Skip to Content

Site helps athletes find jobs, long after the final shot

More
Text SizeAAA

Filed under: College, Entrepreneurship

career athletes logoIn the months before Chris Smith graduated from Missouri State University in 2002, his classmates were doing the networking and other things that soon-to-be college graduates do in looking for a job.

Smith, however, didn't have the time. While others were out job hunting, Smith was out working at a job he didn't get paid for: He played football for the university.

With a bachelor's degree in entrepreneurship, it turns out that Smith's work on the football field helped him develop the skills he needed in the working world -- being goal oriented, handling pressure well, having a strong work ethic and being mentally tough.

Those traits and many others that athletes share are what drove Smith to start CareerAthletes.com, a Web site that helps athletes network and find jobs through mentors and school alumni.

"It's the same traits you hear in boardrooms -- these are the people we need," Smith said in a telephone interview.

With 50,000 members -- including student athletes and professional athletes -- CareerAthletes works with more than 1,200 universities to help them search for free for a job.

Since few college athletes make it to the pros and get all of the riches and fame that come with it, it's a group that needs to use its athletic skills in the workplace.

Being of the mind frame that they're going to get to the next level of sports, such as the NFL, is what makes college athletes who they are in the first place and it's a level of thinking they shouldn't ignore in the workplace, Smith said.

The life of being a college athlete suddenly comes to an end at graduation, and Smith's site works to teach athletes how to articulate their skill set to employers.

Those skills include valuing constructive criticism, knowing how to prepare, being focused and being willing to learn.

Contrary to the popular cliche that student athletes don't graduate from college, an NCAA study of student athletes in 2006 found that they graduate at a higher rate, 76%, than college students nationally. Women athletes had a much higher graduation rate than men.

One reason may be that athletes have a support structure at school and are committed, Smith said.

"They know what it means to be a teammate and they don't want to let their teammates down and drop out," he said.

Aaron Crowe is a freelance journalist in the San Francisco Bay Area who can be reached at www.AaronCrowe.net
Subscribe to Walletpop

Add your comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

When you enter your name and email address, you'll be sent a link to confirm your comment, and a password. To leave another comment, just use that password.

To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.

What are the Next Hot-Spots in the Luxury Resort Scene?
Luxist Awards asked three of our Expert Panelists, all veterans of the travel industry, about the ...
The Luxist Awards for Best Accessories
Do you know of a magnificent jewelry line with pieces that are to die for? Which is the finest ...

Geoff Williams
Geoff Williams Filed under: Banks, Technology, Banking-checking-account

Personal checks poised to be a relic

Is the personal check on its way out? The Dallas Morning News recently suggested that -- and, no, they aren't the first to suggest it, nor will they be the last -- but they point out that several ...
Barbara Bartlein
Barbara Bartlein Filed under: Borrowing, Credit, Debt, Home, Real Estate, Bankruptcy, Mortgages

Reckless lendings' fallout continues

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reports that a record number of loans -- one in seven -- is delinquent, up from one in 10 a year ago. Today's numbers also show that one in 22 families in the ...
Aaron Crowe
Aaron Crowe Filed under: Health, Travel

Travel with the flu during holidays and you could end up in quarantine

Just as swine flu activity is slowing, health officials are worried about another increase as people travel for Thanksgiving. And a few weeks after Thanksgiving, more people will be preparing to ...
Zac Bissonnette
Zac Bissonnette Filed under: Entrepreneurship

Donald Trump enters the world of multi-level marketing

What happens when you combine one of the world's most ridiculed business personalities with one of the world's most ridiculed business models? The Trump Network, the new Donald Trump-branded ...

Headlines from WalletPop Partners