Sports communicators, sports information directors, creative teams, and digital content creators are expected to do more than ever before. A single day can include writing recaps, designing graphics, editing video, managing social media, coordinating interviews, producing live stats, traveling with teams, updating websites, responding to media requests, and handling last-minute emergencies before the first pitch or kickoff even begins.
The modern athletics communicator is no longer simply a storyteller. They are often a photographer, editor, marketer, strategist, analyst, brand manager, recruiter support staff member, and event operator all at once.
And while versatility is valuable, scattered attention comes with a cost.
When Everything Matters, Nothing Gets Full Attention
The pressure to constantly produce content can create a cycle where professionals feel they must say yes to every request, every project, and every opportunity. Over time, that fragmented focus impacts creativity, relationships, and overall performance.
Creativity suffers first.
Great storytelling requires observation, emotional connection, research, intentionality, and reflection. But creativity struggles in environments where every task is urgent and every notification demands immediate attention. Instead of producing meaningful stories that elevate student-athletes and programs, communicators can become trapped in survival mode — creating content simply to keep up with the pace.
In athletics communications, the difference between good and impactful often comes down to focus.
The best stories are rarely rushed. They are developed with purpose. They capture humanity, emotion, adversity, leadership, and growth. That level of storytelling requires mental space.
The Relationship Impact
Scattered attention also affects relationships throughout athletic departments.
When professionals are stretched too thin, communication becomes transactional rather than relational. Coaches may feel unheard. Student-athletes may feel overlooked. Creative teams may become disconnected from shared goals because everyone is operating reactively instead of collaboratively.
Strong athletic departments are built on alignment and trust.
That trust grows when staff members are fully present in conversations, intentional in collaboration, and clear in communication. Constant multitasking often creates the illusion of productivity while quietly weakening the quality of professional relationships.
Presence matters.
A five-minute conversation with complete attention is often more valuable than an hour spent distracted by emails, notifications, and competing priorities.
Performance Declines When Focus Disappears
There is a misconception in athletics that being overwhelmed is proof of commitment.
It is not.
Burnout does not improve performance. Chronic stress does not enhance creativity. Exhaustion does not produce better leadership.
When attention is scattered across too many responsibilities, mistakes increase. Deadlines become harder to manage. Energy declines. Decision-making suffers. Professionals begin reacting instead of leading.
In college athletics, where communication often shapes public perception, recruiting visibility, donor engagement, and institutional branding, that decline in focus can have long-term consequences.
The reality is simple: focused energy produces stronger outcomes.
Mental Health Matters in Athletics Communications
As May recognizes Mental Health Awareness Month, it is important to acknowledge the emotional and mental demands placed on communications professionals within athletics.
While student-athlete mental health has rightfully become a larger conversation across college sports, the mental health of administrators, communicators, creatives, and support staff deserves attention as well.
Many sports communicators operate in environments where:
- Workdays rarely end at 5 p.m.
- Weekends are not truly weekends
- Travel is extensive
- Public criticism is immediate and visible
- Staffing limitations increase workload
- The expectation to always be available feels constant
Over time, that environment can create emotional fatigue and mental exhaustion.
Mental health is not separate from performance. It directly impacts creativity, communication, leadership, and overall well-being.
Departments that value sustainable excellence must also value healthy boundaries, manageable workloads, and supportive workplace cultures.
Rest is not weakness. Boundaries are not laziness. Focus is not selfishness.
They are necessary for long-term effectiveness.
The Power of Saying No
One of the most difficult — and most important — professional skills in athletics communications is learning when to say no.
Not every idea needs immediate execution. Not every request aligns with departmental goals. Not every opportunity deserves equal energy.
Saying no is not about avoiding responsibility. It is about protecting purpose.
When professionals say yes to everything, they often unintentionally dilute the quality of the work that matters most. Strategic focus requires understanding which projects advance the mission and which simply create noise.
The strongest brands in college athletics are rarely built through random activity. They are built through intentional consistency.
Sometimes saying no to one task means saying yes to better storytelling, stronger strategy, healthier collaboration, or personal well-being.
Delegation Is Leadership, Not Weakness
Many communicators struggle with delegation because they care deeply about quality. They want to ensure things are done correctly, efficiently, and professionally.
But attempting to do everything alone eventually limits both personal growth and organizational growth.
Delegation creates trust. It develops younger staff members, graduate assistants, interns, and student workers. It allows teams to operate more efficiently while expanding creative capacity.
Effective leaders do not simply assign tasks. They define responsibilities through purpose and mission.
When roles are clearly defined:
- Staff members understand expectations
- Teams avoid duplication of effort
- Communication improves
- Accountability increases
- Creativity becomes more intentional
- Individuals can specialize and grow
Not everyone on a communications staff needs to do everything.
Some excel in writing. Others thrive in photography, social strategy, video production, graphic design, media relations, or long-form storytelling. The best departments recognize those strengths and build systems that maximize them.
Clear mission-driven delegation helps people move from being overwhelmed generalists to empowered contributors.
Intentional Focus Creates Better Storytelling
The most impactful athletics storytelling still comes from depth, not volume.
It comes from understanding people. Listening carefully. Observing details. Building relationships. Identifying meaningful moments others overlook.
Focused attention allows communicators to tell stories that resonate beyond scores and statistics.
In an era dominated by constant content production, intentional focus may be one of the greatest competitive advantages an athletics department can have.
Not because it creates more content.
Because it creates better content.
And perhaps more importantly, it creates healthier professionals, stronger teams, and more sustainable careers within college athletics.