Golf Asia

The Honma Report

How Is Honma’s Bid To Take On The World

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Early in the year, Honma’s signing of Englishman Justin Rose made worldwide news. It was the Japanese brand’s first signing of an internatio­nal player. Then in another show of intent, Honma shifted their office from Los Angeles to the capital of golf, Carlsbad.

To find out more on what has progressed since, Golf Asia spoke to Honma’s Senior Manager, Asia Sales Department, Takahiro Suzuki.

GA: Since Justin Rose’s signing, what’s the report card for Honma looking like so far on the world stage?

Takahiro: Honma’s image was one of a luxury golf brand from Japan, now more golfers worldwide know Honma also produces tour level golf clubs. It’s been good for sales, and the numbers have increased in the U.S. and especially in Europe .

Honma has its own factory, and we design and engineer our own clubs and

shafts with ‘Made in Japan’ quality. So, even though the sticker price is less expensive for our internatio­nal range, customers still trust our products because they’re made in Sakata, Japan.

GA: What has Honma learned from Justin Rose, its first internatio­nal brand ambassador?

Takahiro: Justin was not so much concerned with hitting longer, unlike Japanese golfers. He was more focused on the design and technical details like the club face and how the clubs look at address. We brought his ideas back to our factory in Sakata and within two weeks, Justin got the clubs back with the design changes.

GA: Apart from the Farmers Insurance Open, is Honma concerned that Justin hasn’t yet had much success on tour this year?

Takahiro: We don’t want to give Justin any extra pressure, conditions change daily depending on the tournament. He wants to be a better player, so we will keep trying to do our best to meet his requests.

Hopefully, he manages to stay in the top 5 at each tournament. Form is like a wave; because he’s not a robot but human, there will be times when he’s better and times when he’s not so good.

GA: Are the Tour World series clubs only for tour level players?

Takahiro: People think that the ‘Tour ‘in Tour World means a club that’s difficult to play; but the 747P Iron or the 460 Driver for example, is designed to catch the ball with a high launch. So the Tour World series is for the middle handicap to better players.

GA: After joining Honma, how has former Taylormade CEO and President Mark King made a difference?

Takahiro: We were familiar with the Asian market, not so much the U.S. or Europe; and we were able to learn how our competitor­s were successful. With the new knowledge, our sales increased in both the U.S. and Europe.

Also, product meetings for upcoming models in the past involved only Japanese staff, and we gained a different perspectiv­e when we involved the Americans in design discussion­s.

GA: Where does Honma go from here after signing Justin Rose?

Takahiro: With Justin as ambassador for the Tour World series, our idea is to raise the profile of the Beres and the new Xp-1range internatio­nally.

We are also looking for other top players to sign. Players who will be a good fit for Honma in image and technicall­y; like Justin who in looking to be a better player, gained more speed with our clubs and found the answer with Honma.

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