Total Downloads
8,337
First app open
New Sign-ups
6,253
is_sign_in=false · 75% of downloads
Peak Week
807
Feb 2
Latest Full Week
548
↓ -32% vs peak
Weekly Downloads (first app open)
New Sign-ups by Country Top 15 · Total: 6,253
US dominates; strong English-speaking and Nordic markets
US leads with 2,065 sign-ups (33%), UK 743 (12%), Canada 636 (10%). Norway (369) and Sweden (363) lead Nordics. Germany (264), Denmark (251), Australia (225) and France (216) round out the top 10.
Sign-up Activation — Q1 Average
Player Activation (Q1 avg)
14%
914 of 6,566 · added a round within 14d
Coach Activation (Q1 avg)
9%
33 of 334 · connections > 0 within 14d
Player Activation — % adding a round within 14d · by month
January
11%
Sign Up Date: Jan 1–31
February
17%
↑ +6pp vs Jan
March
21%
↑ +4pp vs Feb
Coach Activation — % with connections > 0 within 14d · by month
January
3%
3 of 97 coaches
February
12%
↑ +9pp vs Jan
March
13%
↑ +1pp vs Feb
Round Start Success — course selected → round started (14d) · by month
% of players who selected a course and started a round within 14 days
January
63%
415 of 654 · course → round
February
75%
↑ +12pp vs Jan
March
81%
↑ +6pp vs Feb
Completion Success — round started → hole entry → round finished (14d) · by month
% of players who started a round and completed it within 14 days
January
48%
Round finished · 195 of 410
Hole entry: 57% · Hole→finish: 83%
February
55%
↑ +7pp vs Jan · 456 of 835
Hole entry: 67% · Hole→finish: 82%
March
62%
↑ +7pp vs Feb · 671 of 1,086
Hole entry: 74% · Hole→finish: 84%
Gametype Selected — breakdown by available holes
Total unique players: 1,964 · Jan 1 – Apr 1, 2026
All (18 holes)
1,454
74% of selections
Front 9
685
35% of selections
Quick 3
439
22% of selections
Back 9
210
11% of selections
Both round start and completion improving strongly month-on-month
Course → round started jumped from 63% in Jan to 81% in March. Round completion improved from 48% to 62%. Hole entry rate is the key driver — up from 57% to 74%. Once players enter a hole, finish rates are consistent at 83–84%. Full 18-hole rounds dominate (74%); Quick 3 shows healthy casual engagement (22%).
Core Activity
Analysis Views (total)
21,637
↑ Consistent growth
Rounds Started (total)
18,965
↑ 2,149 peak Mar 16
Round Completion Rate
~89%
Finished / started weekly
Feature Engagement — Weekly Unique Users
Viewed Diamonds
856
Stable ~50–90/week
AI Round InsightsAI
2,636
↑ 5× growth in Q1
Plan Round
3,522
↑ Best: 428 (Mar 23)
Practice Viewed
1,238
↑ Launched Feb 23
Engagement nearly tripled since Jan 1; AI Insights fastest-growing feature
Analysis views and round starts grew ~150% since Jan 1. AI Round Insights grew 5× from ~58/week to 300–380/week. Plan Round is the most-used feature at 350–430/week. Practice launched Feb 23, hit ~280/week within a month.
Subscriptions Paid
1,207
↑ Growing
Trial Upgrades
817
↑ Best: 85 (Mar 23)
Plan Views
2,516
~48% view-to-pay
Conversion Rate
2.73%
First open → paid (30d)
Total Subscriptions Paid & Trial Upgrades — Weekly
New vs Renewal Distribution — by month
January
382 total
New 100 · 26%
Renewal 282 · 74%
February
459 total
New 143 · 31%
Renewal 316 · 69%
March
543 total
New 175 · 32%
Renewal 368 · 68%
Monthly vs Annual Cycle — by month
Monthly (total)
1,175
Jan 334 · Feb 379 · Mar 462
Annual (total)
197
↑ Jan 44 · Feb 77 · Mar 76
Basic vs Pro Plan — by month
Basic (total)
928
Jan 255 · Feb 298 · Mar 375
Pro (total)
455
↑ Jan 128 · Feb 159 · Mar 168
Subscriptions Paid by Country Top 15 · Total: 738
Renewals dominate; annual and Pro both on upward trend through Q1
Renewals make up ~68% of paid subscriptions — a strong retention signal. Monthly dominant at ~93% but annual growing from 12/week in late Dec to 15–23/week in March. Pro growing from 27 → 45/week, positive upsell signal heading into Q2. US and UK account for over 40% of all paid subscriptions. South Africa (21) and Colombia (18) are notable emerging markets punching above their sign-up share.
Top Events — All Players
Total events: 3,639,234
Top Events by Proficiency Level — Compared
Ranked by total events · Tour Pros (99,118 total) · Elite Amateurs (552,207 total) · Club Golfers (160,273 total)
Tour Pros (217 users)
Elite Amateurs (1,155 users)
Club Golfers (3,073 users)
Rounds Finished per User — by Proficiency
Total Round Entry Finished events ÷ unique users · Jan 1 – Apr 1, 2026
Tour Pros
5.7
1,232 rounds · 217 users
Elite Amateurs
5.4
6,222 rounds · 1,155 users
Club Golfers
0.25
756 rounds · 3,073 users
Plan Round per User — by Proficiency
Total Round Plan Started events ÷ unique users
Tour Pros
1.71
370 plans · 217 users
Elite Amateurs
1.22
1,407 plans · 1,155 users
Club Golfers
0.05
140 plans · 3,073 users
AI Insights Viewed per User — by Proficiency
Total Viewed Insights events ÷ unique users
Tour Pros
0.55
119 views · 217 users
Elite Amateurs
0.61
703 views · 1,155 users
Club Golfers
0.06
182 views · 3,073 users
Tour Pros and Elite Amateurs play 20× more rounds per user than Club Golfers
Tour Pros lead on rounds (5.7/user) and plan round usage (1.71/user), confirming serious pre-round preparation habits. Elite Amateurs are close behind on both. Club Golfers complete fewer than one round per user (0.25) and barely use plan round (0.05/user) — the biggest engagement gap in the product. AI Insights are used most by Elite Amateurs (0.61/user), slightly ahead of Tour Pros (0.55), while Club Golfers lag significantly at 0.06/user despite being the largest segment.
Profile Stats — Jan 1 – Apr 1, 2026
Avg time to start/finish a round from Mixpanel funnel avg_time · session length in seconds for median/min, converted for max
Tour Pros (104 post-verification)
Immediately after verification, Tour Pros split between Session (36%), Profile (19%), and Round Entry Page (13%) — the first meaningful sign of round intent appears within the very first post-verification step.
Subscription Plan viewing is prominent at steps 2–4, with 28–30% of users evaluating pricing straight after checking their profile. Tour Pros weigh up the value of the product early — before committing to a full round. This is the clearest upsell window of any proficiency group.
Course selection takes 3–4 steps. Course Searched is persistent at steps 2–6 as Tour Pros compare options before committing. Once Course Selected, 45–67% move directly to Round Entry Started — decisive once they pick.
Shot Dropped dominates steps 5–10 with 46–68% share, and Hole Entry Finished appears at step 9. Tour Pros get deeply into a round within 10 post-verification steps — the slowest to start but the most committed once they do.
Account Linked appears at steps 3–7 for a small but consistent subset — Tour Pros occasionally link external accounts mid-journey, unlike Club Golfers who do it en masse as a dedicated onboarding step.
Elite Amateurs (464 post-verification)
Post-verification, 9% of Elite Amateurs go straight to Quick Hole Entry at step 1 — the highest of any group. A further 9% go directly to Round Entry Page. These users arrive already knowing what they want to do.
Subscription Plan viewing peaks at step 2 via the Profile → Subscription Plan path (18% of profile viewers). Elite Amateurs evaluate pricing early and decisively — they are the group most likely to convert after a single plan view.
Course Search → Course Selected is the dominant spine from steps 2–5. At step 3, 61% of Course Selected users immediately move to Round Entry Started — the sharpest and most direct course-to-round conversion of all three groups.
Gametype Selected → Shot Dropped accounts for 50–67% of the flow at steps 5–6. By step 6, Shot Dropped is the clear dominant event, and it stays dominant through step 10. Elite Amateurs are fully in-round faster than Tour Pros.
Analysis Viewed strengthens through steps 7–10, reaching 76–89% of remaining active users by step 9. Unlike Club Golfers who browse analysis instead of playing, Elite Amateurs reach analysis after completing rounds — it complements, not replaces, their playing behaviour.
Club Golfers (2,407 post-verification)
Post-verification, Club Golfers split across Profile (23%), Session (21%), Activity (12%), Quick Hole Entry (9%), and Connections (9%). Unlike Tour Pros and Elite Amateurs, there is no dominant path — Club Golfers scatter immediately after onboarding, reflecting a less defined intent.
Account Linked is the dominant step 5 event at 56% — and for Club Golfers, this is 100% Trackman (1,322 of 1,322 users). Every Club Golfer who links an account is connecting their Trackman data, not Tour or any other source. This suggests Club Golfers are primarily driving range and simulator users importing shot data — a fundamentally different use case from Tour Pros and Elite Amateurs who link far less frequently and at later steps.
Analysis Viewed takes over from step 5 onward and never lets go — growing from 51% at step 5 to 89% at step 9 of remaining active users. For most Club Golfers, the entire post-onboarding journey is analysis browsing. A round never starts within the first 10 steps for the majority.
Yardage Book appears in Club Golfer later steps — it is entirely absent from Tour Pro and Elite Amateur flows. This suggests Club Golfers use the app for course prep and reference rather than live scoring, pointing to a different use case that may warrant its own onboarding path.
Quick Hole Entry appears at step 2 (9%) — a small but meaningful signal that some Club Golfers bypass the full round setup and jump straight to hole entry. This could indicate frustration with the standard flow or preference for a lighter engagement mode.
Three distinct post-login journeys
Tour Pros spend steps 1–4 on profile, subscription evaluation, and course discovery before getting fully into a round by step 5–6 — deliberate but committed. Elite Amateurs are faster and more decisive: Course Search → Select → Start happens by step 3, Shot Dropped dominates by step 5, and Analysis follows as a complement to play. Club Golfers scatter post-verification, converge on Account Linking (100% Trackman), then settle into deep Analysis browsing that consumes the rest of their session. No round is started. The product is serving three distinct use cases, and only two of them centre on playing a round.