For a long time, golf coaching had one accepted image.
A student stands on the lesson tee. A coach stands nearby. The coach watches, explains, adjusts, demonstrates and sends the player away with something to work on.
That model still matters. It always will.
But it is no longer the only serious way to coach.
Remote instruction used to be treated like a backup plan. It was something you did when distance, weather or scheduling made an in-person lesson impossible. That view is changing fast, and the combination of FlightScope data and Golf Live’s coaching platform helps explain why.
The lesson tee is still valuable. It just has more competition now.
Coaches Were Right To Be Skeptical
Good coaches are not wrong to ask hard questions about remote instruction.
How do you help a player with grip pressure if you are not standing next to them? How do you explain a backswing position through a screen? How do you know whether a player is actually changing the pattern or just feeling like they are changing it?
Those are fair questions.
In a recent interview, Jordan Vogler, who helps lead FlightScope’s work with affiliates, influencers and creator partnerships, talked about that skepticism during a conversation on FlightScope’s partnership with Golf Live. The most honest part of the discussion was the acknowledgment that remote coaching is not magic. It still requires clarity, communication and a coach who understands what matters.
But once you add reliable video, data and follow-up, the model becomes much more powerful than many old-school coaches may assume.
This Is Where My Own Coaching World Has Changed
This is the story where I can speak most directly from experience.
As a PGA Professional and coach, I still believe deeply in face-to-face instruction. There are things you can see, feel and communicate in person that are hard to fully replace. A player’s setup, rhythm, tension level, comfort, questions and body language all matter.
But I also know this: remote coaching is no longer some watered-down version of a lesson.
When it is done correctly, it can be extremely effective.
That is where the combination of video, communication and FlightScope data becomes so valuable. A player can send swing video from another state. I can look at the motion, listen to what they are feeling and then match that against actual numbers. If the club path is changing, we can see it. If launch and spin are improving, we can see it. If carry distance or dispersion is trending in the right direction, we can see it.
That gives both coach and student confidence.
In many ways, data becomes a form of coaching validation. It tells the student, “Yes, the work is starting to show up,” even before the swing feels completely natural. It also tells the coach whether the plan is working or whether the priority needs to change.
That is a very different experience than sending a student away with one swing thought and hoping they practice it correctly.
Remote coaching still needs a coach. It still needs interpretation. It still needs a plan. But with tools like FlightScope and Golf Live, the conversation between coach and student can continue long after the lesson ends.
That is not a small thing. That is where golf instruction is going.

Data Gives the Coach More Evidence
Video is useful, but video alone can still leave room for debate.
A player may feel like the club is moving more from the inside. The video may show part of the story. But the launch monitor data can confirm whether the path, face, launch, spin or carry numbers are actually changing.
That is where FlightScope becomes such an important part of remote coaching.
The coach is no longer only saying, “This looks better.” The coach can say, “Here is what changed, here is why it matters and here is the number we are trying to keep moving.”
That gives the student a better roadmap. It also gives the coach more evidence.
Sometimes a student does not feel better right away. Sometimes a swing change feels strange before it becomes productive. But if the numbers begin moving in the right direction, the player can build confidence before the final result fully shows up on the golf course.
That matters.
The Best Remote Lessons Still Need a Real Coach
There is a trap in golf technology.
Some people assume more data automatically means better instruction. It does not.
A launch monitor can tell you what happened. It can show club path, face relationship, ball speed, launch, spin and carry. It can reveal patterns that the naked eye might miss. But it still takes a coach to decide what matters most for that golfer.
That is why the FlightScope x Golf Live model makes sense. It is not technology replacing instruction. It is technology giving instruction more structure.
A student can send video. The coach can review the swing, pair it with data, draw lines, record voice notes and give the player a plan. The player can practice indoors or outdoors, then send new swings and new numbers back.
That loop is the key.
Not one lesson. Not one tip. A loop.
Remote Coaching Removes Barriers
One of the biggest strengths of remote coaching is obvious: geography matters less.
A player in New York, like the two I work with, Brevin and Bennett, can work with a coach in Florida- that being me. A junior golfer can send swings during a tournament week. A busy adult can practice indoors after work. A player who feels intimidated at a public range can start in a more comfortable environment before taking the work outside.
That last point is important. Many newer golfers do not love the idea of struggling in front of strangers. They worry about taking up space, hitting bad shots or not knowing what they are doing.
An indoor setup, paired with launch monitor feedback and remote coaching, can create a safer first step. It allows a player to build contact, confidence and understanding before bringing the work to the golf course.
That is good for instruction. It is also good for participation.
The strongest coaching model going forward will not be remote-only or in-person-only.
It will be blended.
There will still be times when a player needs an in-person lesson. There will still be moments when a coach needs to see ball flight, body movement and setup live. But there are also plenty of times when remote coaching can be more efficient, more consistent and more trackable.
The best teachers will not fight that. They will use it.
FlightScope and Golf Live are part of a larger shift in golf instruction. Players want access. Coaches want better information. Technology can help both sides stay connected between lessons, between tournaments and between practice sessions.
Remote coaching is not a lesser version of instruction.
Done well, it is an extension of good coaching. It gives the player a plan, gives the coach better evidence and gives both sides a way to measure progress.
That is not a backup plan anymore.
That is the future arriving on the lesson tee.

