A Private Golf Membership Designed for Networking Opportunities
Kingdom Golf • April 22, 2025
GrayBull Club in Maxwell, Nebraska, Dormie Network’s newest property
Kingdom Golf recently featured Dormie Network in a deep dive that explores what sets it apart: from chef-driven cuisine and personalized service to future expansion plans and the unique criteria each property must meet to join the collection. It’s a compelling read for anyone looking to elevate their membership experience—and a clear example of why Dormie Network golf courses are perfect for networking, entertaining, and impressing.
With seven luxuriously appointed and hospitality-driven clubs all included with a single membership, Dormie Network is redefining the private golf experience.
To be dormie in golf is a good thing, so long as you’re the one who is up in the match. It all but guarantees a favorable outcome. Such is the feeling that comes with membership to Dormie Network, a collection of seven exclusive golf clubs—each one dedicated to top-shelf golf and an always-say-yes approach to hospitality. “From the start, the intent of Dormie Network was not just about offering a multi-course membership,” says Zach Peed, Dormie Network’s president. “It’s really about the experiences and hospitality we provide.”
Peed founded the Network in 2017, leveraging his past as a collegiate golfer and trusting his instincts as an enthusiast of the game. Knowing that similarly discerning golfers seek out multiple club memberships, he quickly saw a deficiency in the private golf marketplace, as offerings like Dormie Network didn’t exist. Since then, he has methodically acquired existing clubs that meet the Network’s criteria (more on this in a moment), and the company recently completed its first new build, GrayBull Club, which opens for its inaugural full season this spring. “It was built to deliver an unparalleled blend of genuine hospitality and pure golf,” says Peed.
To date, a Dormie Network membership offers access to a lineup of courses designed by celebrated architects—names that include Arnold Palmer, Tom Fazio, Coore & Crenshaw, and David McLay Kidd, among others—and the company prides itself on providing members with routings that reflect the purity, challenge, and enjoyment that the game can supply.
As for Dormie Network’s commitment to golf’s heritage and its intentions for the game’s future, you can tell a lot by taking a closer look at the flagsticks used at each of those clubs. The white pole accented by two black stripes and a vibrant red flag (with two black stripes of its own along the top and bottom edges) promotes a traditional look, but those stripes are meaningful. According to Peed, one stripe represents the history of golf, the other symbolizes the company’s commitment to shape its future. “The flags serve as a reminder of where golf has been,” he says, “and where it’s going.”
Read the rest of the article on Kingdom.golf.