From the Gridiron to the Community: How Kevin Rutland Is Turning Competitive Drive into Community Impact
By any measure, Kevin Rutland has already lived a life most people only dream about.
A standout linebacker at the University of Missouri, Rutland went on to play in the NFL for the Jacksonville Jaguars and Kansas City Chiefs. He competed at the highest level of professional sports, learning what it takes to perform under pressure and lead inside a locker room built on discipline, accountability, and teamwork.
But when his football career ended, Kevin faced the same question many professional athletes eventually confront:
What’s next?
Today, Rutland is answering that question through franchise ownership with Fundraising University and building a business that gives back to the very communities that shaped him.
A Family Business That Built the Foundation
Kevin and his wife, Sydnea, are already accomplished entrepreneurs. The couple owns and operates a Chick-fil-A franchise in Houston — an achievement often compared to winning the lottery in franchising circles. Chick-fil-A receives tens of thousands of applications each year and selects only a small fraction of operators.
Sydnea took the lead in running the restaurant, and together they built a thriving operation. For Kevin, the experience provided something even more valuable than financial success: confidence.
“Seeing how a world-class franchise system operates from the inside gives you a whole new level of belief in yourself,” Kevin says. “It showed me that ownership was something I could really do.”
With their Chick-fil-A established and thriving, Kevin was ready for a business of his own — one where he could channel his leadership skills, competitive drive, and passion for youth development.
Looking for Purpose, Not Just Profit
Like many former athletes, Kevin explored coaching. Working with high school and prep school players was rewarding, but he found himself craving something more entrepreneurial — something that allowed him to build an organization, lead a team, and create long-term impact.
That’s when Kevin and I began reviewing franchise opportunities together.
We explored home services, supplemental education, and corporate cleaning concepts. Each had merit. But when Kevin learned about Fundraising University, something clicked immediately.
Fundraising University is a performance-based fundraising franchise that partners with high schools, youth sports teams, and community organizations to help them raise serious money — without relying on the outdated model of only selling candy bars, popcorn, or discount cards.
Instead, Fundraising University teaches student-athletes how to communicate, ask for donations confidently, and work together as a team to reach real financial goals. The result is fundraising campaigns that routinely generate tens of thousands of dollars for programs that desperately need funding.
For Kevin, the mission was personal.
“I know what it costs to run a sports program,” he says. “Buses. Equipment. Field time. Travel. There are always budget shortfalls. And too often, some kids miss out because their parents can’t afford to cover the gap.”
Fundraising University gives coaches real budgets to work with — allowing them to buy safer equipment, fund travel, and ensure no player is left behind because of finances.
A Coach’s Franchise
What truly sets Fundraising University apart is its coaching culture.
This is a franchise system built by former coaches and sales leaders who believe in training, accountability, and leadership development. Franchisees don’t need to be natural salespeople. They need to care about youth development, believe in teamwork, and be willing to learn.
The franchisor’s internal culture mirrors a locker room: structured, supportive, performance-driven, and relentlessly focused on helping franchisees win.
Kevin is not a born salesperson — but he is a relationship builder, a motivator, and a leader.
In other words, he’s exactly the type of franchise owner Fundraising University is built for.
Before Kevin had even finished his formal discovery process, he had already reached out to the superintendent of his own high school district in Houston and secured a verbal commitment to help fundraise for their athletic programs.
That’s how quickly this opportunity moved for him.
Building a Legacy in Houston
Kevin officially signed his franchise agreement in Q2 of 2025. He currently operates a single territory but already has plans to build a multi-unit operation across the Houston metro.
The business model is asset-light and scalable. Franchisees build long-term relationships with athletic directors, coaches, principals, and booster clubs — becoming trusted community partners rather than transactional vendors.
For Kevin, the business represents more than income.
It’s about legacy.
The father of two young daughters, ages eight and three, Kevin is building something they can grow up watching — an enterprise rooted in service, leadership, and community.
“This is about giving kids the same opportunities I had,” he says. “Sports changed my life. If I can help open doors for other kids, that’s success to me.”
A New Chapter in Entrepreneurship
Fundraising University is the kind of franchise that attracts purpose-driven owners — people who want to make a living and make a difference.
From the gridiron to the boardroom, from the locker room to the community, Kevin Rutland is turning competitive drive into community impact — one school, one team, and one student at a time.
As his franchise advisor, I couldn’t be more excited to watch him build what will soon become one of the strongest Fundraising University platforms in the country.
For Kevin Rutland, the game has changed.
But the mission remains the same.
Lead.
Serve.
Win together.
About the Author
Over the past 25 years Aaron Bakken has been the owner of 7 franchise businesses, 6 of his own companies, a franchise executive, franchising consultant and board member with a franchisor.











