creating wr culture: from fundraising to athlete buy-in

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Creating a Weight Room Training Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in Joe Staub, CSCS RSCC [email protected] Twitter: @JStaub26

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Page 1: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Creating a Weight Room Training Culture:

From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Joe Staub, CSCS RSCC

[email protected]

Twitter: @JStaub26

Page 2: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Who am I and how do I know what it takes?

Been around sports as long as I can remember Success and Failure

Was never naturally gifted, had to work for every inch I moved forward in sports Blue Collar mentality & a lunch-pail work ethic

Knew that if I wanted to keep up athletically I needed to train smarter not just harder Surrounding myself with leaders in the field and great people

Practical research based education B.S. Strength & Conditioning – Ex. Science ~~ M.A. Kinesiology – Ex. Physiology Multiple Professional Certifications – CSCS, RSCC, USAW, TPI Incorporating scientific based research methodologies and techniques to

enhance athletic performance in the most effective manner possible to understanding why it works not just that it works

Study the art of coaching and the art of people

Non-athletics related mentors Academic / Business Executives

Page 3: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Let’s Start With a Quote

“There is nothing more difficult and dangerous, or

more doubtful of success, than an attempt to

introduce a new order of things in any state. For

the innovator has for enemies all those who

derived advantages from the old order of things

while those who expect to be benefited by the

new institutions will be but lukewarm defenders”

- Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince

Page 4: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

What is “Culture”?

“Culture is the way of life of a group of people

consisting of the behaviors, beliefs and values they

accept, generally without question, that are passed

down by communication and/or imitation from one

generation to the next.”

https://www.tamu.edu/faculty/choudhury/culture.html

Page 5: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Define Your Culture

Who are you?

How does that impact how you do things?

What is your mission?

Does it make sense for you to try to accomplish this?

What is the lasting impact (Vision)?

What ultimately is the goal beyond W’s?

How far away or how close are you currently?

Page 6: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Global - Behaviors, Beliefs and Values

Who am I?

A dealer in Truth

A builder of Confidence

What are we here for?

To win / be successful in a results driven business (Athletics)

To mentor & develop young people in sport and life (Coaching)

What is important to us?

Commitment to & pride in “Us” (Team Pride)

Self-accountability & altruism (Discipline)

Displaying mental toughness & having resilience (Strength of Character)

Page 7: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Why are these things important to us?

We seek to give those who come to us the

opportunity to become self-sufficient, self-

aware people of high moral fiber, who are

willing and able to do the things necessary to

achieve personal and team success while

representing “Us” well both during their time

with us and after as well.

Page 8: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Adapted Imitation is the best place to start

Dick Fosbury anyone?

Sometimes you need to innovate away from what is currently done, forge your own path…

Other times you need to adapt what is currently working for others to your situation…

Be wary of “coin flip coaches” and other “guru’s” who talk about how it should be done but have never done it themselves.

One-time or cyclical success isn’t the same thing as consistent success over time.

Eventually the blind squirrel finds a nut.

Page 9: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

If You Want To See Culture Look No Further

Teams who you may have heard of?

UCLA Basketball? De La Salle Football?

St. Anthony Men’s Basketball? UConn Women’s Basketball?

Kansas Men’s Basketball? Alabama Football?

Penn State Volleyball?

Many more…. Often in books and wearing rings.

Process orientated systems that are built to last so they create tradition.

Page 10: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

People who I learned to build culture fromS&C

Jerry Martin

Andrea Hudy

Moe Butler

Academic

Dr. Bill Kraemer

Dr. Carl Maresh

Sport Coaches

Gino Auriemma

Jim Calhoun

Bill Self

Greg Roy

Jaimie Bermel

Executives

Dan Janis III

Joe C. Staub

Countless others along the way…

Amanda Kimball

Drew Wilson

Luke Bradford

Glenn Cain

Zack Zillner

Emily Esselman

Jimmy Prendergast

…Many many more…

Page 11: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Why is it important in the weight room?

The physical demand of training requires a particular environment in

order for it to get results as you are often asking athletes to do things

they may not have ever done or currently believe they cannot do…

Que the buzz words every (Sport) Coach wants…

Consistency Pride Mental Toughness

Commitment Positive Attitude Work Ethic

Discipline Accountability Character

Communication Altruism Confidence

Team Work Trust <insert word of choice>

Page 12: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Why is it important in the weight room?

The Bleed Out Effect Generally speaking, all athletes from all teams use a

common WR(s) and S&C Staff. So some things related to the WR have to be global for all who use it.

There has to be some kind of underlying current of consistency and uniformity.

“All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”

― George Orwell, Animal Farm

Page 13: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Two paths leading to the same place

You’re the First S&C Coach Ever

Congrats, you’re in the best situation!

You’re the most recent S&C CoachHopefully the person before you didn’t leave you out to dry

Page 14: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Get a History Lesson

Take time to understand the history of the situation and the people involved.

Often times things “are the way they are” because precedents were set that made them that way without realizing the ripples turned into tsunami’s somewhere else.

“What you tolerate you encourage”

Page 15: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Create a History Analysis

Sport Coaches & Staff

Who has influence on the WR? Why and should they?

Who values the WR and who does not?

Who wants you to help and who doesn’t? Why not?

Page 16: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Create a History Analysis

Who must you keep on your side? Who can you afford to lose at times?

Not everyone is critical, but those who are must be kept happy!

What are the expectations for you?

Are you just the person to supervise the facility or are you a Coach?

Page 17: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Create a History Analysis Facility & WR Staff

Is it clean? Is it organized?

Is the equipment maintained?

How has the space evolved?

What has been done, why, how?

What level of competency does the staff have?

Are they autonomous or need POLISH?

Page 18: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Create a History Analysis

Athletes

Do they use the WR?

How much do they use it?

How do they use it?

What do they need to do vs what they have been doing?

Page 19: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Making an Action Plan

Phase 1a– Stepping back to go forward

Phase 1b– Keeping/Getting the ball rolling

Phase 2– Evaluate, Refine, Create

Phase 3– Looking ahead

“Action and reaction, ebb and flow, trial and error, change - this is the rhythm of living. Out of our over-confidence, fear; out of our fear, clearer vision, fresh

hope. And out of hope, progress.” - Bruce Barton

Page 20: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Phase 1a - Stepping back to go forwardIntroductions / Meetings

Getting face time with coaches & student-athletes

Watch training sessions / practices / competitions

Understanding the dynamics at play

Taking the time to assess the situation and determine if and what changes might be needed while fostering trust and building rapport

Growth is a process, at times it can be fast but more often then not it shouldn’t be rushed

Page 21: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Phase 1b – Keeping the ball rolling

Risk ManagementSafety, Flow, Standards

Team Training Plans What are we doing now? Where are we going? Where would we like to be?

Administrative Department status & staff organization Facility schedule

Page 22: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Phase 2 – Evaluate , Refine, Create

Staff – Team Assignments

Scheduling / Facility use

Training plans

Department usage and areas to improve

Facility maintenance / repair issues

Equipment needs vs. wants (wish-list)

Internship program

Performance educational materials

Website / Social media footprint

Research projects with Ex. Science Dept.

Page 23: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Phase 3 – Looking aheadRelative to vision, resources and need Department Growth Staff / Facility Supplement sponsorship / NutritionResearch projects Videos / Web based training informationTechnology

OutreachCamps / ClinicsFundraisingHosting events / conferences

Page 24: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR Culture is a dynamic continuum of 5 relationships

WR Culture

WR to Sport Coach

WR to Itself

WR to Staff

WR to Athletes

WR to ATC/SM

Page 25: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

In Relation To Sport Coaches and Staff…

…or becoming a Master of the Human Element

Page 26: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Staff Be seen. Talk to other staff, especially those you

don’t normally interact with.

Get out of the office. Walk around. Be friendly.

You might be known as a lunatic, show them you’re human too. Unless you are a lunatic.

Have a staff hour / open time.

Not everyone wants or like to train. Don’t try to convert people. Those who want to come will. Those who don’t, won’t.

Be helpful if someone needs help.

Don’t let your gym become a health club for staff.

Page 27: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Staff

Be helpful in outside projects/events Get people to see you want to help your athletes beyond

just the scoreboard.

What kind of additional value can you bring to the staff as a whole so it helps create value towards the WR in other people’s minds? Are you good at logistics, are you an idea person, what

other skills do you have?

Page 28: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR vs ATC orWR & ATC The undereducated S&C Coach or ATC are

cancerous to athletic development.

Atypically, there is a large divide between the people who know what it takes to physically do it and the people who know the “how to” behind how it physically happens.

A S&C must know “what it takes” to do it, and also what “how it works” to do it.

An ATC must know “how it works” to do it and also must have a reference of “what it takes” physically to do it.

Page 29: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR vs ATC orWR & ATCHaving a rock solid relationship with Sports Medicine is the only way

to have a successful S&C program.

The greatest ally to a S&C Coach is their Athletic Trainer/PT

Always being on the same page Reviewing injury reports together Planning training adjustments together Consistent message to sport coaches Consistent message to athletes

Collaboration Sharing philosophies and combining best aspects of each Research projects / cont. ed. to improve both sides of the

continuum

Page 30: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Sport Coach Lack/unwillingness of Sport Coach buy-in is the

#1 killer to WR culture. If the Sport Coach doesn’t value it, the team won’t value it.

Constant Communication, Education and Explanation in the way the Sport Coach can understand.

Process Person vs Results Person

More than just metrics…Identify and discuss development of the athlete as person

Page 31: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

A Strength Coach Sport Coach? If your Sport Coach is knowledgeable, talk with them, listen to them,

gain their insights and their slights, incorporate what you know and push things forward in a positive direction.

Don’t be afraid to let it roll.

If your Sport Coach thinks they are knowledgeable but really isn’t, educate them. Talk to them, show them information, get them to understand you bring value they don’t have.

Don’t be afraid to stand your ground.

If your Sport Coach isn’t knowledgeable, or simply just doesn’t care about your piece of the pie, shift your focus from getting them to see you as valuable to getting the athletes to see you as valuable.

Once a Sport Coach’s athletes, especially their favorites, say they like what you do and it positively impacts their performance, the leash magically gets longer.

Page 32: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR Training is Team Practice

Training with S&C needs to be viewed as training with the Head Coach. What is acceptable and what is not at practice?

Coaches and Staff do not workout during lifts. It’s not 24hour fitness. Until Coaches can play for

the kids, we don’t need practice bodies here.

Invite them to watch / Ask them to leave. Do not lounge around with poor body language or

be a distraction when the athletes are training.

Page 33: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR Scheduling The Head S&C Coach has the final say in regards to all time conflicts/issues of

scheduling and weight-room facility (WR) use.

While the Head S&C Coach will always make every effort to coordinate as best as possible with the desired schedule requests from each Sport Coach, only a S&C Coach may schedule a training session in the WR. Any time given to an S&C Coach from a Sport Coach is a tentative time until confirmed by the S&C Coach.

Due to the long-range ineffectiveness of discontinuous training programs, teams who opt not to pursue training with the S&C staff synchronously throughout the year will forfeit scheduling priority to those who do regardless if they are "in-season" or not.

Daily/Weekly adjustments to the semester schedule may be requested by the respective S&C Coach and/or Sport Coach, though any times outside of the previously agreed upon times may not be available due to other previously scheduled sessions or availability.

Unscheduled walk-ins by SA's or non-communicated changes to workout times by Sport Coaches or SA's are not acceptable and use of the facility will not be allowed under such circumstances.

Page 34: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Rules for Coaches & Staff To maintain a positive training environment and high training standard please help the S&C Department

uphold the following rules and regulations when using the weight room. If you have any questions about the changes in policy please call or email Head Strength & Conditioning Coach Joe Staub.

There will be a set “Open Hours” time that that can be used by any eligible staff member to lift in the weight room. This designated time slot will be set by the Head S&C Coach before the respective semester starts and communicated appropriately to all required parties.

While you are observing a training session - Please do not sit / lounge while in the WR If you need to use your cellphone please step outside the WR Please be mindful of the training time available and limit casual conversation with the SA’s Please refrain from adjusting or trying to change a SA’s technique before speaking with the S&C Coach Please be mindful of your surroundings and the “flow” of training session to find a safe place to stand

While you are doing your personal workouts - Please do not “lift” while a team is training in the weight room. Contact an S&C Coach for times that you may

use the weight room. Please be aware that the training schedule is subject to change with limited to no notice and you may be asked to stop your personal workout.

Always defer to any SA who needs equipment / space that you are using regardless of the SA’s duration of use Please “clean up” after yourself and replacing all equipment used back to its original location No cell phones, IPods or audio systems are allowed on the weight room floor. Such devices can only be used

to listen to music / watch videos while using the cardio equipment

Additional Items Please do not let any SA into the WR. Any SA using the facility must be supervised by an S&C Coach at all

times. Please do not remove equipment from the WR unless previously discussed and agreed upon with a S&C Coach

Page 35: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Don’t get stuck on other people’s time

There has to be some kind of formal structure for when a team is late, cancels, or in some way isn’t respectful of your time. (Professional Respect)

If there is no value to you or what you do, there is no value to your time.

After previously confirming the session is happening if a team is more than 20min late without communication, I go on to the next thing in my day.

In the short term the athletes may suffer but you cannot allow such a poor precedent to be set.

Shift the paradigm from being“support staff” & into “coaching staff”

Page 36: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

The Punishment Police

Break away from the dogma that you are the person who punishes athletes.

If an athlete needs to be “inspired” due to an issue with you, you deal with it.

If an athlete needs to be “inspired” due to an issue with Sport Coach, academics, Sports Med, etc. That person deals with it.

Recruit / Build Better Character

Page 37: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

In Relation To Athletes

…or creating buy-in

Page 38: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Athlete

If you can show them you care, show them you are serious about them being serious, be consistent in your approach and have a framework to go off of, they will buy in.

You can’t Febreze your way through dealing with people. They will eventually notice the stink.

Page 39: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Athletes

Never play favorites. Demand the same thing from everyone.

Even I do Burpee’s when I make a mistake

Be willing to have fun.

Let’s make a deal! and the “Wheel of Pain”

Kickball days

Be available, and not just to workout

Extra workouts and have an open door.

Page 40: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Athletes Get them for them to get you. Educate yourself about what is going on today at

their level and in their life and communicate about it.

Social Media, Music, “Social Injustices”

Page 41: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Athletes

Coaching vs Encouraging

What feedback are you giving?

Chastise and Praise

The hype man and listening to music

Clearly defined rules and expectations

A kid may not remember what an exercise is but they will never forget when someone got away with something (and they didn’t).

Page 42: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Rules with purpose, not Rules to have Rules

Rules for Safety

No rings, jewelry, glass water bottles, gum

Rules for Culture

3 Strike Policy

First Offense - WR privileges suspended for the remainder of the day.

Second Offense - WR privileges suspended for the remainder of the week.

Third Offense - WR privileges suspended for the remainder of the semester.

Attire - Wear “our” stuff.

Sitting - Be an active participant, “move with purpose”!

Page 43: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Rules for AthletesThe use of the Weight Room (WR) is a privilege, not a right. Proper attitude & behavior is required at all times while using the facility or the privilege of use will be revoked.

An S&C staff member must be present to use the WR. No-one is allowed to be in the facility alone at any time.

Athletes must be on time for workouts unless there is a prior arrangement with the S&C Coach. All workouts must be scheduled with the S&C Coach, unannounced drop-ins are not allowed.

All individuals are responsible for “cleaning up” after themselves and replacing equipment back to its original location.

Hofstra issued clothing / gear only. No hats, hooded sweatshirts, clothing from another school or team, drug or alcohol related logo / markings.

No exposed jewelry (rings, earrings, necklaces). Sport style watches or rubber bracelets are ok so long as they don’t interfere with training or contain inappropriate messages.

No sitting!

No Cell Phones.

Spotting is required on any appropriate lift. Safety racks are required for lifts performed inside the rack. Collars are to be used on all barbell exercises unless explicitly instructed otherwise by a S&C Coach.

No chewing gum or any other type of candy.

Positive attitude, focus and the desire to improve are required.

If you do not understand what a particular exercise is or how to properly do something, Ask!

Failure to comply with the above rules will result in disciplinary action.

Page 44: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to AthletesPeople naturally gravitate towards the popular trend of

the group. Create exclusivity.

Competition is exclusive it is not inclusive.

Recognition Boards Public displays of success

Annual Awards Top athlete per team, top athletes at school

Competitions for prizes T-shirts do amazing things. Socks you say?

Page 45: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Write on the WallTo write on the wall you must achieve one of the following standards during testing. If you do, you can write your name, date, test and result in the color you earned

and leave your mark for others to challenge.

1 - RM SPEED - POWER TESTS

MEN B Squat F Squat Deadlift Bench Clean Snatch MEN VJ BJ 10yd 40yd Pro Agility

BLACK INK 2 x BW 1.8 x BW 2 x BW 1.6 x BW 1.4 x BW 1 x BW

BLACK INK 34" 9' 2" < 1.62 < 4.75 < 4.35

GOLD INK 2.5 x BW 2.3 x BW 2.5 x BW 1.9 x BW 1.7 x BW 1.3 x BW GOLD INK 40" 9' 10" < 1.5 < 4.55 < 4.15

WOMEN B Squat F Squat Deadlift Bench Clean Snatch WOMEN VJ BJ 10yd 40yd Pro Agility

BLACK INK 1.7 x BW 1.5 x BW 1.7 x BW 1 x BW 1.2 x BW .95 x BW

BLACK INK 24" 7'6" < 1.72 < 5.2 < 4.75

GOLD INK 2.1 x BW 1.9 x BW 2.1 x BW 1.3 x BW 1.5 x BW 1.15 x BW GOLD INK 30" 8'1" <1.6 < 5.0 < 4.45

3 - RM ADDITIONAL TESTING

MEN B Squat F Squat Deadlift Bench Clean Snatch MEN2 Min

PushupPullup

BLACK INK 1.85 x BW 1.65 x BW 1.85 x BW 1.5 x BW --- ---

BLACK INK 75 20

GOLD INK 2.35 x BW 2.15 x BW 2.35 x BW 1.8 x BW GOLD INK 105 30

WOMEN B Squat F Squat Deadlift Bench Clean Snatch WOMEN2 Min

PushupPullup

BLACK INK 1.55 x BW 1.3 x BW 1.55 x BW .9 x BW --- ---

BLACK INK 55 12

GOLD INK 1.95 x BW 1.7 x BW 1.95 x BW 1.2 x BW GOLD INK 85 22

Page 46: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

In Relation To The WR Itself

…or setting up your Classroom

Page 47: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to Itself

Is the WR secure? How and Who can access it and when?

What is the body language of the WR? Is it clean? Is it organized?

What impression would another S&C Coach have if they walked into your WR at 3am when no-one was there?

What does the office look like? Is it clean, organized, welcoming?

Would you want your next boss to come meet you there?

Page 48: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

WR to ItselfWhat do WR materials come off as?

Is WR “stuff” presented professionally?

Is it organized, visible and coherent or do you need a degree to decipher it? Can you write on it?

Are papers stapled twice so they doesn’t rip?

Are things in binders, on cardstock, have logos, laminated?

If things are on the walls, how are they hung? Where are they hung? Why are they hung?

Page 49: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Customizing the ClassroomPassive vs. Active Fundraising

Can “stuff’ be bought online? Are you on the donation spam?

Create exclusivity with your “stuff”

Can you sell unused/old equipment? Host Events?

Establish a <___> Club account for S&C

$50-$500 donation gets you a workout T-shirt for the current year.

$500-$1000 donation gets you a workout T-shirt, x2 60-min group training session with other donors

$1000+ donation gets you a T-shirt, x2 group training and x2 individual 60min training sessions

Page 50: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Customizing the ClassroomLarge Scale Donation Opportunities

Naming Rights to the Room(s)

Small Scale Donation Opportunities

Customizable Magnetic Name / Quote Plates on Racks

$500 per year - 3 year minimum. Name with quote underneath, logo on end

Customizable Photo /Quotes on Walls

$1000 per year - 3 year minimum - 3’x5’ space. Choice of approved Logos, Quote or Message with Donor Name that fills space.

Page 51: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Expanding the ClassroomEvents / Outreach

Using community based fitness as a driver for fundraising.

Possible tie into other events such as home games and nontraditional fan exposure. Social Night Before / BBQ After

Hosting “Strength” events

Tie in w/ local gyms to help

Hosting conference / educational seminars

Using local professionals (low cost of speaking)

Drawing people in from community to learn from us

Page 52: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Expanding the ClassroomEvents / Outreach

Meeting & touring donors through facilities pre-game

Creating tangibility in their donations…See, touch, show how their money is directly impacting

Auctioning training packages with S&C staff during fundraisers

Using fitness and health / wellness to improve relations with donors

Using tangible results from training to drive tangible donations

Page 53: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

In Relation To Your Staff

…or developing Culture Enhancers

Page 54: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Teach – Coach - Mentor One of the most important things you can do as a

teacher / coach / mentor is to set a high standard for those in your purview.

However it is not only important to set the standard high and to hold them accountable to it, but to guide them to find their own path in eventually creating their own high standard.

While every journey has a start and end point, not every journey takes the same route to find a similar end.

Page 55: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Teach – Coach - MentorFor someone in a position of leadership, the core element of developing your staff to be more operationally efficient is to Teach, Coach and Mentor.

Teach

show the how & where, explain the what & why

Coach

assist in self sufficient skill development in the things taught

Mentor

provide guidance for further mastery, be a sounding board

Page 56: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

P.O.L.I.S.H.In order to help those who have not had a TCM experience or not had to seek understanding themselves, the goal should be to help P.O.L.I.S.H those we work with.

PROFESSIONALISM

ORGANIZATION

LEADERSHIP

INTUATIVENESS

STRESS MANGAEMENT

HUSTLE

Page 57: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Professional Development“My Goal is to teach you everything I know so

that you become better than me and are able to push beyond what I was able to achieve but do it

in your own way”

Development is more than just going to conferences.

Work on resumes, interviews

Teach how the department works (budget, purchasing)

Get other professionals “into” staff meetings

Make staff/interns do presentations on topics

Sending staff to local/regional gyms/seminars/people

Sitting down and co-programming

Sharing articles/books/videos or numerous other things

Page 58: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Facilitate don’t complicate Be an advocate

Drinking from the fire hose can be a good thing

Fostering “Us & We” instead of “I & Me”

The goal is to not have to say “no” but saying “no” can be ok

Asking the person in the trenches but helping them understand the battlefield

Help maintain a positive work/life balance

Page 59: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

In Relation To Yourself

…or being the creator of Culture

Page 60: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Be educated…In everythingHaving done it, is not enough. Knowing how to do it, is not enough. Can you blend the art of coaching and science of training to create buy-in and get positive results with those you train and work with?

Being a former athlete or naturally very big/strong does not mean you’re going to be a great S&C Coach.

Do you have the knowledge base to understand the “why” not just the “what” of training?

Having a degree in Ex. Science or a bunch of certifications does not mean you’re going to be a great S&C Coach.

Have you ever pushed yourself physically? What training experiences do you have?

Page 61: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Be Educated….In Everything Everything works and Nothing works.

That’s why there are 100+ certifications and no national or state licensure.

Be able to intelligently defend yourself with a evidence driven strategic goal orientated plan

Be educated, be creative, experiment, but stay within some framework with some rationale.

Coach who you have, what their abilities are, and what the goals for them are both short & long term.

Be a Dealer In Truths

Page 62: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Be Open to Learn…from everything

“Wisdom is being able to connect the dots between your experiences and education. Allowing you to create a cumulative net of knowledge you can draw on, learn from, show others and guide you” – My Dad

Even the things not to do are still things to learn from. Always look to draw a positive out of every situation.

Just like how the body adapts to every stimulus good or bad, you must do the same!

Page 63: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Keys to Success Know what you know and know what you don’t know

because you don’t know what you don’t know

Help those who help you, up and down the ladder

Listening is just as important as speaking

Just because you can, doesn’t always mean that you should

Don’t force it if you don’t need to

Everyone was new at some point and everyone is also replaceable

Create tangibility, it helps build trust

When you can, sleep on it

You get out what you put in, don’t seem surprised when it doesn’t smell like roses

Page 64: Creating WR Culture: From Fundraising to Athlete Buy-in

Weight Room Culture Starts & Ends With You.