Business

Team USA Olympic athletes learn to channel competition for entrepreneurship

Olympic athletes are some of the most competitive human beings on the planet, but a professional life after sports can be a tough transition from the daily rigors of physical training.

Transitioning Olympic and Paralympic athletes from the gym, pool, or pitch towards becoming innovative entrepreneurs requires channeling years of physical training with the development of acute, mental training.

To help both current and retired Team USA athletes transition to a life of entrepreneurship, the Athlete Career Education (ACE) Program provides “high quality, comprehensive career and education services aimed at enhancing performance and personal development.”

This year’s US Olympic Committee initiative brought some 600 Olympic and Paralympic athletes to participate in an Entrepreneurship Workshop run by Brant Cooper, the NYT Bestselling Author of The Lean Entrepreneur and Founder of Moves the Needle (MTN).

Brant’s session was entitled “Being your own boss and exercising Entrepreneurship” and focused on dispelling the myth of the visionary that you can just come up with an idea, build and execute upon it, then become a successful entrepreneur.

One of the key takeaways about the myth of the visionary is that people are born with either deflated or inflated idea about their potential for becoming successful entrepreneurs. Deflated people believe they have nothing to add while inflated people have bigger egos with lesser ideas that don’t pay much attention to constructive criticism.

Both visionary myths are equally debilitating, according to Brant, and the workshop was aimed at dispelling these myths while empowering athletes to reach their full potential outside of athletic competition.

As a result, Team USA athletes learned about who are the customers they want to serve, and how they could go about identifying problems worth solving using customer, problem and solution zoom tools.

Through the ACE program, “Athletes gain valuable, hands-on work experience, as well as essential tools and training to make informed decisions about their career transition.”

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

Recent Posts

Top 15 LatAm tech journalists and editors of 2024

Latin America’s tech industry is booming, with innovative new startups popping up across the region.…

1 hour ago

G20 announces initiative to crackdown on climate change disinformation

The Global Initiative for Information Integrity on Climate Change claims to 'safeguard those reporting on…

3 hours ago

How GPUs, widely used in gaming, are helping doctors get better look inside us

In the late 19th Century, physicians began inserting hollow tubes equipped with small lights into…

13 hours ago

Top Five Trends Shaping Gaming in 2025

This year wasn’t exactly what the video gaming industry expected — it declined by 7%…

2 days ago

Why data flywheels are the key to sustainable growth in 2025 

By Oren Askarov, Growth & Operations Marketing Director at SQream Becoming “data-driven” has become a…

2 days ago

Swiss-based Horasis to host its Asia Meeting in Dubai, United Arab Emirates 

Horasis Asia Meeting, led by German entrepreneur Frank Jurgen-Richter, will take place this year on the…

5 days ago