March 17, 202601:09:10

What the NIL Gold Rush Got Wrong | Stephen Bienko of 42U

When NIL took off, most of the attention went to deals, collectives, and monetization. Much less attention went to the person behind it all: the athlete, their identity, and whether they are actually being prepared for what comes next.

In this episode, Eric talks with Stephen Bienko, co-founder and CEO of 42U, about the gap between athlete value and athlete development. The conversation touches NIL, the transfer portal, brand equity, leadership in college athletics, financial literacy, and the life skills that still matter most.

What Stephen Bienko and Eric Discuss:
  • Stephen’s transfer from the Air Force Academy to Villanova and how that shaped his thinking
  • What NIL revealed about athlete value — and what it still fails to address
  • How 42U approaches athlete identity, development, and long-term brand building
  • Why college athletics has leadership and infrastructure gaps right now
  • The difference between chasing NIL deals and building brand equity
  • How the transfer portal has changed communication, decision-making, and development
  • Why soft skills still matter in an AI-heavy world
  • Financial literacy as a real need inside the athlete ecosystem
  • Why athletes influence enrollment, culture, and school visibility beyond the field
  • The role of facilities, community, and environment in athlete development
Full Show Notes

There has been no shortage of NIL conversation over the past few years, but much of it has centered on money, marketplaces, and short-term opportunity. Stephen Bienko brings a different lens. His view is that NIL exposed the value of the athlete, but the system still hasn’t built enough around developing the human being behind that value.

That idea sits at the center of 42U, the company Bienko co-founded. Rather than focusing only on transactions or exposure, the work is more about identity, communication, self-awareness, decision-making, and long-term development. In other words, what actually helps an athlete build something durable instead of just reacting to the moment.

Eric and Stephen also get into the broader college sports environment, including the transfer portal, recruiting, leadership gaps, and the changing demands being placed on young athletes. A recurring theme is that performance alone is not enough. Athletes are being asked to navigate visibility, pressure, personal branding, and business decisions earlier than ever.

The episode also explores brand equity, financial literacy, and the value of so-called soft skills in a world increasingly shaped by technology and automation. It is a thoughtful conversation about what college athletics rewards, what it overlooks, and what athletes may need if they want to build a career and identity that lasts beyond sports.

Notable Quotes Chapters in This Episode

00:00 – Intro
01:27 – Stephen’s Transfer Story: Air Force Academy to Villanova
04:00 – A Hard Conversation With Coach DeBerry
07:54 – What the NIL Boom Missed
09:24 – What 42U Actually Does
14:03 – Athlete Identity and Long-Term Development
18:19 – Leadership Gaps in College Athletics
21:51 – Athletes as Economic Engines for Schools
25:47 – The Meaning and Value of Soft Skills
29:51 – Recruiting, Evaluation, and Mental Capacity
35:27 – “College Sports Is Not a Business”
47:19 – Stop Chasing Deals. Build Brand Equity.
56:47 – Financial Literacy, AI, and Athlete Education
1:00:00 – Parenting, Recruiting, and Decision-Making
1:07:42 – Facilities, Community, and Why Environment Still Matters

Connect with Stephen Bienko / 42U:
LinkedIn: Stephen Bienko
Instagram: @bienkostephen

Connect with Eric / SportsEpreneur:
Website: SportsEpreneur.com
X: @sportsepreneur
LinkedIn: SportsEpreneur

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Eric Kasimov

Eric Kasimov is the founder of SportsEpreneur, part of the KazSource media network. Since launching the platform in 2015, he has hosted over 500 podcast episodes, written and published more than 1,500 articles, and advised business leaders, founders, and creators on building authority through media strategy.

Through his brands — KazSource, KazCM, SportsEpreneur, and QuietLoud Studios — Eric leads teams that produce podcasts, develop brand platforms, and help companies grow through modern content ecosystems. He also scaled KazSource Insurance into a seven-figure boutique agency, providing the foundation for the broader media network he operates today.

His work has been featured in Forbes, Axios, and Front Office Sports, and his podcasts have included conversations with top founders, investors, and athletes turned entrepreneurs.

The post What the NIL Gold Rush Got Wrong | Stephen Bienko of 42U appeared first on SportsEpreneur.

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