AthletesGoing2College Stage 3 of 4 · Action Plan

Your Personal Recruiting Action Plan

A week-by-week outreach roadmap. Build the plan once. Maintain it every week.

Stage 1Build Profile
Stage 2Find Schools
Stage 3 · You are hereAction Plan
Stage 4Outreach

The athletes who get recruited aren’t always the most talented ones. They’re consistently the most organized ones.

Talent gets you into the recruiting pool. Organization determines how effectively you work it. An athlete with a strong profile but no system — contacting programs inconsistently, forgetting to follow up, losing track of who she spoke to and what was said — leaves recruiting relationships on the table every week.

When you know exactly which programs you’re targeting, what you said to each one, when you last reached out, and what to do next, every interaction builds on the last. This page is that system — a real working framework for organizing your outreach and keeping the process moving, whether the results are immediately visible or not. Work through each section in order.

Before You Build the Plan

Three things that must be in place first

Starting active outreach before these are ready produces emails that underperform — and can actively hurt your recruiting.

Prerequisite 1

Your profile is published

Every email you send makes a coach look you up. If your profile isn’t live, interested coaches find nothing and move on. It doesn’t need to be perfect — just complete enough to show who you are and how to evaluate you.

Tool: Recruiting Profile Builder

Prerequisite 2

Your school list is built and tiered

Outreach without a targeted list is mass emailing, and mass emailing performs poorly. Have 15–25 programs organized into three tiers before you start.

Tool: College Search Dashboard

Prerequisite 3

Your social media is clean

Complete your social media audit before any coach gets an email. A coach who receives your email and then finds a problematic online presence has learned two things at once.

Resource: Social Media & Recruiting

Part One

Know your timeline

The right outreach plan isn’t the same for every athlete. Calibrate it to your graduation year, your division target, and your current level of coach interest.

Freshman / Sophomore · D1 target

Visibility & development phase

Coaches can’t initiate contact until September 1 of junior year, so you’re not in active outreach yet — you’re making yourself findable and evaluable. You can contact coaches anytime (the Sept 1 rule limits coach-initiated contact, not yours), but keep it brief: a short intro with your profile link and showcase schedule, not a full campaign at 14.

  • Compete where D1 coaches evaluate
  • Publish your profile so it’s findable
  • Attend camps at programs you’re truly interested in
  • Research programs so you’re ready on Sept 1
  • Keep your academic record strong
Junior · D1 target

Your most active outreach window

Coach-initiated contact opens September 1, and official visits open January 1 of junior year. The class is forming now — athletes who aren’t in active outreach watch it fill without them. Your outreach should be active, systematic, and consistent starting now. This plan is built primarily for you.

Junior / Senior · D2, D3, NAIA, JUCO

Consistent, targeted, patient

D2 coaches can contact you after June 15 of sophomore year; D3 and NAIA can contact year-round. That flexibility is a trap — with no external deadline forcing urgency, the plan matters more, not less. These relationships often develop more slowly and personally, and the plan accounts for that.

Senior · Incomplete process

Direct, honest about timing

Senior year is not too late — athletes commit and sign in the fall and spring regularly — but roster spots fill faster now. Be clear and specific about what you’re looking for and why a program fits, rather than the slow relationship-building that junior year allows.

Part Two

Build your tiered school list

Organize your list into three tiers — no more than 25 programs total. Engage with every program as if it might be the one.

3–5 programs

Tier 1 — Stretch

Top of your realistic range, where you’d need to perform at or above your current ceiling. Include them — the market moves, roster needs change, and a stretch can become realistic in months. Reach out professionally and genuinely; you have every right to contact any program you’re interested in.

12–15 programs

Tier 2 — Target

Where your profile is a genuine competitive match. This is where most of your energy belongs — the relationships most likely to produce visits and offers. These get your most personalized, most consistent outreach.

5–7 programs

Tier 3 — Foundation

Where you’re a strong candidate and an offer is highly likely if you pursue it. Not fallbacks — insurance that you have real options by junior spring. Athletes who dismiss this tier sometimes find in senior year that it was the best fit all along.

Part Three

The weekly outreach schedule

Daily is unsustainable. Monthly is too slow. Weekly is the right cadence — one or two focused sessions, each with a specific agenda.

Monday · 15 min

The Check-In

Open the Contact Tracker and answer four questions:

  • Who responded last week, and what’s the next step?
  • Who has a follow-up due this week?
  • Who haven’t I contacted yet? (work Tier 2 first)
  • What’s happening this week a coach should know about?
Wednesday · 30–45 min

The Outreach Session

Writing and sending, based on Monday’s check-in:

  • 2–4 new initial emails, personalized (Tier 2 first)
  • Follow-ups that always add something new
  • Replies to any coach email not yet answered
Friday · 10 min

The Update

Update every status in the tracker, set next follow-up dates, and note specifics from each email in the notes field so next week’s follow-up can reference them. Skip Friday and Monday becomes a recovery session instead of a planning one.

Part Four

The first wave of outreach

The first wave is the most important and the most intimidating. Here’s exactly how to approach it.

Start with Tier 2

Your target programs are where you’re most competitive and most likely to get a real response. Leading with stretch programs and getting silence is demoralizing and an inaccurate read; leading with targets gives you momentum and information.

3–5 programs per week

Not all 20 at once. Spreading the first wave over four to five weeks lets you write genuinely personalized emails and staggers responses so they’re manageable.

Log every email the moment it goes out

The date of first contact anchors everything that follows. Set the follow-up date (2–3 weeks out) in the tracker the same day you send. Don’t wait for the full wave to finish before following up — outreach and follow-up run simultaneously from week three on.

Part Five

The follow-up rhythm

This is the section most athletes skip, and the one that matters most. The first email rarely produces the outcome — the follow-up is where relationships are built or lost.

No response to your initial email → follow up in 2–3 weeks

One follow-up is expected. Keep it short: reference the first email briefly, add one new piece of info (a showcase, a result, a new video), and close with a simple ask. Open with the new information — not “I’m not sure if you got my last email.”

No response after the first follow-up → one more in 3–4 weeks, then reassess

A second follow-up is reasonable; a third to a program that has engaged with neither is not. Exception: if you’ll compete at a showcase that program’s coaches attend, a brief note with your schedule is appropriate even after silence — in-person evaluation is different from email.

Genuine interest expressed → follow up within 1 week with a real update

A real reply (not a form email) moves this to active. Follow up quickly and advance the conversation: ask a specific question, share what they asked for, send your schedule. The goal is to move from email to a phone call — the moment a relationship becomes real. If a door opens to a call, walk through it.

Phone or video call completed → email within 24 hours

Not a form thank-you — a specific acknowledgment of what was discussed, answers to anything they asked, and a clear statement of continued interest. One of the highest-leverage emails in the whole process. Coaches notice whether it arrives, how fast, and what it says.

Campus visit completed → email within 24 hours

A specific, genuine thank-you within 24 hours of leaving campus, referencing real details — something the coach said, something on campus, a conversation with a current player. Specificity proves the interest is real.

Active but pre-visit relationship → check in every 4–6 weeks

Brief, forward-looking, not asking for anything — a tournament result, an academic update, a recent highlight. Keeps the relationship warm and shows continued development.

Part Six

Your monthly recruiting review

Once a month, step back from the weekly rhythm and look at the full picture.

Where are the real conversations?

Look at the tracker by status. How many programs are Active Interest vs. Awaiting Response vs. gone quiet? The distribution tells you where your recruiting actually stands.

Is the division range realistic?

If months of professional outreach to stretch programs gets silence while targets generate real interest, the market is telling you something. Read it accurately and fully develop the Tier 2 relationships.

Is the list still right?

Rosters change and coaches move. Recheck program websites, coaching changes, and current signees, and update your list as fit changes.

Is communication quality holding up?

Reread the last month’s emails. Still specific and personalized, or drifting toward generic? Quality declines as the process becomes routine — catch it before it’s a pattern.

Any programs to add?

Coaching changes, reclassifications, and camps surface new options. Your list should evolve as the process develops.

Part Seven

Camp & showcase integration

The plan doesn’t live only in email. In person is where the relationship becomes three-dimensional — so the plan accounts for it.

Know who’s attending

Before every event, identify which coaches on your list will be there — from the organizer, the camp roster, or research on program travel schedules.

Email them beforehand

A brief note that you’ll be competing, with your field assignment and schedule and genuine interest in the program. Many coaches use these to decide which fields to watch.

Make yourself easy to find

Know your field, game times, and number before it starts. Some athletes clip a small info card to their bag — name, grad year, position, programs of interest.

Follow up in 24–48 hours

Every attending coach for whom the program is a genuine target gets a brief follow-up. Reference the interaction if you saw them; reference the event if you didn’t.

The Action Plan at a Glance

Save this where you’ll see it every week

Weekly rhythm

  • Mon: review responses, set the week’s outreach
  • Wed: write & send — new, follow-ups, replies
  • Fri: update tracker, set next follow-up dates

Outreach targets

  • 3–5 new programs/week until list is contacted
  • Follow up unanswered emails at 2–3 weeks
  • Reply to any coach email within 24–48 hrs
  • Post-call / post-visit thank-you within 24 hrs
  • Active check-ins every 4–6 weeks

Monthly

  • Full tracker review
  • Division-range calibration
  • List update — add & remove
  • Communication-quality check

The Contact Tracker is the engine

Every email sent, every response, every call, every visit goes in the tracker the day it happens. A tracker that’s current is a plan that’s working. A tracker weeks behind is a plan running on memory and optimism.

A Final Word

On patience and persistence

The plan doesn’t produce instant results. The first wave brings some responses and a lot of silence. Follow-ups bring a few more. Camps start conversations the emails didn’t. Then the calls. Then the visits. Then the offers — slowly at first, then sometimes quickly.

The athletes who find the right school are the ones who kept the plan going when it felt like nothing was happening — who sent the follow-up unsure it would be read, updated the tracker even with nothing positive to add, and kept moving in the weeks recruiting felt out of their control. Most of it is out of your control. What’s in your control is the quality of the outreach, the consistency of the follow-up, the professionalism of every interaction, and the honesty of your assessment at every stage. Do those well, every week, and the plan creates the conditions for the right outcome to happen.

Continue with Stage 4

Outreach — put the plan to work

Next: how to write a coach email that gets a response, ten ready-to-personalize templates, and the follow-up system that keeps you on a coach’s radar without crossing the line.

Give your athlete a professional recruiting profile that puts her skills, stats,

and videos in one easy-to-share link — ready for coaches anytime, anywhere.