Former professional footballer Steve Sanders turned down a life of fast cars and popstar girlfriends for QSing, and last March he aced the APC. So with the second round of APC exams coming up in November, the KHK project QS speaks to Matthew Parsons about tactics and psychology

Steve Sanders has played for Huddersfield Town, Lincoln City and Doncaster Rovers. He was good, he says, but adds that he knew he wasn鈥檛 good enough to play in the premiership or for England. 鈥淒espite the myths that all footballers are rolling in it, the truth is that your average lower league player earns a modest income with little to no career opportunities outside of football after the age of 35,鈥 he says.

So at the age of 19 he decided to go semi-professional and study quantity surveying part-time at Leeds Metropolitan University. After graduating with a 2.1, he turned down big firms such as G&T and EC Harris to work for a smaller player 鈥 KHK Group, where he鈥檚 been for five years. He鈥檚 just finished working on Tabard Square, a major mixed-use regeneration scheme in south London, which he used as his APC case study.

How do people react when you say you were a pro-footballer?

Normally with: 鈥榊ou used to be a what? Why on earth are you a QS?鈥 I reply that I saw the light. Who needs to earn millions and drive fast cars when you can be a QS.

How did you balance working on a major scheme with the APC?

I鈥檝e been lucky. My bosses were always prepared to give me as much responsibility as I could cope with, but with the support structure always in place. I knew that I鈥檇 been making presentations to clients, so knew I was ready for the APC.

We have an open plan office too, and that helps as you can just pop your head up and ask someone something. Or when you go and get a coffee, someone will always ask how is it going. KHK鈥檚 attitude was similar to that of a football club: if you鈥檙e good enough then you鈥檙e old enough.

Did the size of the project boost your confidence?

With the support from KHK, and external support from APC Coach, I felt quietly confident about my chances of passing but unsure how the assessors would react to me telling them I was working on a 拢75m project.

How did you structure your presentation

You get 10 minutes for this, and it鈥檚 useful because it puts you in the right frame of mind and allows you to settle your nerves. The presentation should quickly set the scene then concentrate on the critical issues. Don鈥檛 waste time describing whether the outside of the building was white, the carpets were green and plush. Make sure your presentation mirrors the technical analysis that you鈥檝e already submitted.

Any tips for the final assessment?

Don鈥檛 look to try and make friends in that room; go in there with a professional attitude and prepare yourself mentally. I had four mock interviews 鈥 with Alpesh Patel (founder of APC Coach) and colleagues. You have to take these seriously 鈥 even with colleagues there was no joking around. Make it realistic, be professional.

Describe your experience on the final day

It was the most surreal place 鈥 a hotel in Heathrow. You walk down a long corridor and into a room where there are 25 other people waiting, some frantically flicking through their notes. It was deathly silent. I felt relaxed on the day because I knew I鈥檇 done my preparation.

Are you still playing football?

Not really. I had an injury a while back, so it鈥檚 more golf now. And anyway, I鈥檝e been too busy with work.