In athletic communications, “yes” is often the default setting.
Yes to the extra feature.
Yes to the last-minute graphic.
Yes to another layer of coverage.
Yes to one more responsibility because it might help, or because no one else is available.
Early in a career, that instinct can feel like progress. Being dependable, visible, and responsive is part of building trust in a program. But over time, there’s a quieter lesson that tends to separate constant output from meaningful impact: the best work often comes from the discipline of saying “no” to the wrong things.
Not everything that is urgent is important. And not everything that is asked of you is aligned with the work that actually moves a program forward.
The cost of saying yes too often
There are seasons in athletic communications where the workload is inherently reactive. Game days compress time. Coaches need updates immediately. Media requests stack on top of internal demands. In that environment, saying yes feels like survival.
But there’s a hidden cost that builds gradually. The first thing to erode isn’t effort—it’s clarity. When everything becomes equally important, nothing truly is. You begin producing more content, but with less intention. You respond faster, but think less deeply. You stay busy, but not necessarily effective.
And perhaps most importantly, you lose the margin required for the work that actually differentiates a program: long-form storytelling, athlete development narratives, and strategic communication planning.
The turning point: choosing depth over volume
A shift happens when you start recognizing that some of the most valuable contributions in athletic communications are not immediate.
A season recap that actually captures identity, not just results.
A feature that reveals something about a student-athlete beyond their stat line.
A strategic content series that builds continuity instead of reacting to isolated moments.
Those things require time. And time rarely appears on its own—it has to be protected.
There were moments in my own career where the most important decision wasn’t what to add, but what to decline. Not in a dismissive way, but in a clarifying one: If I take this on, what does it take away from something else that matters more?
Saying no to an extra, low-impact project didn’t reduce output—it improved it. The work that remained became more intentional, more polished, and more aligned with long-term program identity.
Mentorship requires margin
One of the most overlooked consequences of overcommitment in this field is the loss of relational bandwidth.
Mentorship—whether with student-workers, graduate assistants, or younger professionals—does not happen in passing. It requires presence. It requires time to explain not just what to do, but why it matters. It requires space to let others make mistakes and learn from them without urgency dictating the pace of correction.
When every hour is consumed by output, mentorship gets reduced to transactional instruction: “Do this, send that, fix this.”
But when you protect your energy by saying no to unnecessary tasks, you create room for something more durable. You can sit with a student and walk through a feature story rewrite. You can explain how to structure a narrative arc instead of just formatting a post. You can invest in developing judgment, not just execution.
That is where long-term program capacity is built—not in the volume of content produced, but in the number of people who understand how to produce it well.
Energy is a strategic resource
There’s a tendency in athletic communications to treat energy as infinite. But creative work is not linear. It is cumulative. The quality of a feature story, a season recap, or a strategic campaign often reflects the mental bandwidth available when it was created.
When energy is fragmented across too many low-value tasks, the ceiling on higher-value work lowers. You can still perform—but you rarely elevate.
Saying no becomes less about restriction and more about allocation. It is the process of directing your best cognitive and creative energy toward the work that compounds over time: storytelling systems, communication strategy, and institutional memory.
What actually moves programs forward
If you strip athletic communications down to its most essential purpose, it is not just content creation—it is meaning-making.
Results are reported everywhere. Scores are instantaneous. But identity is built slowly, through consistent narrative framing and intentional storytelling.
Programs move forward when:
Athletes are understood beyond performance metrics
Seasons are contextualized, not just summarized
Institutional culture is documented and communicated clearly
Younger staff are developed into independent thinkers
Communication strategy is proactive, not purely reactive
None of those outcomes are accelerated by saying yes to everything. In fact, they are often delayed by it.
The discipline of intentional refusal
Saying no in this context is not about disengagement. It is about prioritization with awareness of long-term impact.
It sounds like:
“I can’t take that on right now without compromising existing commitments.”
“That’s a good idea, but it doesn’t align with our current communication priorities.”
“If we add this, what are we willing to scale back?”
Those are not defensive responses. They are strategic ones.
And over time, they reshape how your work is perceived—not as someone who simply completes tasks, but as someone who protects standards.
Closing thought
The shift from activity to impact in athletic communications is rarely dramatic. It happens in small decisions repeated over time: choosing depth over volume, clarity over urgency, and long-term storytelling over short-term noise.
The irony is that saying “no” to more things often results in your work being seen—and remembered—more clearly.
Because the goal was never to do everything.
It was to do the right things well enough that they last beyond the moment they were created.