• Loading stock data...
Friday, May 3, 2024
  • -
    days
  • -
    hours
  • -
    minutes
  • -
    seconds

Key Takeaways of “Lessons from an Intern”

This is posted as part of our Summer Intern Blog Series. Be sure to come back each week as interns from around the country share their summer experiences with us!

By: Kelly Cartner, @kellyfavre4


Although my time as an intern will last for a few more months, the sun is setting on the summer, except after being in Michigan for 22 years, it seems to be summer in California every day! The fall semester starts soon and thanks to @Todd_TTU for the wonderful idea, I would also like to summarize my five key takeaways from the summer.

#1 — Get Out Of Your Comfort Zone

Being an intern, you will come across a lot of tasks that will be new to you and a little uncomfortable. The best thing to do is embrace the fact that you will be getting out of your comfort zone and realize that this will help you grow as a person, professionally and personally. You will push your own limits and before you know it, the item that was once uncomfortable will now turn into something you love. Accept the process and get out of your comfort zone!

#2- Every Day is an Interview

You never know who is watching you, and of course I mean that in a professional way. When you continue to work hard and start to catch the attention of those around you, you will be glad you stayed after to help clean up or to help wash the tennis courts. Treating every day as if it were an interview will place you in pole position. You will be ahead of the game and references will be coming from every direction. Chop wood, carry water and get down with the dirty work.

#3- Be Confident

As an intern, you will be asked to do a few things you will have no clue how to do. This is, of course, a great thing because as soon as you say “yes” with enthusiasm unknown to mankind, it will put others at ease. They will learn to build their trust with you and identify you with being a confident individual willing to take on new tasks. This will lead to more responsibility and even better experiences. As I mentioned earlier this summer, walk like a matador, as if you are the expert and others are waiting to learn from you. Be confident, believe in yourself and let yourself know that you can do anything you set your mind to.

#4- You Get Out What You Put In

From the boring, mundane tasks to the exciting media press conferences, any experience is what you make of it. You can turn anything in to an advantageous learning experience as long as you have the right mindset. Going into any assignment asking yourself what you are going to learn that day can change the way you view that same assignment. You have already committed the time to the internship, now make sure you are getting out what you want because in the end that is in your control.

#5- See Challenges as a Space to Learn and Grow

You can be 20 days into your career or 20 years, but no matter what, you will always be facing challenges. Try not to look at these challenges as failures, but instead view them as learning opportunities and assess the situation. Be happy you just hit a bump in the road because now you have the chance to put yourself back on course. Realize some areas in which you need improvement on and own it. Take control and take this opportunity to grow. We will be learning our whole lives, so there really isn’t a reason to try and deny it!

Here at the University of the Pacific, I get to learn something new every day, whether it be about my career, myself or the people around me, but I am thankful I am in an environment to learn. We truly can never stop learning, it’s a wonderful thing. I have had a wonderful ride this summer and I can’t wait to see what is in store for me this upcoming school year. In nine months I will have a Master’s degree and on my way to backpacking in Europe. I can’t wait to look back and reflect on this experience and know I put my best effort into it.

I want to thank everyone who read my blogs throughout the summer and provided me with an immense amount of support. So many of my friends back in the mitten, fellow grad students and of course my professors were all a great support system this summer and I can’t thank them enough for their encouragement. It is heartwarming to know how many friends I continue to have by my side.

Words cannot describe how much I appreciate the Front Office Sports team for allowing me to have this opportunity. This is a tremendous group of individuals who want to help facilitate the success of others in the sportsbiz community and they are doing just that. These are people that everyone hopes they can work for one day and I am so honored to have had that opportunity this summer.

I will leave you all with one of my favorite quotes, “I always wonder why birds stay in the same place when they can fly anywhere on the Earth. Then I ask myself the same question.” — Harun Yahya.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

True Challenges of an Intern

This is posted as part of our Summer Intern Blog Series. Be…

A Lesson on Confidence: Walk Like A Matador

This is posted as part of our Summer Intern Blog Series. Be…

5 Takeaways From My Summer Internship

By: Todd Rogers, @Todd_TTU My summer internship here at ACU has finally…

Learning From Leaders

This is posted as part of our Summer Intern Blog Series. Be…
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

How Red Bull Laps the F1 Competition and Builds the Brand

0:00
0:00

Featured Today

Just Like We Drew It Up? Stadium Renderings Can Excite, Confound, and Anger

During a historic wave of development, drawings wield more power than ever.
The scene in the green room behind the NFL Draft Theater in Detroit on Tuesday, April 23, 2024. Thirteen college players who will be picked in the first round will be waiting in this large room with friends, family, agents and college coaches on Thursday night.
April 27, 2024

More NFL Draft Prospects Are Staying Home, and TV Networks Are Adjusting

Whether making or missing out on millions, more prospects are staying home.
April 21, 2024

Everything You Need To Know About the Legal Attempts To Kill the ACC

Four lawsuits involving the conference, Clemson, and FSU could determine the future.
April 20, 2024

A Bare-Knuckle Fighter Won His Pro Debut. The Far Right Scored a Marketing Win

With Proud Boys sponsoring him, experts say extremist groups will use his success to elevate their ideologies and recruit new believers.

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world.
Live Nation
Multiple - USA Careers
Adidas
Multiple - USA Careers
FanDuel
Multiple - USA Careers
Sponsored

Rapid Returns: How Technology Is Getting You Back to Your Seat

How Oracle’s POS technology is helping fans get back to their seats faster.
Sponsored

MLS’ Chris Schlosser on Pioneering the Digital-First Sports League with AI

Chris Schlosser discusses MLS’s growth and digital transformation.
Sponsored

How Sportradar and the NBA are Partnering to Fuel Fan Engagement

How Sportradar and the NBA are utilizing data to enhance fan engagement
Sponsored

Rapid Returns: How Technology Is Getting You Back to Your Seat

How Oracle’s POS technology is helping fans get back to their seats faster.
Oakland-A's
April 25, 2023

Oakland A’s Could Share Stadium with Triple-A Team

The Oakland A’s could be searching for a place to play.
Titans stadium.
April 19, 2023

Titans’ Historic New $2.1B Stadium One Step Closer to Reality

About $1.26B in public money would go toward the new stadium.
Crypto-markets-sports-sponsorship
May 20, 2022

Crypto Crash Impact on Sports Sponsorships

Prior to the last two weeks, cryptocurrencies, NFTs, exchanges, and a host…
Insights-Wearables-Consumers
March 11, 2022

The Evolution of Consumer Wearables

The wearables market has seen incredible amounts of growth since the onset of the pandemic. Trends like telemedicine and remote patient monitoring have helped spur adoption and inspired new consumer products that allow for the tracking and collection of biometric data.