Harvey studied for his O Levels and A Levels at Hough Side High School in Bramley. After leaving school, he took up a job at the Guardian Royal Exchange Insurance Company. He then took up an administration job at Farsley Celtic F.C. which led to a chance meeting with Geoffrey Richmond, the then chairman of Scarborough. In February 1992, Harvey took up at job at Scarborough after having been personally invited by Richmond to the club. When Richmond became chairman of Bradford City, Harvey followed him where he eventually became Managing Director and the club rose to the Premier Leaguefor the first time in its history.
Leeds United
In June 2004, after ten years at Bradford City, Harvey joined Leeds United as chief executive officer. The new management of Leeds included Richmond who joined the club as a board advisor. Harvey remained at Leeds for nine years before stepping down as chief executive officer on 1 July 2013. He was replaced by David Haigh, deputy chief executive of new owners GFH Capital, who took up the role of managing director.
In June 2011 Shaun Harvey was elected to the Football LeagueBoard of Directors by Championship clubs. and on 29 July 2013 he was appointed the organisation's Chief Executive. As Chief Executive, he took responsibility for the day to day administration and management of the largest single body of professional clubs in European football which includes the fourth most watched league competition, the Sky Bet Championship, as well as Sky Bet League One and Two, the Carabao Cup and the Checkatrade Trophy. During his time at the EFL, Shaun Harvey has implemented a number of controversial changes to the League and its competitions. In the summer of 2016, The Football League was renamed the ‘English Football League’ as part of a comprehensive corporate and competition re-branding to give the League’s competitions a new and distinct identity, while simultaneously retaining its unique heritage. More recent changes included a controversial change in format to the Football League Trophy. He claimed this was to allow a young players a chance to develop, to reinvigorate the competition and to increase prize money. This led to record low crowds and a drastic decrease in the average number of fans attending games. He oversaw a commercial programme that generates more than £100m of revenue every season from broadcasting and sponsorship. This includes the recently launched iFollow service – a digital streaming over-the-top platform that allows the estimated 270,000 overseas fans of EFL clubs to watch their team play live. Harvey spoke out in 2018 in favour of safe standing in principle, but against a mid-season break in EFL leagues as impractical. In 2018, Shaun Harvey agreed a live domestic broadcasting rights deal with Sky Sports worth £595 million running until 2024, the biggest in the League’s history. A majority of Championship clubs in the Football League, however, felt the deal undervalued their broadcast rights, and that it cut their revenues by removing their streaming rights to many matches. Pressure and resistance from these clubs led Harvey to announce his resignation from the position of Chief Executive in 2019.