ATSWINS

After $45 million funding round, Good Good CEO hints at 'global' future

Updated March 21, 2025, 11:43 a.m. 1 min read
NCAAB News

Good Good Golf announced Thursday it closed a funding round at a $45 million valuation.

Getty Images The most significant development in Good Good Golfs financial history began mostly by accident.

The journey from YouTube channel to a $45 million fundraising round from a fascinating group of Wall Street bigwigs began long before Thursday afternoon; before the company set its sights on honest-to-goodness world dominance; or before its CEO even knew they were raising money.

It started with a meeting with Ben Grubbs at Creator Sports, Matt Kendrick , Good Goods CEO, told GOLF.com.

I wasnt pitching him on funding the meeting actually wasnt to talk about funding at all.

And then he came back to me a couple weeks after that and said, Hey, Ive got this partner of mine.

Were looking to raise a fund.' Grubbs was a perfect fit.

Hed spent five years as a partnerships exec at YouTube before co-founding an investment and advisory firm to help sports startups in the so-called creator economy a booming industry surrounding the creation and monetization of internet content.

Now, with his business partner Brian Kabot, Grubbs was looking to invest.

He made Kendrick an offer.

As it happened, Kendrick was in a position to listen.

Good Good the YouTube golf content-and-commerce behemoth hed founded almost five years earlier was spectacularly successful, but the business was nearing the ceiling of what it could achieve without additional outside investment.

Were in the product space, and thats cash-intensive, Kendrick said.

We limit ourselves on some of our growth initiatives because of cash management.

Grubbs knew the true strength of Good Good: The business wasnt a bunch of YouTubers selling polos, as Kendrick says with a chuckle, but rather a legitimate (and growing) golf brand using YouTube to create, market and sell premium golf products.

In many ways, YouTube, where the brand is most popular, is only a vehicle for the brands larger ambitions in merchandise and equipment.

It is striking to hear Kendrick talk about his business in this way: at once built upon internet golf videos and aiming to exist almost entirely independently of them.

In a media moment defined by YouTube, Good Goods business reflects the platforms widest ambitions.

This was a piece of it that we discussed heavily: Lets go build something that lasts forever, Kendrick said.

Im sitting here watching basketball.

You know, these guys cant play basketball for the rest of their life, right? Its the same thing with creators.

Theres a lot of pressure and burnout.

So lets build something so that you dont have to make a video for the rest of your life.

Ironically, the best method to reach a lifetime without videos turned out to be ...

a lot of videos.

A new, algorithm-tuned delivery arrives on the Good Good YouTube channel each week, depicting everything from exotic golf trips and celebrity matches to self-examining dispatches from creators moving on to greener pastures.

In less than five years, the channel has grown to more than 1.75 million YouTube subscribers, built out a robust merchandise and golf equipment business, and bulged from a handful of creators to a team of 25 on-camera personalities, editors and shooters.

Now the company is readying for its boldest jump: from YouTubes (comparatively) friendly pond into the shark pit of major golf brands.

Kendricks long-stated moonshot goal to build one of the five biggest golf companies in the world suddenly isnt a moonshot.

We knew there was an inflection point of, theres all these ideas that we have written down, theres all these goals that were ready to go get, and were a highly profitable business,' Kendrick said.

It gets to a point to where, if youre going to scale it and youre going to grow it and take on some initiatives that you want, youre going to need more capital for projects, but youre also going to need some strategic partners as well.

A post shared by Garrett Clark (@garrettj_clark) Within weeks of the offer, Grubbs had attracted more than 50 major institutional and sports investors into the fold, including a boutique sports and entertainment fund at Manhattan West and Peyton and Eli Mannings Omaha Productions .

The investors raised $45 million for Good Good, with Grubbs Creator Sports leading the fundraising round, and while Kendrick was reticent to reveal the companys valuation, he has big plans for the capitals deployment.

According to Kendrick, three areas will dominate Good Goods plans with the $45 million: global expansion, sales, and content creation.

On global expansion, Kendrick says Good Goods goal is to build its content and merchandising efforts into international markets like Asia and Australia (already home to five of the channels top 10 viewing cities).

In Asia, Good Good will pursue dubbing and subbing its english-language content entertainment parlance for subtitling and translating audio and could also look to hire local creators in markets like Korea and Japan.

Meanwhile, in Australia, the company will launch merchandising efforts in full force (and expects to find a hungry market).

On sales, Kendrick says Good Good will hire a sales team for the first time in its existence, which will target bringing the companys merchandising efforts into some of the 20,000 pro shops around the United States.

And the third prong of his plan content Kendrick says the company will invest deeper into its own YouTube channel, dive into an existing partnership to create scripted and unscripted content with NBC Sports, and explore potential overlaps within the Omaha Productions portfolio.

I hope that our fans see were putting out more high-quality content, Kendrick said.

I hope our fans see that we keep pushing the envelope on content ideas, because we feel like weve been the ones leading the charge on new and different ideas.

People follow what we do including the PGA Tour with this whole Creator Classic thing.

We understand what its like to lead from the front, and in order to do that, weve got to keep innovating.

Capturing even one of these pillars would count as a Herculean accomplishment to say nothing of all three but Good Good is used to life as a longshot.

It was only five years ago that Kendrick approached the group for the first time, including lead voice Garrett Clark, with the hopes of coalescing golfs YouTube stars in one place.

Three weeks ago, that same group met to sign the paperwork on a $45 million fundraising round.

These guys are so young, Kendrick said.

To show them that when you set out with a goal, put the right things in place, and do the right things, youre gonna succeed.

I think thats a big piece, and I think its very validating for them, too.

Clark, 24, has been a golf YouTube star since he was a teenager.

He dropped out of college to pursue making videos full-time, then got scooped up by Kendrick as he looked to replicate the success of a fishing channel called the Googan Squad.

The moment that we signed the box, which was a couple weeks ago, Garrett and I had a long conversation, Kendrick says.

He just said, Dude, I just never thought wed actually do it.' YouTube golf is an unlikely dream.

And as it turns out, its an even stranger reality.

Latest In News Golf.com Editor James Colgan is a news and features editor at GOLF, writing stories for the website and magazine.

He manages the Hot Mic, GOLFs media vertical, and utilizes his on-camera experience across the brands platforms.

Prior to joining GOLF, James graduated from Syracuse University, during which time he was a caddie scholarship recipient (and astute looper) on Long Island, where he is from.

He can be reached at [email protected]..

This article has been shared from the original article on golf, here is the link to the original article.