Use Six Sigma to Improve Your Golf Game

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Jay Arthur
888-468-1537
303-756-9144
KnowWare International, Inc.
DBA LifeStar

2253 S. Oneida
Ste 3D
Denver, CO 80224

We help people think!

Copyright © 2008

 



  Six Sigma GolfCan Six Sigma help improve your golf game?

Of course it can, if you count your "misses" and discover your tendencies and correct them. Do you:

  • Drive the ball left or right off the tee?
  • Hit your irons left or right, long or short of the green?
  • Putt left or right, long or short of the hole?
Where do amateurs drop 80% of their strokes to par?

What process can you use to simplify and dramatically improve your short game?

What's the single biggest mistake everyone makes on the putting green?

What process can you use to simplify and dramatically improve your putting? Find out how.

Excellent exposition of the subject. The distribution curve overlaid on the fairway is priceless. Michael Meinhardt, Ph.D., Six Sigma BB and quality practitioner

Here's what you get:

Six Sigma Golf Book - 24 pages

Excel Templates for Measuring and Improving Your Golf Game

  • c chart for golf scores
  • u chart for average strokes/hole
  • pareto chart of strokes per round
  • cause-effect (fishbone) diagram of lost strokes
  • checksheet for tracking scores

Send us your feedback on this book and tools!
(Click Here)

This is what I've been needing to get leadership's attention. Great tool! You hit a BIG home run with this. Congratulations!
Ken Grimm

Add Six Sigma golf Booklet and Templates (#242) $29.95 plus S&H
 

Six Sigma Golf Workshops

If you were a Six Sigma Golfer meaning that you only miss one shot out of every 294,000 (3.4PPM), what would that mean?

  • You'd make a hole-in-one on every par 3.
  • You'd eagle every par 4 or 5!
  • Your drives would always land in the fairway.
  • You'd never have to putt because you'd sink every approach shot.
  • You'd never land in a bunker.
  • You'd never lose a ball in the water.
  • Your average score for 18 holes would be 36.
  • And golf would be an insanely boring game.

Hole-in-One
Odds of getting a hole-in-one: 20,000-to-1
Ave Length: 151 yds
Ave Age: 39.6 years
Ave years playing to first hole in one: 17
Ave Handicap: 14.4

June 16, 1989
U.S. Open
Four PGA players aced the 159 yard 6th hole in 1 hour and 50 minutes.
(Doug Weaver, Mark Wiebe, Jarry Pate, and Nick Price).
Before that day, there had only been 20 holes-in-one in U.S. Open history.

September 14, 1868
The first hole-in-one was recorded by Young Tom Morris at No. 8 in Prestwick, Scotland.


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