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How to Develop Your Personal Recruiting Platform via Social Media

The college recruiting process has drastically changed over the last decade. Verbal commitments have been trending earlier and earlier, and social media has altered how prospective student-athletes market and promote themselves to college coaches.  It is safe to say that every high school student utilizes some form of social media platform whether it be Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook or Snapchat. The days of paying a recruiting or scouting service thousands of dollars are no longer necessary.

There are plenty of tools, resources and guides to help you navigate through the process and be recruited successfully. One of those tools is your social media platforms.

Use Social Media to Enhance Your Personal Brand

Your social media platforms should be an extension of who you are as a student, an athlete and as a person. If you are not representing yourself in positive manner, then college coaches simply will not recruit you. You must learn how to utilize social media to help you in your journey to play college soccer.

Name/handle: First things first, make sure you use an appropriate name.

  • Make sure a coach can recognize you. Include part of your name, graduation year and/or number. 
  • Try to be consistent across all platforms (e.g CJStack2019).

Content: The content (pictures, comments, etc.) you post should be appropriate. If you weren’t comfortable saying it/showing it to your parents and grandparents than you probably should not publish it on social media.

  • I know you would never violate any rules or break any laws, but in the unlikely event you do, don’t publicize it. There are countless stories of athletic scholarship opportunities lost and careers ended by tweeting incriminating info.
  • Never tweet about controversial topics including politics, race, religion or sexual orientation. Nothing good ever comes from those tweets and they tend to go viral quickly. Just don’t do it.
  • Do not tweet about being in “grind mode” or tell the world how hard you are working on the field or in the gym, because if you were really working that hard, you would not have time to tell us about it.

Representation: Keep in mind as a student-athlete you not only represent yourself, but your family, your school, your team and your coach. What you post could affect them in the long run.

  • Avoid using profanity or any derogatory comments about a person or group of people.
  • Be extra cautious about posting after a tough loss. A good rule would be to sleep on it. They can be difficult and emotionally draining and you might regret what you tweet. Let’s use the Hope Solo incident. “We lost to a bunch of cowards. The better team did not win.” Her words resulted in a six-month suspension from the U.S. Women’s National Team and was recently allowed a leave of absence from the Seattle Reign.
  • If you are underage, you should not be drinking. Never allow yourself to be photographed with a drink or red cup in your hand. We all know what goes in those red cups and even if you were drinking water, nobody is going to believe you.

Social Media can either help or hinder your recruitment to the college of your choice, make sure it’s the former.

How to Use Social Media as Your Personal Recruiting Platform

Social media allows you to easily share and send information, articles, and videos. So why not use that as opportunity to market yourself to college coaches? 

Student-athletes can share and interact with schools, programs and even coaches as they navigate through the process.

Twitter: Your twitter account (e.g @CJStack2019) can be the perfect platform to promote and market your academic and athletic abilities. If you have a Student-Athlete Profile Document, you can pin that to the top of your profile.

Anytime someone visits your page, your SA profile is the first thing that they see. If you have a recruiting video, post that to your page. If you received any honors or achievements both on and off the field, let the world know.

Check out  our video How to Use Twitter as Your Recruiting Profile

Facebook: If you have a Facebook account, go ahead and create a Facebook Page (e.g Chris Stack 2019). Similar to your Twitter page, add photos, images and videos. You can add links of upcoming schedules and events you will be participating in.

Instagram: Insta is slightly different than Twitter and Facebook because it is really limited to pictures and videos that you can post. Do you have an elevator pitch? If not, you should develop one and video you saying it to post and share. This is just a 30-second video of who you are and what you are looking for in your college experience.

YouTube: Do you have a YouTube account? This can be a great place to share your recruiting videos. The videos don’t always have to be your athletic videos. You can share what is going on in school or something about a community service project you are working on.

Try to let college coaches into your world. The more they know about you outside of your sport the more likely they are to recruit you.

Creating Your Blog

Are you looking for a creative way to tell your story to college coaches? Then start your own personal blog. What better way to tell your story for coaches to read? A blog is an excellent and innovative way for prospective student-athletes to gain college exposure. In order to be recruited college coaches need to know who you are. And your blog can tell them that story.

How easy is it to start a blog? In 5 minutes you can set up a FREE personal recruiting blog on WordPress and start writing your first article.

What do you want college coaches to know about you? What kind of student, athlete and person are you? What are your goals? What are your core values? What is most important to you in your life?

Why blog?

One of the first things college coaches/recruiting coordinators do when information about new prospect comes across their desk is Google them.

What shows up when you Google yourself? By creating a personal recruiting platform using a consistent name (e.g CJStack2019) across all your social media platforms these will show up first in a Google search.

What to blog about:

Your options are limitless when it comes to things to write about. You want to focus on ideas that will maximize your recruiting exposure.  Don’t blog about your day-to-day routine but rather bigger life events.

  • How you prepare for competition
  • Bio of who you are as a student-athlete
  • Recent/upcoming/past athletic performances (game, showcase, camps, etc.)
  • Honors/achievements (academic or athletic)
  • Discuss your goals
  • Talk about things you are involved outside of sports and why
  • Community service initiatives
  • Moments where you had to battle adversity
  • Times when you were overwhelmed and how you dealt with it
  • Attending a college ID/camp clinic
  • Experience on campus visits

This shouldn’t need to be said, but make sure what you are writing is the truth and not a made up story of things that coaches want to read and know about a prospect.

COACHES ALWAYS FIND OUT THE TRUTH.

The keys to writing a good recruiting blog:

1. A blog title that stands out – e.g Stack’s Two Goals Propel the Explorers to PCL Final

2. Quality writing (interesting topics that have been proofread for spelling and grammar)

Use your social media to enhance your personal brand, not to destroy it. A coach once said, don’t let a 140 character tweet cost you $140,000 scholarship. Now, everyone is not receiving a full athletic scholarship, but a tweet can you cost you the opportunity to play at the next level.

Chris Stack is a an expert in college recruiting education, check out his bio to learn more about him and the impact he is making on educating prospective student-athletes about the college recruiting process. 


CoachUp is the safest and easiest way to find a coach for personalized training. With our 100% money-back guarantee and vetted coaches, anyone can achieve their full athletic potential. Find your perfect coach today and become the athlete you want to be!

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2 Responses

  1. I have a son who have played soccer for 15 years in States, Japan and Germany but since he was moving ( military family member ) he did not get a chance to be seen here in states
    What can we do ?

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