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20岁时年收入高达20万美元,如今这位奥运金牌得主却艰难谋生

对绝大多数运动员而言,制定B计划至关重要。

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“媒体报道铺天盖地,赞助商却不见踪影。”奥运冠军劳琳·威廉姆斯(Lauryn Williams)警示道。图片来源:Andy Lyons—Getty Images

即便是奥运金牌得主,也无法保证财务状况稳定。劳琳·威廉姆斯便是例证。这位田径、雪车双料奥运冠军,20岁时年收入高达20万美元,可到了30岁,却只能从事时薪12美元的实习工作。

尽管她是美国首位在冬夏两届奥运会均摘得奖牌的女运动员,但奥运会后,她的职业机会却寥寥无几。

“外界有个误区:由于我是首位达成这一成就的人——至今无人能及——我全年演讲邀约不断,”她在接受美国消费者新闻与商业频道(CNBC)《Make It》栏目采访时表示,“我确实偶尔会收到邀约,但根本不足以维持生计。”

“媒体报道铺天盖地,赞助商却不见踪影。那年我成为美国首位在冬夏两届奥运会均斩获奖牌的女运动员,收入却只有8万美元。”

正因如此,这位缔造体育史的传奇人物被迫从零开始。领英(LinkedIn)资料显示,2013年,威廉姆斯投身白领职场,在Briaud Financial Advisors担任实习生。

“我起步太晚,30岁才开启职业生涯,而同龄朋友早已成为医生、律师,事业有成,”她补充道,“我整个二十多岁都在赛场上拼搏,缺乏实际工作经验让我倍感不安。"

尽管最初被该公司拒绝录用,但她表示,公司负责人在听闻她的非凡履历后决定破格录用。

糟糕的理财建议促使她转型

即便当时从耐克(Nike)获得20万美元赞助费,威廉姆斯强调,经纪人抽取20%的佣金,之后还需缴纳税款。

“这笔钱远没有外界想的那么宽裕,尽管对二十岁的年轻人而言已算颇为丰厚。”她强调。

“十年职业生涯让我在三十岁时经济基础比普通人稍好一些,但这笔钱远不足以让我躺平,再也不用工作。”

倘若当时能获得专业理财建议,结局或许会截然不同,而这正是她开启第二职业的原因。

“在更换第二位理财顾问却依旧毫无起色后,我通过谷歌搜索找到了注册理财规划师课程,”她说道,“我没多想就报了名,纯粹是想自己理清理财的门道。”

实习期间,她两次参加注册理财规划师考试均未通过,最终在2017年成功考取证书。

如今,身为注册理财规划师委员会大使的她,创办了Worth Winning公司,帮助运动员做出明智的财务决策。

许多金牌得主年收入不足十万美元

如今已为多位体育明星提供咨询的威廉姆斯深知,自己的经历绝非个例,而是行业常态。

菲律宾首位男子奥运金牌得主卡洛斯·尤洛(Carlos Yulo)夺冠后收获了价值55.5万美元、配备齐全的公寓、逾20万美元现金奖励,还获得终身拉面供应。

但对绝大多数运动员而言,制定B计划至关重要。

“从赞助角度来看,我曾为多位金牌得主提供服务,他们并非'热门'运动项目选手,扣除各项开支后年收入甚至不足十万美元。”她坦言。

“奥运会顶级运动员能接到广告等各类商业合作,只要打理好财务,确实能赛后直接退休,再也不用工作。”她补充道。

“但绝大多数运动员仍需继续工作。”(财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

即便是奥运金牌得主,也无法保证财务状况稳定。劳琳·威廉姆斯便是例证。这位田径、雪车双料奥运冠军,20岁时年收入高达20万美元,可到了30岁,却只能从事时薪12美元的实习工作。

尽管她是美国首位在冬夏两届奥运会均摘得奖牌的女运动员,但奥运会后,她的职业机会却寥寥无几。

“外界有个误区:由于我是首位达成这一成就的人——至今无人能及——我全年演讲邀约不断,”她在接受美国消费者新闻与商业频道(CNBC)《Make It》栏目采访时表示,“我确实偶尔会收到邀约,但根本不足以维持生计。”

“媒体报道铺天盖地,赞助商却不见踪影。那年我成为美国首位在冬夏两届奥运会均斩获奖牌的女运动员,收入却只有8万美元。”

正因如此,这位缔造体育史的传奇人物被迫从零开始。领英(LinkedIn)资料显示,2013年,威廉姆斯投身白领职场,在Briaud Financial Advisors担任实习生。

“我起步太晚,30岁才开启职业生涯,而同龄朋友早已成为医生、律师,事业有成,”她补充道,“我整个二十多岁都在赛场上拼搏,缺乏实际工作经验让我倍感不安。"

尽管最初被该公司拒绝录用,但她表示,公司负责人在听闻她的非凡履历后决定破格录用。

糟糕的理财建议促使她转型

即便当时从耐克(Nike)获得20万美元赞助费,威廉姆斯强调,经纪人抽取20%的佣金,之后还需缴纳税款。

“这笔钱远没有外界想的那么宽裕,尽管对二十岁的年轻人而言已算颇为丰厚。”她强调。

“十年职业生涯让我在三十岁时经济基础比普通人稍好一些,但这笔钱远不足以让我躺平,再也不用工作。”

倘若当时能获得专业理财建议,结局或许会截然不同,而这正是她开启第二职业的原因。

“在更换第二位理财顾问却依旧毫无起色后,我通过谷歌搜索找到了注册理财规划师课程,”她说道,“我没多想就报了名,纯粹是想自己理清理财的门道。”

实习期间,她两次参加注册理财规划师考试均未通过,最终在2017年成功考取证书。

如今,身为注册理财规划师委员会大使的她,创办了Worth Winning公司,帮助运动员做出明智的财务决策。

许多金牌得主年收入不足十万美元

如今已为多位体育明星提供咨询的威廉姆斯深知,自己的经历绝非个例,而是行业常态。

菲律宾首位男子奥运金牌得主卡洛斯·尤洛(Carlos Yulo)夺冠后收获了价值55.5万美元、配备齐全的公寓、逾20万美元现金奖励,还获得终身拉面供应。

但对绝大多数运动员而言,制定B计划至关重要。

“从赞助角度来看,我曾为多位金牌得主提供服务,他们并非'热门'运动项目选手,扣除各项开支后年收入甚至不足十万美元。”她坦言。

“奥运会顶级运动员能接到广告等各类商业合作,只要打理好财务,确实能赛后直接退休,再也不用工作。”她补充道。

“但绝大多数运动员仍需继续工作。”(财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

Even for Olympic gold medalists, financial security isn’t guaranteed. Just ask Lauryn Williams. The Olympic track and bobsled champion earned $200,000 a year at age 20, yet by 30, she was interning for $12 an hour.

Despite being the first American woman to medal in both the Summer and Winter Olympics, her post-Olympic opportunities were scarce.

“There’s this misconception that because I’m the first to do this thing—and still no one else has done it—that I’m booked all year long for speaking engagements,” she told CNBC Make It. “I get things here or there, but I can’t make a living from it.”

“The news coverage came, but the sponsors didn’t. I made $80,000 the year I became the first American woman to medal in the Summer and Winter Olympics.”

It’s why, despite making sporting history, she was forced to start from scratch. In 2013, Williams joined the world of white-collar work as an intern at Briaud Financial Advisors, as per her LinkedIn.

“I was behind the ball because I was 30 years old and just starting, whereas I had friends who were already doctors and lawyers and well into their careers,” she added. “I spent all of my 20s competing, so I felt kind of insecure that I didn’t have any real work knowledge.”

Though she had initially been turned down for work at the firm, she said the owner decided to bring her onboard after hearing about her impressive background.

Poor financial advice inspired her career move

Even when Williams was earning $200,000 in sponsorship from Nike, she said her agent took a 20% cut, and then there were taxes.

“The money doesn’t go quite as far as people think it does, even though it was a pretty good living for a 20-year-old,” she stressed.

“I had a 10-year career, so it set me up better than the average person by the time I was 30. But it also didn’t give me the income to kick my feet up forever and never have to do anything again.”

Perhaps that could have been a different story if she had good financial advice—and that’s precisely what inspired her second act.

“I did a Google search after having a second financial advisor that didn’t work out and found CFP coursework,” she said. “I enrolled in it blindly, simply because I wanted to better understand finances for myself.”

After two unsuccessful attempts at passing the CFP exam while interning, Williams finally passed in 2017.

Now she is a CFP Board Ambassador helping athletes make smart decisions with their money through her firm Worth Winning.

Many Gold medal-winning athletes aren’t making $100,000 a year

Having now advised various sports stars, Williams knows her experience is very much the norm.

Philippines’ first male Olympic gold medalist in history, Carlos Yulo may be set with a fully furnished $555,000 condo, over $200,000 in cash and a lifetime supply of ramen to go with his medals.

However, for most athletes, a plan B is essential.

“From a sponsorship standpoint, I’ve had multiple gold medal-winning athletes as clients who didn’t compete in “premiere” sports and weren’t clearing $100,000 a year after all was said and done,” she said.

“There are the people that you would call the headliners of the Olympic games that are in commercials and those sorts of things, who are going to be able to retire and never work again after if they organize their finances accordingly,” she added.

“But the vast majority of people are going to need to work.”

财富中文网所刊载内容之知识产权为财富媒体知识产权有限公司及/或相关权利人专属所有或持有。未经许可,禁止进行转载、摘编、复制及建立镜像等任何使用。
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