Thursday, May 21, 2026

Consistency Over Moments: The Standard That Defines Athletic Communications (May 21, 2026)

The Quiet Standard – What Consistency Really Looks Like in Athletic Communications

In athletic communications, people often notice the “big moments.”

The championship graphic.
The viral post.
The record-breaking crowd photo.
The nationally ranked matchup.

Those moments matter. They should be celebrated.

But after more than two decades in this profession, I’ve learned something important:

Most careers in this industry are not built on occasional greatness.
They are built on consistent reliability.

The professionals who last—the ones coaches trust, administrators lean on, and student-athletes respect—are usually not the loudest people in the room. They are the people who quietly deliver at a high level over and over again.

They meet deadlines.
They communicate clearly.
They solve problems without creating drama.
They represent the institution professionally whether 10 people are watching or 10,000.

That consistency becomes your reputation long before your title changes.

Consistency Builds Trust

One of the most overlooked realities in athletic communications is this:

Every interaction is part of your professional brand.

The way you answer an email.
The accuracy of a roster.
The preparation before a broadcast.
The professionalism shown during a tough loss.

People remember those details.

In many ways, trust in this profession is built through repetition. Coaches need to know you will handle things correctly under pressure. Administrators need confidence that you can represent the institution well. Student-athletes need to believe you genuinely care about telling their stories the right way.

Trust is rarely earned through one spectacular moment.

It is earned through hundreds of dependable ones.

The Hidden Work Matters

There are parts of this profession that never make social media.

The late-night stat corrections.
The travel-day graphics built on a laptop in a hotel lobby.
The rewritten recap after a scoring change.
The hours spent helping a student worker learn a process correctly.

That work matters.

The public usually sees the finished product. What they do not see is the discipline behind it.

And discipline is what sustains excellence when motivation fades.

Anyone can be fully engaged when the team is winning. The challenge is maintaining the same standard during losing streaks, staffing shortages, weather delays, or difficult seasons.

That is where professionalism shows itself.

The Impact You Don’t Always See Coming

Over the last 24 hours, I found out that three of my former student-athletes have earned doctoral degrees.

That kind of news has a way of stopping you in your tracks.

One of them was also a former student worker of mine at Pacific University. Her path is one that continues to stay with me. She originally came to college to compete in one sport, but ended up transitioning to another. During that period of change, she made the decision to work in our athletic communications office—not just as a source of income, but as a way to build skills she knew would serve her beyond athletics.

She is now a veterinarian.

Her journey is a reminder that the roles we play in college athletics often extend far beyond the field, court, or office. Sometimes we are simply a small part of a much larger trajectory.

I am proud of all my former student workers. Recently, I reached out to many of them, and those conversations have been deeply meaningful. I plan to begin introducing some of them—as well as members of my broader network—more intentionally through this space moving forward.

We all have a story. And I am grateful for how many people have continued to invest in mine, even in ways I do not always immediately recognize.

Young Professionals: Don’t Rush the Foundation

For younger professionals entering the industry, there can be pressure to “arrive” quickly.

Everyone wants the bigger title.
The higher division.
The larger platform.

Ambition is healthy. But don’t overlook the importance of mastering the fundamentals first.

The professionals who grow the fastest long term are often the ones who first become dependable.

Can people trust your work?
Can they trust your communication?
Can they trust your preparation?
Can they trust your attitude during stressful moments?

Those questions matter far more than follower counts.

The strongest careers are usually built brick by brick—not viral post by viral post.

Leadership Is Often Quiet

Leadership in athletic communications is not always visible.

Sometimes leadership is simply being steady.

Being the calm person during a chaotic gameday.
Being prepared before everyone else arrives.
Being willing to help another department without needing recognition.

Culture inside an athletic department is shaped by those daily behaviors.

Over time, people begin to mirror the standards that are consistently demonstrated around them.

That is why consistency is not just a work habit—it is leadership.

Final Thought

In a profession built around highlights, never underestimate the value of becoming someone others can consistently rely on.

Because long after people forget a graphic or a final score, they will remember whether they could trust you when it mattered most.

We all have a story—and I am thankful for the way so many continue to be invested in mine.


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Beyond Media Relations: How Great SID Professionals Shape Department Culture (May 20, 2026)

Some professionals manage communications.

Others quietly shape the culture of an entire department.

And often, they do it without a title that reflects their influence.


1. Culture Is Built Daily

Examples:

  • professionalism under pressure
  • emotional consistency
  • preparation
  • accountability
  • teamwork

2. Veteran Presence Matters

Discuss how experienced professionals:

  • stabilize younger staff
  • reduce panic during crises
  • mentor through action
  • set standards through consistency

3. Students Learn More Than Skills

Student workers learn:

  • professionalism
  • communication habits
  • composure
  • relationship management
  • work ethic

4. Culture Builders Think Beyond Themselves

They ask:

  • How do we leave this department better?
  • How do we help younger professionals grow?
  • How do we protect institutional standards?

Closing Thoughts

The most impactful professionals are rarely the loudest people in the room.

They are the people whose standards quietly influence everyone around them.

That is culture leadership.

And college athletics needs more of it.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Most Valuable Skill in Athletic Communications Isn’t Design — It’s Trust (May 19, 2026)

 Technology changes. Platforms evolve. Algorithms shift.

But one thing has never changed in athletic communications:

People still work with people they trust.

Monday, May 18, 2026

More Than a Content Creator: Why Strategic Thinking Separates Great SID Professionals (May 18, 2026)

At some point in every SID career, there’s a realization:

The people who advance the furthest are rarely the ones producing the highest volume of content.

They are the ones who understand why the content matters.

Anyone can learn to write a recap. Anyone can post a graphic. Anyone can schedule social media.

But not everyone learns how to think strategically.

That is the separator.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

More Than a Content Creator: What the Best SID Professionals Actually Become (May 14, 2026)

I recently reviewed a job description and started to to think what qualifies one person for the job over another. There are moments during every hiring process where résumés begin to blend together.

Everyone has written recaps.
Everyone has posted graphics.
Everyone has worked games.
Everyone knows Photoshop, social media strategy, and basic statistics software.

Technical competency matters. It always will.

But the longer I work in athletic communications, the more I realize the profession’s best professionals are rarely separated by software knowledge alone.

They are separated by how they think.
How they serve.
How they communicate.
How they respond under pressure.
How they build trust.

Too often, the modern athletic communications conversation becomes centered entirely around production:
How many graphics?
How many posts?
How many impressions?
How much content?

Those things matter, but they do not fully define the value of an SID professional.

The best professionals in this field become connective tissue for an athletic department.

They connect coaches to administration.
They connect student-athletes to institutional storytelling.
They connect alumni to current programs.
They connect community to campus.
They connect trust to communication.

That responsibility requires far more than content creation.

Serving Before Self-Promotion

One of the clearest indicators of long-term success in this profession is whether someone enters the field to serve or to be seen.

The strongest professionals understand visibility is earned through consistent work, not chased through constant recognition.

They celebrate student-athletes before themselves.
They share credit.
They handle small tasks with professionalism.
They understand that some of the most important work in athletic communications is never publicly noticed.

The late-night stat correction matters.
The follow-up email matters.
The quiet conversation with a frustrated coach matters.
The overlooked athlete story matters.

Service builds trust.
Trust builds relationships.
Relationships sustain departments.

A self-centered communicator can create division quickly.
A service-centered communicator creates stability.

Strategic Thinking Beyond the Recap

Athletic communications is no longer simply about documenting events.

It is about positioning institutions.

The best SID professionals think strategically. They ask:

  • What story are we telling?

  • Who needs to hear it?

  • How does this align with institutional mission?

  • What does this communicate about our culture?

  • What impact does this have beyond today?

A graphic is not just a graphic.
A release is not just a release.
A social media post is not just content.

Every piece of communication reinforces identity.

Strong communicators understand that recruiting, fundraising, alumni engagement, campus pride, and institutional reputation are all affected by the consistency and intentionality of communication.

The profession increasingly needs communication leaders, not simply content producers.

Trust Is the Real Currency

In athletic communications, trust matters more than almost anything else.

The best professionals become reliable people within departments.

Coaches trust them.
Administrators trust them.
Student-athletes trust them.
Media members trust them.

That trust is built through consistency:

  • Accuracy

  • Follow-through

  • Calmness

  • Professionalism

  • Emotional maturity

  • Honest communication

Departments do not need professionals whose demeanor changes based on wins, losses, recognition, or stress levels.

They need stabilizers.

The strongest SID professionals often become trusted because they consistently make situations better, not louder.

Communication Is Leadership

Every interaction inside an athletic department shapes culture.

Emails shape culture.
Social media shapes culture.
Conversations shape culture.
Responses during adversity shape culture.

The best communicators understand that communication is not simply output. It is leadership behavior.

Intentional communicators understand:

  • Timing

  • Tone

  • Audience

  • Context

  • Emotional intelligence

They understand that professionalism is not performative. It is operational.

Clear communication reduces friction.
Thoughtful communication builds alignment.
Professional communication creates trust.

Mentorship Still Matters

One of the profession’s greatest strengths has always been its willingness to help others grow.

The best SID professionals invest in people.
They mentor student-workers.
They share ideas with peers.
They encourage younger professionals.
They seek growth themselves.

This profession improves when knowledge is shared instead of protected.

Strong professionals understand their responsibility extends beyond their own career progression.

They are helping shape future communicators, future leaders, and future advocates for student-athletes.

Protecting Institutional Culture

Athletic communicators often become unofficial custodians of departmental culture.

They help determine:

  • Which stories are elevated

  • Which voices are heard

  • What standards are reinforced

  • How people are represented publicly

Culture is affected by communication more than many departments realize.

Negativity affects culture.
Carelessness affects culture.
Disengagement affects culture.
Ego affects culture.

The strongest professionals understand their role is not simply to promote athletics.

It is to represent people responsibly and institutions professionally.

Professionalism Under Pressure

Athletic communications is demanding work.

Long hours.
Constant deadlines.
Travel.
Unexpected issues.
Emotional environments.
Limited staffing.

Pressure reveals professionalism.

The best SID professionals are not defined solely by what they produce when everything goes smoothly.

They are defined by:

  • How they respond to mistakes

  • How they manage conflict

  • How they communicate during adversity

  • How they handle exhaustion

  • How they lead when things become difficult

Composure matters.

Departments need professionals who create calm, not chaos.

Understanding the Mission

The strongest candidates — and the strongest professionals — understand the work is bigger than the content itself.

A transactional communicator sees:

  • Posts

  • Graphics

  • Statistics

  • Recaps

A mission-driven communicator sees:

  • Student-athlete experiences

  • Institutional storytelling

  • Historical preservation

  • Community connection

  • Department identity

Athletic communications is not simply publicity.

It is stewardship.

It is documentation.
It is advocacy.
It is relationship-building.
It is preserving moments and memories that become part of an institution’s history.

That responsibility deserves intentionality.

More Than Content Creators

The phrase “content creator” has become common within athletics.

But the best SID professionals eventually become something much more important.

They become connectors.
Stabilizers.
Translators.
Relationship-builders.
Problem-solvers.
Culture-shapers.

They become connective tissue for athletic departments.

And in a profession built around people, trust, and institutional identity, that may be the most valuable role of all.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

You Don’t Have to Have It All Figured Out (May 12, 2026)

As another academic and athletic year comes to a close, the field of athletic communications spends significant time celebrating others. We promote championship moments, recognize award winners, highlight academic success, and tell the stories of coaches and student-athletes whose work deserves to be honored. It is one of the most meaningful parts of the profession.

But after the graphics are posted, the releases are written, the banquets end, and the seasons officially close, there are often quiet moments that follow for the people behind the scenes.

Too often, those moments can feel empty.

As professionals in athletic communications, many of us quietly wrestle with questions that nobody else sees. Did I do enough? Did I represent people well? Did I miss something important? Could I have told that story better? Could I have served our student-athletes, coaches, or institution more effectively?

I have felt that personally.

There have been moments where the uncertainty of whether I handled a responsibility to the best of my ability followed me long after the event itself ended. Those thoughts do not always stay confined to the office or the press box. Sometimes they spill into other areas of life — creating pressure, doubt, and exhaustion that are difficult to explain to people outside the profession.

That is part of why I wanted to write this.

Not because I have everything figured out, but because I know many others in this field are carrying similar thoughts. In a profession built around serving others, it can become easy to measure our worth only through production, recognition, or external validation.

But growth in this profession — and in life — rarely comes from perfection.

It comes from continuing to show up.

In athletic communications — and really in any leadership role — there is pressure to appear polished, confident, and always prepared. Social media often rewards certainty. Résumés reward accomplishments. Public perception rewards composure.

But growth rarely happens from pretending you already have all the answers.

Some of the best professional moments I have experienced did not come from having everything figured out. They came from showing up willing to learn, willing to listen, and willing to take responsibility for the next step in front of me.

Early in a career, it is easy to believe that credibility comes from perfection. Over time, you realize credibility is built through consistency. It is built through reliability. It is built through humility.

There are days in athletic communications when everything moves fast. Deadlines stack up. A game changes unexpectedly. A story becomes more emotional than anticipated. A coach, student-athlete, or administrator needs support in a moment you did not prepare for. In those moments, you cannot always rely on having the perfect answer.

What matters is showing up.

Showing up willing to work.
Showing up willing to adapt.
Showing up willing to learn from mistakes instead of hiding them.

Humility is often misunderstood as weakness, but in this profession, humility creates growth. It allows you to ask questions. It allows you to accept feedback. It allows you to recognize that every season, every student-athlete, and every institution has something new to teach you.

The pressure to “have it all figured out” can become paralyzing for young professionals entering athletics. They compare their beginning to someone else’s middle. They think confidence means never doubting themselves.

It does not.

Confidence can simply mean trusting yourself enough to take the next right step even when the entire path is unclear.

Sometimes the next right step is sending the email.
Sometimes it is owning a mistake.
Sometimes it is staying late to finish the job correctly.
Sometimes it is asking for help.
Sometimes it is listening more than speaking.

Careers are not built in giant moments nearly as often as they are built in small, consistent decisions repeated over time.

The people who last in this industry are rarely the ones pretending to know everything. More often, they are the ones willing to keep learning long after others stop.

You do not need to have the entire journey mapped out today.

You just need enough humility to keep growing and enough discipline to take the next right step.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

The Competitive Advantage Athletic Departments Overlook: Retention (May 12, 2026)

The athletic job market has never been more crowded, yet departments across the country continue to struggle with one issue that receives far less attention than hiring: retention.

Every opening in athletics now attracts hundreds of applicants. Social media makes opportunities more visible, networking has become more accessible, and professionals are constantly encouraged to chase the next title, salary increase, or institutional logo. Movement has become normalized. In many cases, it is even celebrated.

But amid all the turnover, one reality remains unchanged: the most successful athletic departments are rarely built through constant replacement.

Retention still matters because college athletics is fundamentally a relationship-driven industry. Institutional knowledge, trust, consistency, and culture cannot be replicated overnight by simply filling a vacancy. While departments may believe they can always find another candidate in an oversaturated market, replacing experience is far more difficult than replacing a position.

In athletic communications especially, retention creates continuity that directly impacts storytelling, branding, recruiting, alumni engagement, and student-athlete experience. The longer a professional remains invested in a department, the deeper their understanding becomes of the people, traditions, and moments that shape an institution’s identity.

In an era where everyone seems focused on who is leaving for the next opportunity, departments that prioritize keeping good people may ultimately gain the greatest long-term advantage.