Indoor golf concept shoots past the rough with tech driver, hooking franchise success across US

July 19, 2025  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Matt Williams, GolfTRK, Noonan; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

Lenexa-based indoor golf concept GolfTRK is teeing off into the world of franchising, said Matt Williams, scoring big wins from coast to coast as demand to expand access to “golf light” soars.

The modern training and performance facility — a Trackman Preferred Franchise Partner with locations in Lenexa and Overland Park — now has 11 franchises and roughly 30 in the pipeline, explained Williams. 

“When we started the first location, we didn’t know if it would be a single unit,” said Williams, who launched GolfTRK in August 2023 with co-founders Alex Reed, Sam Collins, and Paul Buonopane. “I’ve joked about this in the past: we weren’t sure if we were tricking our wives into buying ourselves our own TrackMan units, disguised as a business. And then if it doesn’t go well, then we each get our own unit to bring home.”

“But obviously, it went well,” he added. “We got a lot of people with unsolicited requests that said, ‘Hey, is this a franchise? Are you franchising?’ And that gave us the idea that this actually has more legs than just one or two units owned by us.”

What followed as basic outreach on LinkedIn — the co-founders are handling all their own lead generation and sales — quickly turned into franchise locations in Dallas; San Antonio; Tampa, Florida; Eugene, Oregon; and Omaha, Nebraska; plus plans for locations in St. Louis and more in the Kansas City metro area.

“We made the investment thinking, if we sold a couple of these, it would pan out,” Williams said. “It’s turned out indoor golf is honestly one of the fastest-growing franchise brands right now. So it’s a good space to be in.”

GolfTRK co-founders: Matt Williams, Alex Reed, and Sam Collins; Not pictured, Paul Buonopane; photo courtesy of GolfTRK, Albatross Golf

GolfTRK locations also serve as an incubator space for tech from Kansas City-built Noonan — a patent-pending digital caddie platform that uses simulator data to deliver intelligent shot recommendations and help golfers lower their scores. The GolfTRK co-founders launched the tech piece to complement their performance facilities, Williams shared.

ICYMI: 2025 Startups to Watch: Noonan scores under par success with digital caddie as golf market earns deepage

“It creates a really nice flywheel,” he said of the Noonan and GolfTRK, sibling brands under their Albatross Golf company. “Noonan helps create safety nets for the franchise. The franchise is generating leads for Noonan.”

RELATED: Golftech startup raises $675K seed round, swinging for franchise expansion and commercial tech launch

Golf is seeing a 40-percent increase in participation right now, he continued, but it’s expensive, golf course supply is stagnant, 65 percent of golf courses operate at capacity, and players can’t just hit the green whenever they want. 

Innovation swing

On top of franchising, the GolfTRK co-founders are also working with the Kansas State University Technology Development Institute to develop a new long-lasting screen prototype as their current facility screens — which sustain golf ball hits — only last three months, Matt Williams said. The K-State team has finished the design and is working on building out the MVP.

“All of that demand has to go somewhere and facilities like ours are bridging the gap,” Williams explained. “There’s a concept people are talking about right now: ‘golf light,’ which is not hardcore golf but not entertainment. It sits in the middle. It appeals to more of those avid golfers. That’s definitely where we sit.”

GolfTRK offers memberships, lessons, and club fittings, which — offered all in one unit — is unique, Williams noted. Each location has a PGA instructor on staff as either the owner or general manager.

“If they’re struggling, they have somebody they can talk to, as opposed to just banging balls and trying to guess,” he added. “So I think that’s really powerful.”

Franchising opportunities through GolfTRK are catered to PGA instructors, who are often capped in their earning potential, Williams said. 

“They’re locked into a facility,” he explained. “We’re giving these PGA instructors a way to spend more time with their kids, while also having kind of more control over the future through revenue sharing and opening a real career path.”

If an instructor also is the owner and operator, Williams continued, they won’t have much overhead since they can do all the onboarding and lessons themselves, plus they often have instant revenue with their current lesson list.

“The unit economics are really, really attractive,” he added.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2025 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Thank a community leader; Nominate them to win $50,000

        By Tommy Felts | July 23, 2025

        Editor’s note: The following is a paid message from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. Allison Greenwood Bajracharya, a fourth-generation Kansas Citian, is chief impact and strategy officer for the Kauffman Foundation. In communities around the country, people are doing uncommon things in the most common places — parks, food pantries, classrooms, soccer fields, and church…

        Crossroads distillery asks KC to make a toast in honor of founder lost in weekend motorcycle wreck

        By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2025

        Update: A crowdfunding campaign has been launched to support the family of the late Jeff Evans. Click here to learn more or to donate.  With doors temporarily closed early this week (July 21-22) to mourn the loss of co-founder Jeff Evans, the team behind Mean Mule Distilling is asking its community to “grieve with us,…

        KC govtech startup: You shouldn’t have to know how local government works to get answers (or make impact)

        By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2025

        Even a ripple can make waves, said Mitch Mabrey, an exited cleantech founder whose new cause finds him on a mission to ensure that the voices of residents from all walks of life are more broadly heard — and answered — by their government officials. Resonus, his Kansas City-based political information platform is designed to…

        Northland BBQ spot opens, building flavors, menu from side hustle to storefront

        By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2025

        After a decade-long journey building his BBQ business — from tailgates to a just-opened brick-and-mortar restaurant — Wardell Hooks Jr. would only change one thing along the way: He’d have quit his full-time job sooner. “My thing is the joy,” said Hooks, founder of Off the Hook BBQ, describing the feeling of accomplishment from his…