Every role in a modern hockey organization must be clearly defined before the season begins.
Not
halfway through the year.
after a conflict.
when parents are already upset.
If a role is unclear, people will eventually fill the gaps with assumptions. In hockey, assumptions become politics fast.
Every organizational role should include these eight core areas:
1. POSITION PURPOSE
Why This Role Exists
Every position must have a clear reason for existing.
The purpose statement answers:
“Why does this role matter to the organization?”
A good purpose statement prevents people from treating the role as a title rather than a responsibility.
Example:
President — Position Purpose
The President exists to provide leadership, protect organizational integrity, guide strategic direction, and ensure that the association operates in accordance with its values, policies, and long-term goals.
Head Coach — Position Purpose
Head Coaches are responsible for leading player development, fostering a healthy team environment, implementing the organization’s hockey philosophy, and representing the association professionally.
Team Manager — Position Purpose
The Team Manager supports team administration, communication, scheduling, documentation, and parent coordination so coaches can focus on player development.
Hard Truth
If someone cannot explain why their role exists, they are not ready to hold that role.
2. CORE RESPONSIBILITIES
What This Role Is Expected to Do
Every role must clearly define daily, weekly, monthly, and seasonal responsibilities.
This prevents:
- “I thought someone else was handling that.”
- “That’s not my job.”
- “No one told me.”
- “We’ve always done it this way.”
Core responsibilities should be specific.
Not vague:
Bad:
“Helps with hockey operations.”
Better:
Good:
“Supports coach selection, reviews development alignment, oversees evaluation standards, monitors player movement processes, and reports hockey operations concerns to the board.”
Every role should include:
- primary duties
- seasonal duties
- meeting expectations
- documentation duties
- reporting duties
- deadline responsibilities
Hard Truth
Most volunteer conflicts arise because responsibilities are assumed rather than assigned.
3. COMMUNICATION RESPONSIBILITIES
Who This Role Communicates With, When, and How
Communication must be defined for every role.
This includes:
- who they report to
- who reports to them
- what information they are allowed to communicate
- what must be escalated
- how quickly they must respond
- what tone and professionalism are expected
This matters because hockey organizations often break down through poor communication before they break down through poor decisions.
A role description should clearly define:
Internal communication:
Board, Hockey Director, coaches, convenors, managers, volunteers.
External communication:
Parents, players, officials, other associations, sponsors, arenas, leagues.
Restricted communication:
Confidential matters, discipline cases, evaluations, financial information, player placement decisions.
Example
A Head Coach may communicate:
- team expectations
- practice plans
- player development themes
- game preparation
- team rules
A Head Coach should not independently communicate:
- board decisions
- confidential discipline matters
- evaluation rankings
- financial policy
- organizational disputes
Hard Truth
The wrong person communicating the right information can still create a problem.
4. DECISION-MAKING AUTHORITY
What This Role Can and Cannot Decide
This is one of the most important parts of the entire operating model.
Every role must define decision-making authority.
A person should know:
- what
- they can decide alone, what requires approval
- must go to the committee
- what must go to the board
- what they are not permitted to decide
Without this, people overstep.
President may decide:
- meeting agendas
- leadership priorities
- emergency escalation
- board process directionThe
President should not decide alone:
- major financial commitments
- coach removals without process
- player placement outcomes
- discipline rulings without proper review
Head Coach may decide:
- practice structure
- game lines
- team expectations
- tactical decisions
Head Coach should not decide alone:
- player suspension beyond team rules
- financial penalties
- roster manipulation outside policy
- parent discipline
- organizational punishment
Hard Truth
Unclear authority creates power struggles.
Clear authority creates stability.
5. ACCOUNTABILITY STANDARDS
How Performance and Conduct Are Evaluated
Every role must be accountable.
Volunteer role or paid role — it does not matter.
If the role affects children, families, money, safety, reputation, or development, accountability is required.
Accountability standards should include:
- professionalism
- communication quality
- reliability
- policy compliance
- respect for boundaries
- confidentiality
- conflict management
- alignment with organizational philosophy
- behavior under pressure
For coaches, accountability should include:
- player treatment
- development environment
- emotional control
- communication with families
- team culture
- player retention
- practice quality
For board members, accountability should include:
- confidentiality
- preparation
- attendance
- conflict-of-interest compliance
- decision-making integrity
- professionalism
- support of board decisions once finalized
Hard Truth
If nobody evaluates leadership, leadership eventually evaluates itself.
That rarely ends well.
6. CONFLICT-OF-INTEREST EXPECTATIONS
How Bias and Perceived Bias Are Managed
Minor hockey is full of relationships.
Parents coach.
Board members have children in the system.
Friends recommend friends.
Sponsors know executives.
Former players become evaluators.
That is normal.
But unmanaged conflict of interest destroys trust.
Every role should state:
- when
- someone must declare a conflict
- someone must step out of a decision
- independent review is required
- perception matters even if no wrongdoing occurred
Examples of possible conflicts:
- board member involved in their child’s team placement
- coach evaluating a relative
- evaluator connected to a private training business
- sponsor influencing team selection
- director is protecting a personal friend
- parent volunteer accessing confidential information
Hard Truth
In hockey, perception can be almost as damaging as reality.
If families believe the process is fixed, trust is already damaged.
7. ORGANIZATIONAL ALIGNMENT EXPECTATIONS
How the Role Supports the Bigger Mission
Every role must support the organization’s philosophy.
This means no one operates as an independent island.
The President, Hockey Director, coaches, managers, convenors, volunteers, and board members must all understand:
- the development philosophy
- communication standards
- player-first priorities
- behavior expectations
- parent engagement model
- competitive objectives
- long-term organizational goals
This is especially important for coaches.
A coach cannot say:
“This is my team. I run it my way.”
No.
It is the organization’s team.
The coach is trusted to lead it within organizational standards.
Hard Truth
Independent rogue leadership is one of the fastest ways to fracture an association.
8. REVIEW, SUPPORT, AND REMOVAL PROCESS
What Happens When Standards Are Not Met
Every role should include a fair review process.
This protects both the organization and the person in the role.
The process should include:
- informal support
- documented concerns
- performance discussion
- improvement expectations
- timeline for correction
- escalation process
- possible suspension or removal
This should never be personal.
It should be standards-based.
Examples of reasons for review:
- repeated communication failure
- breach of confidentiality
- disrespectful conduct
- conflict-of-interest violation
- failure to perform duties
- toxic behavior
- unsafe environment
- undermining organizational decisions
- refusal to follow policy
Hard Truth
Removing someone from a role is difficult.
But keeping the wrong person in the wrong role can damage an entire organization.
THE STANDARD ROLE TEMPLATE
Every role description should follow this structure:
Role Title
Example: President, Hockey Director, Head Coach, Treasurer, Team Manager
Position Purpose
Why the role exists.
Core Responsibilities
What the role must do.
Communication Responsibilities
Who they communicate with and how.
Decision-Making Authority
What they can and cannot decide.
Accountability Standards: performance and behavior are measured.
Conflict-of-Interest Expectations
How bias and perceived bias are handled.
Organizational Alignment
How the role supports the association’s philosophy.
Review / Removal Process
What happens if standards are not met?
FINAL PRINCIPLE
A hockey organization should never rely on people “just knowing what to do.”
That is not leadership.
That is hope.
Modern hockey organizations require defined roles, clear expectations, accountable leadership, and professional standards.
Because when roles are unclear, conflict becomes inevitable.
Presented by thehockeyresource.com and thehockeytournamentresource.com