HomeGolfTitleist Expands AIM Alignment Designs Across Full Golf Ball Lineup

Titleist Expands AIM Alignment Designs Across Full Golf Ball Lineup


If you don’t have alignment aids on your golf balls, are you even trying, bro?

For decades, the standard Titleist sidestamp was good enough, I suppose. You’d crouch behind the ball, eyeball the line, and tell yourself that was close enough. And maybe it was. But emerging data suggests there just might be something to all this alignment trickery—and Titleist built a measurement device to prove it.

More on that later.

Better Late Than Aggressively Late

Let’s be honest: Titleist was slow to the visual alignment game. While competitors were printing lines, stripes, and the occasional taco, Titleist steadfastly offered … a sidestamp.

Cutting-edge stuff.

For a company that prides itself on being the most played ball on every professional tour on the planet, the visual technology side of the business moved at a pace that could charitably be described as [JB] Homesian (AKA: deliberate).

That said, Titleist is catching up to the times. The introduction of AIM Performance and AIM Enhanced designs for the Pro V1 family was a meaningful step. And now, with reimagined AIM designs for AVX, Tour Soft, Velocity, and TruFeel, the alignment story extends across the entire Titleist golf ball family.

Would I like to see Titleist get a little more adventurous with it? Push the designs further? Maybe do something genuinely fun with Left Dash? Yup. But, for now, I’ll happily settle for progress.

Besides, the fact that Titleist developed custom tooling specifically to validate the effectiveness of these designs suggests this isn’t a passing trend or a box-checking exercise. They’re investing in the technology side of alignment stories.

The Data Behind AIM

To assess whether AIM designs actually do anything (a fair question), Titleist Golf Ball R&D developed a proprietary device that measures how precisely golfers align their ball to a target. They ran controlled testing, collected thousands of data points, and measured left-right proximity to the hole through absolute angles.

The result: golfers using AIM designs were up to 35% more precise in their alignment compared to those using a standard-length sidestamp.

Whether or not they actually made more putts is a question for another day, I suppose.

“Interestingly, AIM is more valuable as you get farther from the hole,” said Frederick Waddell, Titleist’s Director of Golf Ball Product Management. “On a four-foot putt, you might be okay lining up your ball with a standard sidestamp because it’s such a short putt. But as you go back to 12 feet or 16 feet, you could be off by up to a foot on either side of the hole as that dispersion cone gets wider.”

That tracks. A slight misalignment at four feet is a couple inches off. At 16 feet, that same angular error translates into real misses. And for those of us who already miss enough putts without giving away strokes on alignment (raises hand), the suggestion of improvement is worth investigating.

What’s New with AIM

Each of the four new AIM models features a unique design, and the approaches vary by ball.

Titleist AVX AIM alignment

AVX AIM 360 – A distinctive alignment pattern that wraps around the full circumference of the ball, gradually fading towards the edges

Titleist Tour Soft AIM alignment

Tour Soft AIM Performance  – An extended three-line alignment design printed on the fourth pole (opposite the sidestamp), available in blue/black or red/black.

Titleist Velocity AIM alignment

Velocity AIM Performance – An orange and black arrow design, also on the fourth pole. Perhaps the boldest design in the AIM lineup.

Titleist True Feel AIM alignment

TruFeel AIM 360 – A continuous red arrow that wraps the circumference of the ball. TruFeel remains the softest ball in the Titleist lineup, built for long distance, consistent greenside spin, and ultra-soft feel.

The Full AIM Lineup

Titleist AIM golf balls

With today’s updates, the complete Titleist AIM family now looks like this:

For Pro V1, Pro V1x, and the new Pro V1x Left Dash, AIM Performance and AIM Enhanced designs continue to be available. The AIM Performance marking – inspired by the line that roughly 65% of Titleist ball players on the PGA TOUR already add to their ball manually – is a 105-degree design printed on the fourth pole, available in black, red, blue, and pink.

The AIM Enhanced version is an extended three-line design built into the sidestamp itself, measuring over 65% longer than the standard Titleist sidestamp.

No excuses left for eyeballing it.

All AIM Performance and AIM Enhanced designs are available now in golf shops and at Titleist.com.

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