Category: Your Career (Page 59 of 62)

Land an internship to start a career in sports

Many people love sports, and many also would love a career in sports. Of course, few have the physical skills plus necessary dedication to become a pro athlete, but a career in sports business or as a sports agent appeals to many people.

Jack Bechta is a respected sports agent and he’s written an article about how you can use an internship to start a possible career in sports. It’s not easy, however, as these internships are in high demand.

If you want to work in sports, the best way to start is by landing an internship. It’s a productive path: Six interns who worked for me went on to careers in sports.

The problem is that there are too many people chasing too few internships, so it’s tough to get your foot in the door. Like many agents, I get several unsolicited inquiries per week about the possibility of interning at JB Sports. NFL teams, and other pro sports teams, receive hundreds per month. However, I only use about two interns per year, and they’re usually selected a year in advance.

Bechta goes on to suggest seven tips to help you land that internship. Check out the entire article and you may be on your way to a lucrative and fun career in sports.

Student loan reform signed into law

President Obama has signed into law the student loan reform that was attached to the health care bill. It’s a huge triumph against bank lobbyists and a significant victory for students who have been victimized by aggressive loan techniques used by the banks that are similar to the tactics they used for credit cards. Millions of young Americans are saddled with debt with onerous interest rates and penalties.

The new law is also a victory for taxpayers who no longer have to subsidize bankers preying on students.

The new law will eliminate fees paid to private banks to act as intermediaries in providing loans to college students and use much of the nearly $68 billion in savings over 11 years to expand Pell Grants and make it easier for students to repay outstanding loans after graduating. The law also invests $2 billion in community colleges over the next four years to provide education and career training programs to workers eligible for Trade Adjustment aid.

The law will increase Pell Grant grants along with inflation in the next few years, which should raise the maximum grant to $5,975 from $5,550 by 2017, according to the White House, and it will also provide 820,000 more grants by 2011. Including money from last year’s stimulus program and regular budget increases, the White House said Mr. Obama has now doubled spending on Pell Grants.

Students who borrow money starting in July 2014 will be allowed to cap their repayments at 10 percent of their income above basic living requirements, instead of 15 percent. Moreover, if they keep up their payments, they will have any remaining debt forgiven after 20 years instead of 25 years – or after 10 years if they are in public service, such as teaching, nursing or serving in the military.

Mr. Obama portrayed the overhaul of the student loan program as a triumph over an “army of lobbyists,” singling out Sally Mae, which he said spent $3 million to stop the changes. “For almost two decades, we’ve been trying to fix a sweetheart deal in federal law that essentially gave billions of dollars to banks,” he said. He said the money “was spent padding student lenders’ pockets.”

Hopefully this will enable more Americans to chase the American Dream.

Learning to be an entrepreneur

Is the life of an entrepreneur for everyone? Probably not, as it can be rather demanding and it’s hard to imagine living that life unless you have a passion for business or for the service or product you choose.

The next question involves whether you can learn to be an entrepreneur. Some people may want to do it, but they really aren’t prepared to make a successful go of it.

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Lessons from the king-sized success (and failures) of Donald Trump

People who want to learn about success often forget that many of these lessons are also about how to face gigantic problems and solve them. As Oscar Wilde famously said “Who are afraid to fail are afraid to succeed.” There is no better person to learn from than Donald Trump.

As a kid, Trump was obsessed with baseball to the exclusion of almost everything else so his parents had to send him to the New York Military Academy to sort him out. It worked and Trump pulled up his socks, graduating from one of the best business schools in the country, the Wharton School of business at the University of Pennsylvania. After an apprenticeship with his father, a successful real estate developer, Trump was ready to take off on his own. Trump has always thought big and told Millionaire Magazine “Always do something that you like, always do something that you enjoy doing, or you will never be successful. You will never be good at it,” However, it is Trump’s success in overcoming his gigantic problems that make him truly unique.

Trump made a multibillion dollar fortune only to see most of it wiped out in the real estate market crash. He was staring down the brink of the precipice with total debts of over $9.2 billion. His superlative negotiating skills and his astute business moves enabled him to recover. In his own words: “It’s always a great asset to be able to get along with people.” Over the years, despite some very tricky deals, I’ve generally been able to get along with people. You always have to let the other side think that they are also getting something out of the transaction. And, it’s often true that the best deals are the ones that everybody benefits from.”

Trump would be a winner anywhere, but he happened to choose the real estate business. He was also a master at using debt and keeping his options open. Certainly, one lesson you can learn from him on using debt is to investigate the use of elastic loans.

Keep your credit standing high

A credit standing has many advantages. In the first place, you will gain access to a whole range of sources of affordable debt who will welcome you as a customer. In the second place, you will be able to obtain the best possible terms and interest rates in the market because of your credit history. Finally, your credit score says much about you as a person so whether you are dealing with a landlord with a potential employer, your credit history will speak for you.

In the last few years of profligate lending, the easy availability of credit seduced many people into borrowing far more than they could afford to repay. For many of these people, debt consolidation is now being touted as a magic wand to waft all the problems away. Nothing could be further from the truth. Debt consolidation is a platform on which to reorganize your personal debt on a one time basis, but it cannot be a long-term fix, unless you are prepared to rein in the sort of spending that led to your problems.

If you would like to take control of your life, a debt consolidation is a good way to look at your personal debt and to reorganize it. If you are like the average American, the chances are that you will have debt outstanding on several credit cards and possibly some personal loans. All of these are high-cost debt because they carry a high interest rate. You should aim at obtaining one single debt consolidation loan to pay off all these bits and pieces and to provide you with a single monthly repayment. If you are in a position to use your home equity as collateral, you should be able to obtain this loan on favorable terms and conditions thus potentially saving you thousands of dollars in interest.

Finally, having regained control of your life, aim to keep it that way, and a lifelong high credit standing will follow.

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