The Club Building Process

A professional fitting is only complete when the final clubs are built to match the specifications identified during the fitting. The role of the clubfitter does not end with the recommendation. The quality and accuracy of the build are what turn that recommendation into equipment the golfer can trust.

Every specification matters. Length, loft, lie angle, shaft, grip size, swing weight, total weight, set makeup, and overall balance all influence how the club performs. If these details are not carried through correctly, the finished clubs may perform differently than the clubs tested during the fitting.

This is why the build process is such an important part of professional clubfitting. A set of clubs should not be assembled to be “close enough.” Each club should be measured, built, and checked to ensure it matches the fitting prescription as accurately as possible. Even small inconsistencies can affect ball flight, contact, distance control, feel, and confidence.

The International Professional Association of ClubFitters recognizes the build process as a critical part of delivering properly fit golf equipment. A quality build protects the integrity of the fitting and helps ensure that the golfer receives clubs that match their swing, their physical needs, and their performance goals.

When fitting and building are treated as connected parts of the same process, the result is a set of clubs built with purpose, precision, and consistency throughout the bag.

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