Athlete Representation – Desirable Sports Careers

Athlete representatives, or sports agents, can play hard but there’s plenty of work and stress. We always think of high rollers who drive Porsche cars and hobnob with the biggest and brightest athletes. This is the life for some who have made the most of their lucky breaks but it is not the norm for every agent.

A lot of responsibility is part of the job of a Sports agent. The movies did get it right when they show agents with some sort of phone permanently attached to their ear. The job involves constant contact with players, agencies, marketing people, sports teams, and others. Communication is key when recruiting new clients and maintaining portfolios for existing clients.

Agents are responsible for all aspects of a player’s career. Endorsements, investments, and professional appearances have become a part of the athletic package for high profile stars. You never know when a director in Hollywood will want your client for a cameo role in a movie. A sports agent will negotiate the contract. Athletes participate in modeling campaigns and photo shoots.

Agents can’t be complacent because clients are hard to come by. The hardest part of the job is finding the clients to represent. You can have all of the education in the world, but if you don’t know how to network and “be seen” it will be a long hard road to success.

To begin, get an education. Get that education at a university that has a major sports program. Their athletic degree programs will be well-funded and more diverse than at a smaller school with a modest program. Opportunities to network with the players, athletic administration, and sports boosters will present themselves at a school that gets lots of media coverage for its sports programs. Picking the brains of college recruiters will give you a hint as to what a athlete representative does.

Many sports agents also get their degree in another area. It is not uncommon to see a sports agent who also doubles as a accountant. An agent does act as a lawyer when they review contracts and they must manage an athlete’s financial portfolio not unlike a financial advisor. Exposing yourself to the ‘business of sports’ is vitally important.

A bachelor’s degree in sports administration or another area of sports is a must. Agents who plan to join an agency need the competitive edge to get in the door. A master’s degree is another step in the right direction. Agencies want the best and the brightest agents working for them to attract new clients.

Beginning your professional sports job with an agency has its advantages. An agency has already established its reputation in the sporting world. You will be able to use the name to lend credibility when recruiting clients. Also, your agency can help in the search for clients by throwing money and resources into the acquisition process.

Many sports agents are outgoing and have the entrepreneurial spirit to go it alone. Working independently has its obvious drawbacks like not being a recognized name. The kind of A-list sports clients that will bring you big bucks will not be banging down your door just yet. But there are also benefits. No one is telling you what to do. If you decide that it is okay to take a chance on a lesser known player, you can.

What do you need to succeed as a sports agent? An outgoing personality is first and foremost. It takes a strong person to have doors slammed in their faces over and over again before they find a client who will take a chance on them.

In sports, it really is about who you know. Networking is how you make contact with people in the business that can help you get ahead. But, don’t be a leech. Have something tangible to offer a business contact if they do business with you. Identify your best skill and work to develop it into a marketable asset. There are numerous other sports jobs that could be appealing for those who think a sports agent position may not be the career move for them.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Originally posted 2008-05-08 21:22:12.

No related posts.

This entry was posted on Thursday, January 19th, 2012 and is filed under Jobs. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

4 Responses to “Athlete Representation – Desirable Sports Careers”

  1. reidman barbrick on August 7th, 2010 at 4:42 pm

    You're right, a cameo is an engraved face on jewellery, a cameo role is basically just a chance to show a famous face in a film, not dialogue.

  2. parron jodian on August 29th, 2010 at 1:18 am

    The friends of Sinatra were by definition High Rollers – Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr, Telly Savalas, you name them he was friends with them. These were people with money to burn a Vegas was the place to burn it. If you could work so it was a tax write off too all the better. Hope this helps!

  3. sloeg on November 15th, 2010 at 11:11 am

    >How do you guys manage without a sponsor? I’m sure there’s plenty of costs associated with gaming clans, like site hosting, equipment costs, and registration fees. We have a non corporate sponsor in tranqFX. He paid for the guys stay in Dallas, our jerseys, site costs. We also have a few in-house programmers to help out with the site. >Also, does your team have a sort of theme, or is it a mix? When I say theme, I mean do the playing styles of your members consistently fit a category (i.e. offensive, defensive, cheesy, straight, micro-heavy, macro-heavy)? Its really a [...]

  4. tett on December 26th, 2011 at 2:20 am

    Apologize for telling the truth about the media? Truth needs no apology.

    As for the media coverage of Iraq, it is apparent that ANY positive story is absent, though there have been as many or even more positive events in Iraq than negative ones. They are not showing our successes, and any intelligent person should be asking "Why?".

    Nobody is saying there challenges in Iraq, and that there have been setbacks.

    Your blindness to the bias does not speak well of your ability to see things objectively. You sound like a shill.

Recent Posts

Tags

Recent Searches