Some of you didn't get enough, or any, ammo or primers on your wish list for Christmas and are angry about it. Happy New Year! lol
Both arguments on where to find matches are right and wrong. You can find them if you search hard enough. I know because I am brand new to all this as of about a month ago and I manually entered the one's I'm interested in on my g-calendar throughout the year. Conversely, it shouldn't be so difficult to find the info but hey, that's the Internet and what you get when volunteer work effort is involved. 20% of the people do 80% of the work applies to paid jobs. It's more like 1% do 99% of the work in volunteered work efforts. Anyone with API dev experience could easily pull together a unified listing and map of events across numerous organizations, but I ain't that person, yet. I'll look into doing this on my personal website after my domain is transferred from an anti-firearm hosting provider.
I haven't shot a match yet, so I don't know what needs to be improved, so I'm going to stay in my lane on that, for now. What I can say as a complete and utter n00b is the cost and time are the biggest detractors to the sport from talking to people before I decided to go down this path. I'd also say the lack of firearm education and FUD associated with firearms in the US is playing a factor, but that's a different discussion. Fortunately, I make a decent enough living to afford starting this sport and my company has unlimited PTO so I can plan out in advance taking Friday's off for travel and pre-event activities. Most people I know are not this lucky. I'd guess most are not going to go buy a $4k plus MPA, Proof, GAP or MCT rifle chambered in a competitive round, plus a $1k plus quality optic, ballistics tools, bags, tripod (still don't have one) and calibers requiring them to also start reloading, which they also know nothing about. Personally, I went with a 6GT driven mainly by factory match ammo availability and I don't want to reload right away. I can switch to 6BR or Dasher next year if the competitor d-bag level isn't overwhelming in this sport and I find it fun enough to stay in it. Many potential shooters can't afford that or don't want to reload and if they get laughed at or disregarded because they brought a .308 or 6.5C that doesn't compete, they won't stick around. This is based on comments I've seen in numerous threads on this site and others.
I'm sure there are posts and data out there, but it would be interesting to know how much shooters are spending annually to shoot competitively, regardless of the organization. Being conservative and using easy numbers, take 10 one-day matches shot per year at $100 per match fee. Consider 100 rounds per match for zeroing, practice and stages at $2 per round ($200). Cool Acres and Arena are both roughly three hours away for me here in GA and it seems to be about the minimum for many people so I'll use 200 miles for this exercise in futility and an average of 20 MPG for truck/suv that fit the demographics for most involved in this sport. At $3 a gallon that is $60 round trip for fuel each trip, $600 for the year, best case. At this point this shooter is at $3,600 for those 10 matches. This does not account for any equipment, local gun club memberships, ammo for practice, barrel changes, food, and I'm sure I'm missing other things here. The rule of savings from many financial groups and experts call for saving 10% of your annual income for entertainment and hobbies. Given the average income in the US is ~$52k a year, that equates to $5,200 a year for hobbies and entertainment. These 10 matches have chewed up 69% of the hobby budget for the average US worker and still have to take the family on vacation and waste money at the movie theater a few times a year. Think about how much this cost goes up when you factor in two day matches and/or travel to a range 6-12 hours away. For comparison to another sport, I was an avid mountain biker before I got into this. A quality carbon fiber bike with good, not great, components runs anywhere between $5k-$8k. You spend a couple of hundred bucks A YEAR on maintenance and consumables, unless you suck and wad your bike up continuously. I predict shooting is going to eclipse what I spent on biking, including buying a bike, over a period of three years within 18 months.
I'm not saying this is fair or something most people can overcome, but it is why I believe the cost is arguably the sport's biggest blocker in terms of it growing and putting people in a position to be competitive. Some parts of the country are also at a disadvantage when it comes to event availability. For example, I was very surprised there are no events in Montana for PRS given the number of ELR facilities out there. There are large parts of the country that have nothing within 12-15 hours of them. However, there are local events people can shoot at if they don't care about the big national organizations. The closest 600 yard range to me has a monthly precision rifle shoot that is open to the public for $30. You aren't winning prizes, so it is all about the fun and experience which is fine to me. I can see how I might get bored if the events are cookie cutter, so I am concerned about that. Anyway, just a FNG perspective and observation on the topic. Git to gittin.