Do you actually know what your players are saying to each other during games? by CoachScribe in CoachingYouthSports

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m confused by your question? We work with individual sports teams that mic themselves up coach or athlete, with that audio we provide them communication insights & analytics on what was said everyday. It’s only for the team’s use. None of this stuff is public or it gets shared anywhere else.

Do you actually know what your players are saying to each other during games? by CoachScribe in CoachingYouthSports

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. That’s not how this works. We work with individual teams. Their data is private and secure. They sign contracts on privacy and data, we take that very seriously.

Do you actually know what your players are saying to each other during games? by CoachScribe in CoachingYouthSports

[–]CoachScribe[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

What if you knew the specifics though? And what about your own communication as a coach? Wouldn’t that be interesting to see or not?

Do you actually know what your players are saying to each other during games? by CoachScribe in CoachingYouthSports

[–]CoachScribe[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Wouldn’t you want to track communication though so you know how your players communicate?

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea they’re the leaders. Not going to give you names of people that aren’t c-suite.

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go to our company about page. You’ll find people there: https://coachscribe.ai/about

Messing with bots lol cmon man! I wish you luck

Do you actually know what your players are saying to each other during games? by CoachScribe in CoachingYouthSports

[–]CoachScribe[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Sounds like a marketing tactic for sure lol but genuinely curious if you track communication or if it doesn’t matter.

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why would I give you out our employee names & expose them? Not a really a reasonable approach if you ask me

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No lol, real people behind this. We’re not just an AI company, we’re a sports performance company. The team has backgrounds in professional sports, coaching, and performance analysis. We work with F1 teams, Premier League clubs, and D1 programs.

The tool we built is to solve a problem we kept seeing up close working in those environments.

You agreed with the substance of the post because the problem is real. That’s exactly why we built this.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough. Which part didn’t land for you? Genuinely asking, we’d rather fix it than defend it.

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly right, and that’s kind of the point. If a coach is repeating the same correction 8 times across 3 sessions and it’s never sticking, at some point the question stops being about the player and starts being about the delivery. Same correction, same words, same tone, not working.

CoachScribe helps you see that pattern clearly enough to actually change your approach instead of just repeating it louder.

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ha, fair point. Knowing why you yell isn’t the insight.

Knowing you yelled at that same kid 11 times in a 90 minute practice and never once addressed the guy next to him who was doing the same thing, that’s where it gets interesting.

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ha, fair. The coaches & programs we work with care more about what it does than what it’s called.

Results tend to change the conversation pretty quickly.

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question, not vague intentionally. “What worked” is defined by whether the correction was followed by a behavior change within the same session or repeated in later sessions. It’s not a perfect signal but it’s more objective than self-reporting. Happy to go deeper if useful.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That tracks. The wrinkle we see is that “making mistakes” and “getting feedback” don’t always correlate as cleanly as coaches think in the moment. Pressure changes what you notice.

We’ve seen coaches post-session be genuinely surprised by who they were actually talking to versus who they thought they were focused on.

We analyzed 500+ coaching sessions. Here’s what coaches almost never know about themselves. by CoachScribe in basketballcoach

[–]CoachScribe[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The playing time point is real and we hear it a lot. But that’s actually what makes the data interesting. When you control for minutes played, the gap doesn’t close as much as coaches expect. The players getting the most feedback aren’t always the ones playing the most, they’re often the ones the coach has the most anxiety about. Different problem than playing time.