Most students believe their professional reputation begins the day they submit a résumé.
It doesn't.
By the time you apply for your first job, people may already have an opinion about the kind of teammate, employee, and professional you'll become.
Every interaction matters.
The way you answer emails.
How you treat event staff after a long day.
Whether you show up on time.
How you respond when someone offers feedback.
What you post on social media.
How you handle a task that no one else wants to do.
These moments may seem insignificant, but together they tell a story about who you are.
Long before someone reads your résumé, they're paying attention to your reputation.
Reputation Is Built in the Small Moments
In college athletics, relationships are everything.
Our profession is smaller than most people realize. Coaches change schools. Athletic communicators recommend former interns. Graduate assistants become directors. Supervisors become conference commissioners. The people you meet today may influence opportunities you haven't even imagined.
That's why every interaction deserves your best.
The student worker who helps set up a volleyball match.
The photographer on the sideline.
The facilities crew cleaning the gym after everyone leaves.
The visiting sports information director.
The official statistician.
Treat every person with respect. You never know who will remember the way you made them feel.
People Remember More Than Your Work
Strong work matters.
Character matters more.
I've never heard someone say, "We hired them because they had the most impressive LinkedIn profile."
I have heard people say:
"They're dependable."
"They always followed through."
"They're easy to work with."
"I'd hire them again in a heartbeat."
Those comments don't appear on a résumé, but they often determine who gets the interview.
Your reputation is your professional reference long before anyone calls your references.
Danny's Perspective
Throughout my career, some of the most meaningful opportunities came through relationships that had been built years earlier.
Not because I asked for a favor.
Not because I had the perfect résumé.
But because someone remembered how I approached my work.
They remembered that I tried to be prepared.
They remembered that I followed through on commitments.
They remembered that I treated people with respect.
That reinforced something I've believed for years:
Your reputation is never built during one big moment.
It's built through hundreds of ordinary interactions where you consistently choose professionalism, humility, and reliability.
Put It Into Practice
For the next week, approach every interaction with intention.
Reply to emails promptly.
Thank the people working behind the scenes.
Arrive a few minutes early.
Be fully present in conversations.
Finish every task the way you'd want your future employer to see it.
None of these actions require special talent.
They simply require consistency.
Reflection
Think about the last five people you interacted with in a professional setting.
If each of them were asked to describe you in one sentence, what would they say?
Would they describe someone they'd confidently recommend?
Or someone who still has work to do?
Every conversation...
Every email...
Every handshake...
Every game...
Every meeting...
They're all helping write your professional story.
Make sure it's a story worth telling.
Because your reputation isn't built when you apply.
It's being built today.
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