Lesson 7.4: Building Your Reputation

Junior Caddy Program  ·  HSGA
Module 7 — Getting the Job — Applying and Succeeding


From First Loop to Most-Requested Caddy — How To Build a Career

In caddying, your reputation is your business. Members talk to each other constantly. “Have you tried that young caddy? They’re excellent — knows the course cold and has a great attitude” is the highest form of marketing available, and it’s entirely free. You earn it through your work.

  • Learn the course. Know yardage markers, green breaks, hazard locations, prevailing wind patterns. Local knowledge is your competitive advantage.
  • Learn your players. Remember how far they hit each club, whether they draw or fade, their communication style preference. A player who feels you truly understand their game will request you by name.
  • Be consistent. Great service every single time builds a reputation. Inconsistency destroys one.
  • Ask for feedback. “Is there anything I could do differently to make your round better?” signals humility and professionalism.
  • Set a specific goal. “I want to be the caddy players ask for by name by the end of the summer.” Write it down and hold yourself to it.
The Compound Effect of Reputation

First loop: assigned by caddy master. Fifth loop: a regular player requests you. Twentieth loop: caddy master introduces you to a new member as “one of our best junior caddies.” Fiftieth loop: players are calling to ask when you’re available. Every single loop is an investment in what you will earn a year from now.

★ Pro Tip

When a player requests you by name for the first time, identify specifically what you did that earned it — then do it every loop.

Practice Activity

Write a 90-day caddy reputation plan with specific, measurable goals in four categories: (1) course knowledge — what will you learn in 90 days? (2) player relationships — how many regulars do you aim to serve more than once? (3) earnings — what is your income target? (4) skill development — which skill will you most actively improve? Review at 30, 60, and 90 days.