One of the first things new golfers hear is that they should get lessons to learn the fundamentals of the game and start with a solid foundation. When established players are struggling, they typically turn to PGA professionals to help improve their technique and get better at the game they love. While a few lessons may fix things in the short-term, the only thing that creates long-term success is practice.

The problem is that most players don’t know how to practice effectively.

When Nico Darras (left) walked off the final green of a one-day mini tour event in Scottsdale three years ago, he was on top of the world. A final hole birdie gave him a score of even par, a number he thought put him on the path to PGA TOUR stardom. He finished in 68th place, 11 strokes off the pace.

On the drive home, he heard an interview with Kevin Moore (right), a University of Georgia professor specializing in applied mathematics, analytics, education, and psychology. Darras emailed him right away, hoping to apply Moore’s theories to improving his performance on the golf course.

“I’ll admit that I didn’t read Nico’s email right away, but when I did I thought I’d be able to help him,” said Moore of his first interaction with Darras. “He had a great skill set and we got some great analytics and strategy data. After working on his driver, we figured we had to improve his wedge game.”

During that time, Darras said he was working on the assigned reading for his doctoral program and a line in one of those books hit him. “It was about criterion referenced instruction, the idea of having an end goal in mind and working backwards. I brought it up to Kevin and we started using ourselves as guinea pigs for developing practice plans.”

It may sound like things came together seamlessly, both Moore and Darras said that was hardly the case. The first player to try a practice plan was No Laying Up’s Chris “Soly” Solomon. He shared it with his podcast audience and soon more than 200 people were lining up to learn how to practice.

Moore described the response as eye-opening. “We realized it was bigger than the two of us. We spent 40 days keeping up with demand, eventually getting the website up and zooming with clients. We found they almost all wanted structure, practice plans built around data and research. So that’s what we did.”

The first plans were hand-built, with designed drills and how they should be completed. After five months, the pair had a large database of drills and plans, and an algorithm to apply to golfers. Golf Blueprint is now the largest online instruction service available with clients in 45 states.

Golf Blueprint works off a membership model, with players getting different levels of access to practice plans and Moore and Darras. Members can join on a monthly basis, but are rewarded with a free month when they commit to a six-month improvement plan.

“Month one, that algorithm is really good, it’s dialed,” said Darras when advocating for a multi-month commitment. “Month two, the algorithm learns more about the golfer. By month three it’s really good and it’s all about tightening up those practice plans.”

One of the things that sets Golf Blueprint apart from other instruction programs is that it’s easy to understand. Moore said that when a client has trouble understanding a particular drill, they re-word it to make it easier to put into practice. “It’s important that players of any ability and experience can follow our plans without having a specific golf vocabulary.”

While Golf Blueprint may sound like a fix-all for any golfer, Darras said they’re really focused on golfers between four and 20. “We really think players with handicaps lower than a four already know how to practice, but the sweet spot for improvement lies with those players between four and 20. We can help them.”

To learn more about Golf Blueprint or to purchase your membership, visit www.GolfBluePrint.com