5 Critical Anachel Ways NCAA and NFL Football Coaches Can Secure and Protect Their Brand, Reputation, and Career

This year at the American Football Coaches Association and the Senior Bowl the Anachel team discussed the importance of coaches shedding their old school mentality of, “The film doesn’t have sound,” when it comes to talking about themselves as well as the importance of taking control of and carefully managing their own brands and reputations. 

Like it or not, we live in a search engine world where (almost) everything we want to know we can find on Google. Think about it: When we need an answer to a question or we want more information, what do we do? We Google it. What pops out of the “Google machine” is a powerful driver for how people form opinions and make critical decisions. Today, a coach’s career can be destroyed in less than one hour by false narratives online or an uniformed social media mob mentality. So, what can you do?

HERE ARE 5 WAYS COACHES CAN START TO CONTROL THEIR BRANDS AND REPUTATIONS.

  1. Understand that your brand is what you say about you, and your reputation is what millions of others may say about you. In the wake of the #MeToo movement and a litany of other (good and bad) online advocacy campaigns, reputation and brand terrorism is our new normal and being able to minimize and control it is a very specialized strategic communications game plan. Start controlling your brand and you’ll control your reputation. 
  2. Have a strategic communications plan, and as Jody Powell, former White House Press Secretary said, “Being pissed off is not a plan.” Just like you game plan to compete, you have to have a strategic communications plan for your brand and reputation management. And, the onus of responsibility for managing one’s brand, doesn’t fall on your agent or employer. These plans are not fluff. They are based on attaining and maintaining your business goals, an online analytics audit of your reputation and brand strategies and reputation tactics to grow and protect your legacy, among other key elements. Don’t skip the strategic communications plan; it’s like throwing out the architectural blueprint as you build your house.  
  3. Own your online footprint or someone else will.  That means developing your owned media. What the heck is owned media? Owned media is any content produced and controlled by you (or your reputation team) such as web content, videos, social media, guest columns, etc.  Creating and maintaining uniquely branded owned media is critical to internal culture and external branding. Having owned media (websites, social media, etc.) will also allow you and your team to counter negativity and quell false narratives when the sh*t hits the fan.
  4. Get over the, “You’re not that guy,” attitude regarding brand and reputation strategies. There were 5,000 coaches at the AFCA and Senior Bowl combined and 4,000 of them were out of work. Good coaches. How are you going to differentiate yourself in a noisy marketplace? Maybe you got fired and believe sitting out a year is the answer. Go ahead and submerge your head in the river while you fly fish hoping it will all be good when the coaching carousel comes around. Unfortunately, those days are long gone. With digital and social media, the haters will still be perched on page one of Google in 2020.  Stakeholders such as franchise owners, GMs, presidents, athletic directors will never run the risk of hiring a coach who could potentially get them fired. You could be the best coach on the planet, and one issue that makes its way online can potentially destroy your opportunities. You have to be able to proactively plan for what may be looming in or out of your proverbial closet.
  5. Hire experts. From political candidates to entertainers and CEOs, high profile leaders have strategic communications and brand and reputation management teams outside of their workplace. The employer is going to take care of you, well, until they don’t. They are building their brand, not yours. Ideally, the two work in partnership, but to do nothing is basically crossing your fingers and surrendering your reputation to the masses. There’s an old saying in football, “You’re either coaching it or letting it happen.” Hire people who know what they’re doing and start securing your reputation and legacy. 

Our team will be at the NFL Combine training coaches and players, thus if you want more information on X’s and O’s of reputation management, contact info@anachel.com

ANACHEL is a strategic, litigation, public relations, crisis communications and reputation management company. Its partners, Carrie Cecil and Ramsey Poston, have worked in politics, on political campaigns, for law firms, search firms, professional and intercollegiate sports leagues, energy and entertainment corporations, media conglomerates, and regulatory agencies. 

Tech Talk Tuesday: Get That Crud Off Google

THE IMPORTANCE OF OWNED MEDIA

Have you ever longed to scrub an awkward or even damaging picture of yourself from the internet or social media? Are you stressed that there’s an embarrassing image or video of you that a recruiter, search firm or potential employer might find on the first page of Google? You’re not alone.

Today, much of your reputation lives online. Think about it: When we need an answer to a question or want more information we go to Google.

What pops out of the Google machine is a powerful driver for how people form opinions and make decisions about you.

The good news is that there has never been a time in history where sports stakeholders are able to control and capitalize on their online reputations. On the flip side, there has never been a time in history where your reputation can be so drastically impacted by digital brand terrorism

Thus, it’s time to take charge of your online reputation with your, “owned media.” What the heck is owned media?

In its broadest terms, owned media is any content you create and control such as blogs, docu-series, guest columns, social media posts, op-ed pieces, speeches, panels, webinars, and more.

Owned media creates critical searchable metadata to your online presence and increases your visibility as an expert and industry leader. Owned media isn’t about self-promotion or celebrity, it’s about credibility and building a good online legacy. It allows you to manage and maintain your online reputation and ensure a more accurate, lucrative and robust online persona. Keeping a pulse on what’s being said about you online not only ensures the content is positive, but factual.

Here are three quick things to do today:

Set up a Google alert on yourself.
Post original content on social media.
Write a great blog and ask your employer to post it and promote it on their social media channels.
Owned media helps you to increase visibility, manage your message and keep a pulse on your digital reputation – the time to start is now!

Need help understanding your online footprint, online reputation or owned media? Want to pivot or positively impact your cyber story, let us help you. Reach out to info@teamsm2.com

The Scary Digital Divide For Children

A digital divide is taking place in our country: Children in more affluent areas are spending much less time on screens and phones than kids in less advantaged communities. New York Times’ writer Nellie Bowles discusses with leading digital experts in her article: “The Digital Gap Between Rich and Poor Kids Is Not What We Expected.” Dr. Richard Freed, “Families that have access to more resources are choosing to decrease the amount of time kids spend on screens and phones because of increased recognition of risks to kids’ emotional well-being and academic success.

Lower-income communities need to be provided access to the same resources or we risk increases in already troubling income and racial achievement disparities.”