Fargo INC! February 2016 | Page 20

PROFILE MARKETING NEXT intramurals or get in a town league. Football is different. They have some of that stuff, but I’m already probably going to have health problems when I’m older, so there’s no reason for me to risk playing on some team for $20 a week or whatever. that I couldn’t. So it’s one of those things where you’re always pushing yourself and you’ve got that inner drive to be better than your peers. So I think it gives you a lot of values that, say, a normal college student may not have. “I don’t want to say I was depressed. That’s not the way to put it. But there was definitely something missing in my life, and it kind of messed me up a little bit, not having (football). And it actually took me probably two or three years to realize that, without it, I wasn’t who I normally was. But then I finally realized, I’m not the person I was when I was in college or in the NFL. Because I had something missing, even if I didn’t realize it was missing.” “There’s also having a passion for something. I think that’s a big thing is, once you have a passion for something, it doesn’t really matter how much money you make, it’s just a fire burning non-stop. And that’s kind of how football was back when I played. There are no shortcuts to being great or achieving success. Everyone sees you play on Saturday and Sundays, as well as sees the success of your business. However, what they don't see is the countless hours you put in out of the spotlight. If you put your mind to something and have the enthusiasm to do it, through the countless hours of work and failure, eventually you will succeed." Q: a: Have you found there are any specific skills that translate well from the football field to the business world? “Absolutely. I think the biggest thing that football gives you – and this is not even necessarily football – I think this is just competitive college sports, but it gives you that drive. Where a lot of people come in to work every day and need to be told what to do – and I’m not saying I don’t need to be told what to do sometimes, too – because let’s be honest, one of the hardest things to do is to drive yourself. But to have that competitiveness, to come in every day and try to get better. Going back to college, I hated when someone could do something Q: a: The success the Bison football team has enjoyed recently is well documented. Do you think there are any lessons a business could learn from the program? “I think culture is one of the biggest things that makes companies succeed and fail. If you hire the right people with the right culture, it’s a winning combination. Whereas, if you start getting people who don’t fit your culture, you start getting that split and it pulls people in directions they Schommer's first job after his playing days were over was as an athletic trainer in Woodbury, Minn. He then spent two seasons as an assistant coach with the Minnesota State University Moorhead Dragons football team. 18 FEBRUARY 2016