14142224:SofaKingSick said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			it's been brought up now. why wouldn't jason attempt to resolve the situation and pay him?
no one ever thought it was going to be dynastar money but we're talking being paid vs not being paid here. i don't see how the situation got to the point it did but i really don't see how an adult businessman would try the "oh, you wanted money? you should have said so!" line and then do nothing further
again, i'm going on sparse info here but jason wrote a blurb on the last page and really didn't address these questions
		
		
	 
Welp, for anyone who actually wants really specific facts and timelines, here ya go. I just referenced all of the dates/quotes since I still have all these emails, unlike Hillary...
November 2017: Sander hits us up looking for a "lifelong relationship with a brand as an athlete/representative" with a thorough overview of himself and proposal as to what we has looking for. Jason and myself (Taylor, Marketing/Team Manager) had an awesome phone conversation with him in which we were very upfront that we don't have the financial means to pay athletes outright, but that there was potential to get royalties for a graphic in the future or budgets for certain projects depending on the proposals for those. We end up deciding on a product based relationship to start in which we give him gear in exchange for skiing content. We send Sander tons of gear including skis, bindings, poles, bags, clothes, etc that he's super hyped on.
December 2018: Sander proposes that can make a bigger, stiffer version of The Friend ski he was on, specifically because he had just been invited to Kings & Queens of Corbet's and needed something beefier. The timeline was too tight to get a prototype to him in time for that unfortunately, but it's a ski Giray and our engineer Francois had wanting to do for a while so we decided to start developing it and immediately put a ton of our time and resources into it.
February 2018: We spent the last 8 weeks designing, prototyping, testing and refining a brand-new version of The Friend ski through 3 rounds of prototypes, taking advice from Giray and Sander along the way. It was extremely stressful and expensive to get it done on such a quick timeline, but the final product was awesome and we decided it was done enough to take it to magazine tests. Sander joins us at Powder Week and gets the meet the whole crew. We had a kick ass time, Francois showed Sander some behind the scenes of what goes into designing a ski, and Jason verbally promises Sander a promodel graphic for the following season that he would make royalties on.
March 2018: Sander wants to start producing a new web series called #SendingWithSander so we help him brand it, market it and pay our video editor/animator to create a logo and intro for it. He pitched us a 5 (with a tentative 6th) episode series to start and we were all super stoked on the idea. We received two episodes and pushed them via social, YouTube and email linking to Jskis.com
May 2018: We hear from Powder that the new Friend ski that Sander aided in designing is winning "Ski of the Year" and everyone is super super stoked. It's around this time that Jason tells Sander we only had a spot for 1 Friend graphic in the coming line because the quantity is still really small (around 300 pair) but promises that we still have a pro model graphic for him on the radar and are considering doing it as a late-season release once we have more time to get something really awesome made and space in the line for it.
June 2018: Sander and I didn't talk much except for a text here or there. He told me he was working a construction gig in Utah. He brings up that he has a lot of awesome footage and would like to chat with Jason about potentially getting a ski graphic going because it would be awesome to get some compensation. I told him to give us a call but he was super busy so we never actually got on the phone and discussed it further.
July 2018: I had totally forgotten about this until looking through my texts now, but Sander and I had chatted about graphic stuff and he was bummed about not having one to launch and start getting compensation. We came to an understanding about the realities of timelines and the ski business but it was definitely on me to not realize that this might have been more of an issue than it seemed at the time - really good learning experience.
September 2018: Sander sends me a season edit from last year. We had a verbal agreement (now using contracts with all athletes) that it would have been great for him to do some intermittent posting over the Summer/Fall but all he posted was a few photos of himself on his old ski sponsors so it's nice to get some content. Sander, J and I talk on the phone and get him all setup with gear for the coming season, which was over $7,000 in gear.
October 2018: Sander sends us a proposal for a $3k worth of new camera gear because he was going to be doing a lot of self-filming this season. Jason and I are a bit skeptical since #SendingWithSander fell through and we hadn't gotten much content yet. We get on the phone with him and decide that it would be best to start small and see how it goes, then work up to better gear. We decide that $1k is the budget and wait for a new proposal from him (we later found out it only got sent to Jason, not me, who assumed that I would be taking care of it since it's my job. Another miscommunication).
At this point I also help round up of all of Sander's social media and email performance for us so that he can use these in proposals to outerwear companies.
Jason is also fully invested in Roll With A Pro at this point and keeps reassuring Sander that he'll be making big money on this platform in no time. This was definitely not the right move since Sander was a J athlete and we should have been treating the relationship as if the other thing didn't exist. That's like saying "oh, you already have another job so I don't need to pay you here." Definitely a mistake we learned from.
December 2018: Sander asks me for a ski bag because he's going on a trip to Japan and promises a lot of content from the trip.
January 2019: Sander sends us an email from Japan saying that he received an offer from Dynastar with immediate salary and travel budget while in Japan and had no choice but to accept. He starts posting content on Dynastar skis. We go back and forth by email a few times and then hopped on a long phone call with him to chat about things and see what went wrong. It really fucking sucked because Sander was so fun to work with and had become a friend to me. At the end of it we decided that there were a lot of miscommunications along the way the lead to some resentment. It was definitely a learning experience for me as a young team manager to be more upfront and communicative with athletes. All athletes now sign contracts so that both parties have something to point to if they feel as though the other party isn't coming through on what was promised of them.
February 2019: Sander sells all of the brand-new skis I had sent him for the season. We had told him to keep them and do what he wanted with them, so hopefully this made up for some of what he believed we owed him.
May 2020: Everyone is bored in quarantine and has too much time to speculate, so I (who also has way too much time in quarantine) decide to take a trip down memory lane.
TLDR: The relationship between J skis and Sander fell apart due to multiple miscommunications. We've definitely learned a lot from this experience and are now using different practices to have better relationships with athletes.