Most golfers don’t need more complicated swing thoughts. They need clearer ways to practice, think, and approach the game.
That’s the idea behind the Golf Improvement Series by J. Brandon, a former PGA Apprentice and teaching professional based in the Rocky Mountains who has spent more than thirty years on and around golf courses helping everyday golfers improve.
After years of watching recreational players struggle with the same fixable problems, Brandon started writing the kind of straight-talk instruction he wished he could hand every new student: no jargon, no filler, and no rebuilding your swing from scratch.
Nick Nosewicz has known Brandon for years and still considers him one of the best putters he’s ever seen.
The Golf Improvement Series is available as a five-book collection covering putting, short game, practice, and golf fitness.
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One of the strengths of the series is how approachable it feels.
The books are written for:
The focus stays on helping golfers improve in ways that actually transfer to the course.
The Golf Improvement Series includes five focused books covering different parts of the game:
Putt for Dough
A guide to improving putting through setup, practice habits, green reading, and confidence on short putts.
Get Up and Down
Short game instruction focused on chips, pitches, bunker shots, and scoring around the green.
Practice with Purpose
A practical approach to making practice sessions more productive and transferable to the course.
Play Smart
Course management strategies designed to help golfers avoid unnecessary mistakes and think more effectively during rounds.
Fit to Play
Golf fitness and mobility guidance focused on staying healthy, maintaining distance, and playing longer.
Together, the books create a straightforward improvement system without overwhelming golfers with unnecessary complexity.
Many golfers already know what it feels like to:
What makes this series different is that it focuses on realistic improvement for the way most people actually play golf.
The instruction stays simple, practical, and easy to apply without requiring endless range sessions or major swing changes.
Improving at golf doesn’t always require rebuilding your swing or making the game more complicated. Sometimes the biggest gains come from better practice habits, smarter decisions, and a simpler approach.