I’ve scheduled this post to go live just ahead of my first guest speaking appearance of 2026 with the students at the University of Kansas.
In athletic communications, networking isn’t optional—it’s the profession. Media relations, coach dynamics, campus partnerships, and external vendors all require it. Your career already depends on building connections, yet when it comes to the job search, many treat networking like a mindless numbers game.
They send dozens of cold requests, attend one conference, collect a stack of business cards, and wait.
That isn’t networking. That’s contact collecting. Real networking is intentional, strategic, and relationship-driven.
1. Purpose Beats Volume Every Time
You don’t need hundreds of industry connections; you need meaningful ones. Instead of asking, “How many people can I meet?” ask:
Who is doing the job I actually want?
Who works at the programs I admire?
Who has followed a career path similar to mine?
Who consistently shares valuable insights or opportunities?
Purposeful networking starts with clarity. If you don’t know what roles or environments you’re pursuing, your outreach becomes unfocused—and people can sense that. Be specific about your goals before you reach out.
2. Lead With Curiosity, Not Requests
The fastest way to stall a conversation is to open with: "Do you know of any jobs?" That puts immediate pressure on someone who doesn’t know you yet. Instead, approach networking like a feature interview. Ask about:
Their career trajectory and what prepared them for their current role.
The skills they use most in their day-to-day operations.
The mistakes they would avoid if they were starting over.
Advice for someone trying to break into the industry.
People enjoy sharing their experiences. That’s how rapport forms. Jobs come later—through trust.
3. Show That You’ve Done Your Homework
Demonstrate that your outreach isn't random. Mention a specific project they led, a post they shared, or a recent career move they made.
"I saw your transition from Division II to Division I and would love to hear how you navigated that process."
A line like that immediately separates you from the generic "Add to Network" crowd. Intentional outreach gets responses.
4. Conferences Are Starting Points, Not Finish Lines
Events like CSC are valuable, but attendance alone doesn't build a network. The real work happens in the 48 hours afterward.
During the event: Take notes on who you meet and capture contact info immediately.
After the event: Follow up. This is where most people fail.
A connection "expires" if there is no thank you or continuation. A simple message works: "I appreciated hearing about your path at XYZ and your advice on portfolio development. I’d love to stay in touch."
5. Think Long-Term, Not Transactional
Build a professional ecosystem, not a one-time transaction. Check in occasionally without asking for anything: share an article, congratulate them on a promotion, or comment on their work.
These small touches compound. Months later, when a job opens or your name comes up in a meeting, you won’t be a stranger. You’ll be a known entity.
6. Keep a Networking Tracker
Treat your network with the same professional rigor you apply to game stats. Maintain a simple list of:
Names and organizations.
How/where you connected.
Last contact date and key notes from the conversation.
Final Thought
The best opportunities in athletic communications rarely come from cold applications. They come from conversations, credibility, and being remembered.
Don’t just meet people. Follow up. Stay present. Build something real. That is networking with purpose.