This is correct. League bowlers are already putting money into it very frequently, the last thing they want to do is pay more. Open bowlers don't go very much, most of the time it's a family thing, or a date, or a company party, so money isn't as much of an object. You may think that the consistency of the league bowler revenue is an incentive to keep them, but it's really not. You have to think that for each league bowler, it's most of the time 10-13 dollars for lineage depending on what part of the country you're in, but that's probably the average. Most 5 man leagues last about 3 hours. People will buy beer, food, etc, so I'd estimate an average take at 20-25 bucks over 3 hours per league bowler. How long does it take them to make that on an open bowler? 1 hour. 5 bucks for a game, 5 bucks for shoe rental, some beer and food and you're there, this is before they decide to bowl another game.
So essentially, the center can make on 1 open bowler in 1 hour the same amount they make off a league bowler over 3 hours ON AVERAGE. This is all with less effort. Open bowlers don't notice whether the shot is "fresh" or not. They don't expect everything for free because they're league bowlers. League bowlers already get a pretty good deal on bowling, usually get discounts or kickbacks, but it's never good enough. This is why it kills me how much whining and complaining goes on when the center wants to raise lineage a QUARTER to cover their increasing costs.
Ratt,
No, there isn't a market for that type of center. This is why every new place that opens caters in the opposite direction. A lot of the battle is that most everyone would like to bowl in a center that is shiny and new, and has a lane machine that costs as much as a car, but wants to pay the same for lineage as they did 20 years ago.