Work in Sports

The Seven Deadly Sins of Sports Internships

If you are going to get hired in the sports industry the first step is interning...and so is the second step and the third.

Think of it this way, if you were in charge of hiring someone for an entry level position with a NFL team, would you rather hire the person that:

A: Had a 3.8 GPA and worked in their fathers office during summer vacation

or

B: Interned with the USGA during the US Senior Open, the Michigan International Speedway in corporate partnerships and with the New York Mets as part of their social media department.

Psst. The answer is B. And that is the actual resume of a real-life-soon-to-be-competition-for-a-job-you-are-interested-in person.

Graduating with a high GPA is nice, but it doesn’t tell employers how you can make them better, it just tells them you studied and passed tests. Internships can bulk up a resume to show you have experience achieving specific tasks in a real world business environment.

But it’s not enough to just get sports internships, you have to make the most of them.

Not to worry, we’re here to help. Avoid these seven deadly sins of sports internships and you should be ready to stick your foot firmly in the door of the sports industry.

(OK. They aren’t really deadly, I just happened to watch David Fincher’s classic movie Se7en for the 100th time this weekend and felt inspired)

 

 

Sin #1: Pride


Every sports internship is essentially a drawn out interview, every day that you have your feet planted firmly in the building you have a chance to prove you are worthy of being that company’s next hire.

“It’s a benefit for us to hire an intern because we already know their qualifications and how well they do their job,” says Katie Gambill, Vice-President/General Manager of 5-Star Radio in Clarksville, Tennessee. “We also already have a feel for how well they blend with the rest of the team.”

But being a know-it-all is the quickest way to derail any potential post-internship job opportunities.

 

 

 

 

Sports Internships rough riders
Another benefit of a sports internship - free team gear!

When you think you already know all the answers, you stop asking questions and stop being curious. Curiosity doesn’t limit, it just asks another question and absorbs more information.

Don’t lose your curiosity because you believe your pride is more important.

Advanced Tip: Some people act like a know-it-all to cover up the fact they actually are unprepared, nervous and afraid to be exposed.

I get it; I’ve actually sped down that road before. I was so overwhelmed in my first sports internship that I was afraid to ask questions for fear they’d be stupid. But I still acted like I owned the place. Total fraud.

The truth is, internship coordinators don’t really expect you to know much, they expect you to pay attention, learn and execute when taught. Don’t over think this process, be curious, and ask questions.

 

 

 

 

Sin #2: Sloth


Sports internships are a proving ground, a chance to show your work ethic, ability to complete tasks and abide by deadlines.

But not if you are lazy.

“When you get an internship, become known as the ‘yes’ person, willing to learn and do everything,” says radio host Shellie Hart.

Attitude is everything during your internship, if you bring it every day people will notice. If you are lazy or unmotivated people will notice that too.

Advanced Tip: Treat your internship like a job, don’t show up over-tired, unshaven or in clothes that look like they spent the last week on your floor. Time to show your professionalism, and put in your best effort to every assigned task.   

 

 

 

 

Sin #3: Greed

 

 

 

sports internships while in college
Even if you are just setting up equipment, there is something to be learned from every sports internship experience

True story, I once had an intern tell me when given a certain assignment, “Nah, I’m not doing that”.

You’re probably thinking – well, did you ask him to clean the bathroom or something?

Nope. It was his first day and his assignment was to label tapes for all the sports events we would be recording that night. That was a typical day one assignment, just to help get an interns feet wet and really grasp the enormity of the project we took on each and every night.

He thought he was too good for that task. He wanted something more glamorous, more befitting the person he thought he was.

That intern was unable to see the opportunity in front of him, and he was told not to come back for day two.

What a waste!

His selfish desire to do something other than his assigned task ended what could have been the opportunity of a lifetime. Had he worked hard, done the task to the best of his ability and thought about how he could help the business rather than himself, he would have made the most of his chance.

Advanced Tip: Don’t ever forget, when you are an intern your job is to do the things you are assigned with vigor.

 

 

 

Sin #4: Gluttony


Show restraint if you get invited to a work happy hour, or just out for a cocktail after work – this isn’t the time for ‘just one more’.

“I once invited an intern to come out with the crew for a few beers after a long shift,” recalls a sports reporter who would prefer to remain anonymous. “The intern got pretty drunk and started challenging me to a race out in the alley behind the bar.


“At first I thought he was just joking, but he started to get more and more belligerent about it, telling me how fast he was and that he could kick my butt. It got uncomfortable fast.”

There is a time and place for being the life of the party, it’s in your college dorm or sorority house, not around your new co-workers.

Advanced Tip: Don’t make the mistake of trying to buy your boss a drink. It’s cheesy – they know you don’t have any money so it just creates an awkward situation. Try instead to engage them in real conversation.

 

 

 

Sin #5: Lust

 

 

 

sports internships on the field with Atl Falcons
Treat an internship like a job, dress nice, work hard, impress.

‘No cheering in the press box’ is the common refrain in the sports industry.

Working in sports means you are closely connected to the teams you love as a fan, but when you are interning you aren’t a fan, and you aren’t in a sports bar.

No jerseys, no unprofessional arguments over the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry, no screaming when your team scores. Have respect for the workplace, sports is a business. It cooler than an accounting firm, but it’s still a business.

Advanced Tip: Don’t even bother sharing who ‘your teams’ are unless someone asks, it’s irrelevant to your success. On the other hand, if you find out the hiring manager is a Cowboys fan and so are you, now you have an in to start building some common ground.

Use that as a conversation starter; just don’t go overboard. Ultimately you’ll get a job because you have the skills and attitude they want, not because you know Demarco Murray was the 71st pick of the 2011 draft.

 

 

 

Sin #6: Wrath


There are jerks in every workplace – get used to it. Even if some fool thinks it’s empowering to talk down to an intern, don’t engage with this type of cave dweller, dismiss them.

As an intern you are unproven, it does no good to engage with someone in verbal sparring. Keeping your cool is a skill.

There are also those people in the workplace who are blamers. If something goes wrong they always look to pass the buck, and often that falls on an intern. Resist the urge to personally attack that person, just stick to the facts, calmly.

Advanced Tip: A wise person once told me to always choose your battlefield. If someone blames you for something over email and you send out a flame mail in response, you are on their battlefield, you’ll come off looking petty and juvenile. If someone is rude and dismissive, and you fight back clamoring to be heard, you are on their battlefield, they have high ground, they’ll win.

 

 

 

 

nba sports internships
Small tasks done well on an internship lead to bigger opportunities

Bide your time, you’ll find your battlefield, but in the meantime spend more time concentrating on your learning, your networking, your benefits of being an intern.

 

 

 

 

Sin #7: Envy


I was about three weeks into an internship at a large sports network and was given the assignment to run teleprompter for a new show that was debuting. I hated running prompter, it made me dizzy and I thought it was an idiots chore.

Another intern was watching and logging the lead story for that nights show - I wanted that job instead.

I thought I deserved it, I thought I had earned it.

Instead of focusing on my task and performing it to my best, I sat in envy stewing about what I wanted and I did a pretty sloppy job running prompter.

Afterward, my intern coordinator came up to me disappointed and said, “I needed someone I could trust in that role, it was a very important show we were debuting and I chose you because I knew I could trust you, but you let me down.”

Lesson learned.

Advanced Tip: You won’t always know the genesis or reasoning of each assignment you are given, but you need to trust your supervisors and do the best job you can with what you are given.

Even if it’s running prompter.

Final Thought


A sports internship is an audition, an opportunity for a student to take the knowledge they have begun to acquire in the classroom, and bring that to a real world work environment. It’s a unique opportunity to demonstrate to an employer what they could expect from them if they were hired in a full-time role.

Take it seriously.

 

 

Brian Clapp profile picture
by: Brian Clapp
Originally Published: September 03, 2013

Sign In or Register to access all articles and insider tips for help in your job search.

Search for Sports Jobs

RELATED JOBS
Volleyball, Freshman Head Coach (SY25-26)
Loudoun County Public Schools
Stone Ridge, VA

Job Overview High school Lightridge, Volleyball coaching position. Season runs Fall, August -...

Wrestling, Head Coach (SY25-26)
Loudoun County Public Schools
Leesburg, VA

Job Overview High school Heritage, Wrestling coaching position. Season runs Winter, November –...

Wrestling, Assistant Coach (SY 25-26)
Loudoun County Public Schools
Ashburn, VA

Job Overview High school Independence, Wrestling assistant coaching position. Season runs...

Retail Shop Associate, Tysons Corner
Equinox Group
Tysons Corner, VA

Company Description OUR STORY: Equinox Group is a high growth collective of the world's most...

Football, Varsity Assistant Coach (SY 25 - 26)
Loudoun County Public Schools
Aldie, VA

Job Overview High school John Champe, Football assistant coaching position. Season runs Fall,...

Find a Job »

Find the Right Job Faster

Create Your FREE Account Today to Unlock Exclusive Career Tools
  • Get personalized job matches sent to your inbox every day
  • Connect directly with employers before your competition
  • Advance your career with expert advice on interviewing, salary negotiation, and more
iHire brandmark

We value your privacy