporate lawyer, Simmonds' current career fails to fit one neat label. He wears many hats. He is the creator of a television and DVD series, maintains Web sites, consults with corporations on marketing and branding opportunities and is the author of a history book and numerous articles--all about the world of golf.

So far, the pinnacle of his efforts is the 13-part broadcast series he created, wrote, directed and produced. Called "All A-Round Golf," the infotainment series already aired on a cable network in Japan, on CNBC in several countries and aboard various airlines as in-flight entertainment. It also sells in DVD form.

Simmonds, a gray-haired golf expert and British solicitor who proudly wears kilts to formal events, may seem an unlikely media entrepreneur. Yet with no initial financial backing, and no experience in television production other than some writing, Simmonds somehow created a multi-part television series that looked and sounded good enough for broadcast.

The seeds for creating a career around golf were planted long before Simmonds left law. He spent his free time writing about golf on a freelance basis in London. His mind percolated, however, with more expansive projects.

In 1994, his then-fiancee was asked to work in Hong Kong for an international law firm. The couple had just returned to Britain from a vacation in Vietnam. The football World Cup had just taken place, and Vietnam had gone "football mad," Simmonds says. He recognized that Vietnam was "a green field of opportunity in sport."

He urged his fiancee to work in Vietnam instead of Hong Kong, and within three months they got married, leased their house in London and moved to Hanoi.

In Vietnam, Simmonds finally found a way to immerse himself in sports, writing weekly sports dispatches from Vietnam for the BBC. He also founded a sports marketing business to advise international companies to finance and sponsor various sporting events.

Living in Hanoi forced Simmonds to strike out on his own, rather than taking the safer route of working at an established sports marketing agency in London. He worked then as he does now--independently and without a staff, except for bookkeepers.

Compared to his former legal career, "the opportunities to be creative have been far more considerable," he notes. Equally considerable, however, have been the opportunities for mistakes and financial instability.

"I could not have done it without my wife," Simmonds concedes, referring to his wife's more secure career. "I would not have done it the way I did it without her."

Four years after living in Hanoi, Simmonds' wife took a post in Singapore. Simmonds gladly agreed to move to a more developed, international country, where many companies had resources to spend on promoting sports and promoting themselves through sports.

At this point, he began to re-think the creative end of his work. He wanted to go further than writing. The idea was hatched for creating a television series to "educate and to entertain" everyday players about golf.

"On screen, I have an opportunity to reach a far wider audience and demographic. It was the next logical step after having written about the game. I wanted to create something of lasting influence, something as relevant to people in 5 to 10 years as it is today."

In 1999, he decided to film his first subject, an esteemed golf historian.

"I knew that I needed professional help," Simmonds says. Fortunately, he had built a network of contacts in the television business through his consultancy work and writing gigs. So he simply phoned a contact and asked for the name of a cameraman. He invested a couple thousand pounds to hire the cameraman, and the television project was launched.

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Soon after, Simmonds heard that another big name in golf, a perfect subject for the series, would be in Bangkok to watch a golf tournament. But what could he do with no budget? Again, Simmonds used contacts to find a freelance technical crew who were friendly enough to work for a couple of beers. He paid for the airfare by writing a freelance piece on the tournament.

With two filmed interviews sitting in "rushes" on his shelf, Simmonds felt confident enough to seek financing. Drawing upon the network he cultivated through consultancy work, Simmonds convinced a Dutch bank to underwrite the series. In return, the bank received "branding" credit during the series' first broadcast on CNBC.

 

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