Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • SpaceX stock fell below its IPO price for the first time this week. Here are a few reasons why
    • Join the VOTER GA Online Watch Party and Online Briefing after President Trump’s Speech Thursday Evening
    • Trump Can’t Admit That He Lost the Iran War
    • The unexpected hero of the World Cup? Times Square
    • The Students Betting on a New Democratic Party
    • The AI economy runs on this (incredibly vague) unit 
    • Women entrepreneurs are less likely to leverage AI—but more likely to benefit from it
    • When not to use AI at work
    Populist Bulletin
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Populist Bulletin
    Home»Business»The athlete advantage in the workforce
    Business 5 Mins Read

    The athlete advantage in the workforce

    Business 5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    If you were to join a team meeting at Parity on any given day, you might sense something unusual. One colleague may have just returned from a strength session. Another might be joining from an airport between competitions. Someone else might be analyzing sponsor data mere hours before competing in a world-class event. 

    This is what it looks like to lead a company where a significant portion of the workforce comprises elite women athletes. And I believe it represents a powerful window into the future of work. 

    At most companies, people point to a visionary founder or a breakthrough product as the thing that makes an organization stand out. At Parity, the differentiator is the people themselves. Our team includes a current WNBA player, a Canadian two-time Olympic runner, a nine-time U.S. waterskiing champion, a former NWSL soccer player, and a two-time Paralympic gold medalist in sitting volleyball. Others have competed professionally in pro tackle football and track and field (including pole vault). Twenty-six percent of our team even have Wikipedia entries (and no, I’m not one of them). 

    While some team members have retired from sport, many still train and compete at the highest levels while simultaneously shaping our business strategy. They broker partnerships with esteemed brands like Microsoft, M&T Bank, LinkedIn, and AdventHealth. They manage our community of 1,200 pro women athletes while developing smart content and winning creative strategies for clients. And they bring a lived understanding of what it means to operate under pressure, to persevere, to adapt, and to collaborate—the very skills business leaders often spend years trying to cultivate inside corporate environments. 

    WHY WE HIRE ATHLETES 

    When I joined Parity, our mission was clear: Close the income and opportunity gap for women athletes. That mission shapes everything, including how we think about talent. 

    If we’re going to build a company dedicated to advancing women in sports, why wouldn’t we build it with women in sports? 

    Every athlete who joins our team brings something that leaders often talk about but rarely see themselves: firsthand experience with inequity. Our own research underscores the challenges professional women athletes face.

    • 58% earn under $25,000 annually from their sport
    • 50% don’t net income after training and competition expenses 
    • Many juggle full-time jobs while maintaining elite training schedules

    These athletes aren’t theoretically aware of the pay gap—they’ve lived it. They’re not generically familiar with underinvestment—they’ve had to fight through it. And them having lived the reality of our mission creates a real workforce advantage. 

    When a brand asks how to build authentic partnerships with women athletes, our team can speak from experience—sometimes literally from the Olympic Village. When we advise marketers on what resonates with women’s sports fans, our experts understand the community because they are part of it. This model isn’t manufactured through training sessions or leadership offsites. It’s the natural outcome of building a company around people with lived expertise. 

    THE ATHLETE ADVANTAGE 

    One of the most important things I’ve learned as a CEO is that skills do not automatically translate across contexts—but values and instincts do. 

    Elite athletes possess certain foundational strengths that prove invaluable in business: 

    Resilience. Athletes experience failure and setbacks more frequently—and more publicly—than most professionals ever will. They do not crumble when they lose. They study. They iterate. They try again. This mentality fuels a culture of experimentation and growth at Parity. 

    Adaptability. When you compete on the world stage, you get used to constant change: Schedules shift, travel goes awry, bodies don’t always cooperate. Adaptability becomes a core  

    competency. In a fast-moving, early-stage company, that skill is priceless. 

    Team mindset. Elite women athletes in particular know the experience of achieving something remarkable with scarce resources. They understand the power of collaboration and the importance of elevating others. That ethos is foundational to how we operate. 

    Pressure performance. Athletes are accustomed to performing with something on the line. In business, pressure often derails people. For our athlete-employees, it sharpens them. 

    When people ask me how Parity has built deep credibility in the women’s sports ecosystem in such a short time, the answer is simple: Credibility builds when the people driving the strategy are the very people whose lives and livelihoods the strategy touches. 

    REINVENT WHAT WORK CAN LOOK LIKE 

    We’re living through a generational shift in how people think about leadership and talent. The rise of multi-hyphenate careers, nonlinear professional paths, and values-driven workforces are reshaping traditional corporate norms. Parity’s model sits at the intersection of these trends. 

    Our team members don’t have to choose between competing at the highest level and building a career. They can do both, because our flexible model makes part-time work an option for those at the height of their athletic careers, when 40-hour weeks aren’t feasible. When organizations allow flexibility, the outcomes are profound: stronger culture, greater loyalty, and better results. 

    A MODEL FOR THE FUTURE 

    Not every company will hire Olympians or Paralympians. But every company can learn from the underlying philosophy: The most powerful innovation occurs when the workforce reflects the mission. 

    If you’re a healthcare company, hire people who have navigated the healthcare system. 

    If you’re building products for parents, bring caregivers into leadership roles. 

     If your mission is environmental sustainability, elevate people who have worked on the front lines of climate impact. 

    Experience breeds insight. Insight breeds innovation. Innovation breeds impact. 

    At Parity, integrating athletes into our workforce hasn’t just strengthened our business. It has created a culture defined by resilience, empathy, excellence, and purpose. It has helped us close the opportunity gap in women’s sports—not just through partnerships and research, but through the very structure of our company. 

    If the future of work is about rethinking who gets to participate, whose experiences shape strategy, and whose voices fuel innovation, then companies everywhere would benefit from following the athlete playbook. 

    Which, if you ask me, is a winning strategy. 

    Leela Srinivasan is CEO of Parity. 



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    SpaceX stock fell below its IPO price for the first time this week. Here are a few reasons why

    July 16, 2026

    The unexpected hero of the World Cup? Times Square

    July 16, 2026

    The AI economy runs on this (incredibly vague) unit 

    July 16, 2026
    Top News
    World Politics 4 Mins Read

    “They Stole $550 Million Dollars From Me” – Trump Celebrates Overturned Penalty in Letitia James’s “Fake” Civil Fraud Case | The Gateway Pundit

    World Politics 4 Mins Read

    President Trump visits regulation enforcement and Nationwide Guardsmen at the US Park Police Anacostia operations facility…

    4 strategies for when you’re going to lose your job but you don’t know when

    January 20, 2026

    5 Top Beverage Franchises to Invest In

    June 6, 2026

    Letitia James Calls Gateway Pundit Reporter as Felon Relative Faces Charges in Same Courthouse | The Gateway Pundit

    October 25, 2025
    Top Trending
    Business 2 Mins Read

    SpaceX stock fell below its IPO price for the first time this week. Here are a few reasons why

    Business 2 Mins Read

    Last month, Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corporation, better known as SpaceX,…

    World Politics 2 Mins Read

    Join the VOTER GA Online Watch Party and Online Briefing after President Trump’s Speech Thursday Evening

    World Politics 2 Mins Read

    Join the VOTER GA Online Watch Party and Online Briefing After President…

    US Politics 8 Mins Read

    Trump Can’t Admit That He Lost the Iran War

    US Politics 8 Mins Read

    An expensive, ruinous conflict resumes for no other reason than one octogenarian…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, government accountability, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    We are devoted to delivering straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the majority of the American public, while boldly challenging false mainstream narratives that seem to only serve entrenched elitists, and foreign interests.

    Top Picks

    SpaceX stock fell below its IPO price for the first time this week. Here are a few reasons why

    July 16, 2026

    Join the VOTER GA Online Watch Party and Online Briefing after President Trump’s Speech Thursday Evening

    July 16, 2026

    Trump Can’t Admit That He Lost the Iran War

    July 16, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.