DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

U.S. Olympic gold medalist went from $200,000-a-year sponsorship at 20 years old to $12-an-hour internship by 30

February 1, 2026
in News
U.S. Olympic gold medalist went from $200,000-a-year sponsorship at 20 years old to $12-an-hour internship by 30

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.”

A version of this story originally published on Fortune.com on August 22, 2024.

More on success:

  • MasterClass CEO admits it’s ‘really tough’ for Gen Z grads—he reveals how they can get hiring managers to respond to cold emails
  • Harry Potter star Emma Watson says she paused her career at 29, after 16-hour work days turned her into ‘an insane person’ who couldn’t hold a conversation
  • Gen Z is reviving this boring job that millennials and boomers abandoned—and it’s helping them land six-figure careers straight out of college

The post U.S. Olympic gold medalist went from $200,000-a-year sponsorship at 20 years old to $12-an-hour internship by 30 appeared first on Fortune.

Prep basketball roundup: Heritage Christian’s young players are growing up fast
News

Prep basketball roundup: Heritage Christian’s young players are growing up fast

by Los Angeles Times
February 1, 2026

If there were any doubt about this being the year of the freshman in high school basketball, all you needed ...

Read more
News

Mamdani Forces Delivery Apps to Pay Back $4.6 Million Cheated From Drivers

February 1, 2026
News

‘Nope!’ Mike Johnson shut down by NBC host after repeating false election claims

February 1, 2026
News

‘Melania’ Surprise $7 Million Box Office Success Has Trump’s Older, Female Supporters to Thank

February 1, 2026
News

California AG sues hospital that stopped ‘gender-affirming’ care for minors after Trump’s demands

February 1, 2026
Kylie Jenner and ex Travis Scott reunite to celebrate kids Stormi and Aire’s birthdays

Kylie Jenner and ex Travis Scott reunite to celebrate kids Stormi and Aire’s birthdays

February 1, 2026
Dominik Mysterio’s In-Ring Return Announced (And It’s Not in WWE)

Dominik Mysterio’s In-Ring Return Announced (And It’s Not in WWE)

February 1, 2026
Epstein’s Posthumous Plans for Party Island Revealed

Epstein’s Posthumous Plans for Party Island Revealed

February 1, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025