Murphy has built his reputation on developing young players, having won a pair of Six Nations Grand Slams during his Ireland U20 tenure and knows he will need to continue his track record with the province.
It is set to be a period of transition at Ulster, with the experienced duo of Billy Burns and Steven Kitshoff departing in the summer, with Murphy keen to promote from within given the club’s financial constraints.
Since his arrival, he has already given more minutes to Academy graduates such as Harry Sheridan, Scott Wilson and Cormac Izuchukwu.
“The challenge ahead is how we build this team, which will be quite young, to make sure we become competitive,” added Murphy.
“We’re in a situation where most of the signings have been done and the budget is where it’s at.
“There are probably one or two adjustments to that in the next couple of weeks so we’re working away on that in the background but a lot of it was done before I came in.”
While Ulster brought in South African Kitshoff, a two-time World Cup winner, as their marquee signing last year, Murphy does not anticipate a similar high-profile arrival at the Kingspan Stadium this summer.
He said: “We’re not looking at a marquee signing but exciting young players. We’re not like a Man City of the rugby world, we can’t go out and take whoever we need, so that means we need to develop from within.”
“Our link with the academy needs to be really strong and our feedback with players needs to be positive and direct.
“We need to make sure the young players understand what it means to play for Ulster and at URC level.”