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For parents

A clearer path through recruiting for the family behind the athlete.

Recruiting can feel confusing, emotional, expensive, and hard to evaluate. ProZpects helps families understand the process, organize the athlete's information, and support outreach with a profile built around credibility and coach usability.

A parent and athlete on the sideline at a recruiting event — placeholder photography pending pro shoot.

The promise

What ProZpects does — and does not — promise.

We do not promise scholarships, offers, roster spots, or outcomes. We help families present information clearly, understand the process, and avoid common mistakes. The work is still the athlete's. The platform makes the work visible to the right people.

What you'll find here

Recruiting, broken down for the family.

  • Recruiting roadmap

    A grade-by-grade plan so families know what to focus on, and when to stop worrying about what comes later.

  • Parent role

    What parents own, what athletes own, and the line in between that protects both relationships.

  • Eligibility basics

    NCAA, NAIA, NJCAA — what to track now to avoid losing options later.

  • Communication rules

    When and how coaches can talk to your athlete, and what they cannot do.

  • Safety and privacy

    How athlete data is handled, what is shared with coaches, and what is never shared with anyone.

  • Cost awareness

    Where families spend money in recruiting and where the spend usually does not pay off.

Roles

Parent role vs. athlete role.

Who owns what

  • Parent: logistics, transportation, finances, calendar.
  • Parent: emotional support, perspective, asking hard questions in private.
  • Athlete: outreach to coaches, on-campus conversations, training accountability.
  • Athlete: profile maintenance, video review, owning the next step.

Red flags

  • Anyone guaranteeing scholarships or offers.
  • "Exposure" services with no verifiable coach outcomes.
  • Camps that promise evaluation but produce no usable assets.
  • Pressure to commit before the family has done its homework.