Business News

Stewart Golf launches approved refurbished collection

Published by
Peter Davison

Premium British golf trolley manufacturer Stewart Golf has unveiled the launch of its Approved Refurbished collection, providing golfers worldwide with the opportunity to own an award-winning Follow trolley at an incredible price.

Having launched the Q Follow in 2020, followed by the Q Remote and X10 Follow/Remote in 2021, Stewart Golf has rapidly become one of Britain’s fastest growing companies having secured the Sunday Times Hundred award during 2022.

The popularity of Gloucestershire-based Stewart Golf’s revolutionary ‘Follow’ technology garnered unprecedented interest from golf’s largest media platforms, including Golf Monthly, Today’s Golfer, My Golf Spy, and Golf Digest, among many others.

Media coverage resulted in a large number of trolleys being supplied for media testing and demonstrations, before being returned to Stewart Golf’s HQ.

Whilst these units had often been used for less than one round, they could not be re-sold as new, prompting Stewart Golf’s CEO, Mark Stewart, into launching the Approved Refurbished collection, providing golfers with a fantastic opportunity to purchase an almost brand-new trolley for a price much lower than its original retail value.

Mark said: “We always use brand-new trolleys for our own shoots, and when we work with the big golf websites, influencers, and the occasional TV or film shoot. This means we have trolleys that have barely been used, but that we can’t sell as new.”

“Instead of these going to waste, our service team fully refurbish these trolleys to an almost brand-new condition, ready to be sold as part of our Approved Refurbished collection.”

Stewart Golf’s Approved Refurbished collection was launched online on Thursday 13th October, with select models selling out within hours.

Peter Davison

Peter Davison is deputy editor of The Business Magazine. He has spent his life in journalism – doing work experience in newsrooms in and around Bristol while still at school, and landing his first job on a local newspaper aged 19. By 28 he was the youngest newspaper editor in the country. An early advocate of online news, he spent the first years of the 2000s telling his bosses that the internet posed both the biggest opportunity and greatest threat to the newspaper industry and the art of journalism. He was right on both counts. Since 2006 he has enjoyed a career as a freelance journalist. He lives in rural Wiltshire with one wife, two children, and three cats.

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