Technology isn’t just disrupting Silicon Valley. It’s quietly transforming industries that have operated the same way for decades — from how we play golf to how we renovate kitchens.
Indoor Golf: Where Simulation Meets Experience
The indoor golf simulator market is projected to reach $2.8B globally by 2028. What started as a niche training tool has become a full entertainment category — attracting non-golfers, corporate events, and year-round revenue in seasonal climates like Canada.
The technology stack matters: TrackMan-grade launch monitors, realistic course rendering, booking automation, and membership management. The operators who treat this as a tech business — not just a golf business — are the ones scaling.
Home Renovation: The Design-Tech Gap
Kitchen and bath renovation is a $180B+ industry in North America, and it’s still largely analog. 3D visualization, AI-powered design recommendations, supply chain automation, and project management platforms are starting to close the gap between customer expectation and contractor capability.
The companies that integrate technology into the renovation experience — from first consultation to final walkthrough — will capture disproportionate market share.
The Pattern
In every industry we invest in, the playbook is the same: find operators who understand their domain deeply, then help them leverage technology to serve customers better, operate more efficiently, and scale faster than competitors who are still using spreadsheets and gut feel.
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