How To Manage Your Recruiting Process

How To Manage Your Recruiting Process

Manage Your Recruiting Process With Our College Recruiting Checklists 

Freshman Recruiting Checklists 

Sophomore Recruiting Checklists 

Junior Recruiting Checklists 

Summer Recruiting Checklists 

Going on Official and Unofficial Visits 

Visiting colleges is a very important part of the recruiting process. Do you like the feel of the campus? How’s the climate? Can you see yourself living here for four years? As a student-athlete, you may go on both official and unofficial college visits, although official visits are becoming less and less common. You can (and should) start taking unofficial visits as soon as possible. Official visits, however, cannot occur until your senior year. There are other strict rules for both types of visit, so make sure you’re following the proper steps for setting each up.

Updating Your Target List of Schools 

As you move through the recruiting process, the list of 50-plus schools you started with will naturally start to dwindle. It will be fairly obvious when a coach isn’t interested in recruiting you, and you can remove that school from your list within your online recruiting profile. Coaches who are interested will be sending personalized letters, emails, calling you at home, coming to see you play specifically and inviting you on an official visit. Just receiving a letter from the admissions office, a questionnaire from the coach if or a coach watches you play in a game doesn’t mean you’re being recruited. Realizing what schools are truly considering you will allow you to focus your time and effort on building relationships with those coaches. 

Stay on Top of the Application Process and Deadlines



The last thing you want to think about when you’re trying to get recruited is probably deadlines and paperwork, but if you don’t pay attention to the important dates, you’ll most likely lose your chance to compete in college. There are seven main parts to the application process to pay attention to:

  1. Registering for and taking the ACT and SAT
  2. Registering with the NCAA Eligibility Center (for DI and DII) and/or the NAIA Eligibility Center
  3. Filling out and sending in college applications
  4. Submitting your FAFSA paperwork
  5. Requesting your final amateurism certification 
  6. Sending your final transcripts and proof of graduation to the Eligibility Center(s)
  7. Signing the acceptance letter

Compare and Negotiate Your Offers 

Athletic scholarship amounts differ greatly—from division to division, sport to sport and school to school. While most student-athletes strive for a full-ride scholarship, the reality is that only 1 percent actually receive one, and they’re usually only offered to those who play head count sports (DI basketball and DI-A football for men; DI basketball, tennis, volleyball and gymnastics for women). The majority of student-athletes who are offered scholarships will be offered a percentage of the total cost, so it’s important to compare each package and—when possible—use them to find your best financial aid package at your top school.

 

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