BostonCloser
New Member
- 3
So heres my deal; any input is appreciated...
Im 21 and currently about to enter my last year of undergrad at a large university in Boston. I will recieve a Bachelors in finance June 2008.
I do not plan on riding my degree into a small time corporate job with a salary pay. I am made for sales and will remain in sales until my asset column far far far outweighs my liabilities. I have an investors mind--not so much of an entreprenuers. I want to be a wealthy person mentally and financially.
Now I am young, but ahead of my clown classmates in learning curve and in aspirations with direction.
This past March I took the real estate salesperson license course and passed the test no problem.
On my 21st Bday in April I started working for a rental agency renting apartments for the summer. Im having consistant 20K rental months and love the commissions, but know that the season is near the end (dramatically supresses from Sept.-Dec.) and know I need to keep making money and eventually prosper into a nice lucrative career by next year around this time.
I LOVE real estate, but sales is a much different game than rentals and with school starting this Sept. I will not have the focus needed to close those types of deals. That's not to say that when the times comes, it may be the right thing for me (residential, commercial, land, anything with RE).
Now this is where the possibility of NAA comes in, and please, don't start talking trash of NAA, but rather look at it from MY prospective and what it is for ME, please. From what I understand, in MA, all thats needed is a life license (which I know is much easier to get than the Series 6,7, etc.) to work for NAA.
I want to know if it is a lucrative opportunity to hobby in order to make money while 1. Going to School 2. Obtaining my Series Licenses and 3. Finding other opportunities to make money.
I am not talking about NAA being a life-changing career opportunity for me, but rather a nice inflow of cash while getting the jist of the differences in selling and closing in the industry.
Let me know what you guys think! Sorry for the lengthy post!
Im 21 and currently about to enter my last year of undergrad at a large university in Boston. I will recieve a Bachelors in finance June 2008.
I do not plan on riding my degree into a small time corporate job with a salary pay. I am made for sales and will remain in sales until my asset column far far far outweighs my liabilities. I have an investors mind--not so much of an entreprenuers. I want to be a wealthy person mentally and financially.
Now I am young, but ahead of my clown classmates in learning curve and in aspirations with direction.
This past March I took the real estate salesperson license course and passed the test no problem.
On my 21st Bday in April I started working for a rental agency renting apartments for the summer. Im having consistant 20K rental months and love the commissions, but know that the season is near the end (dramatically supresses from Sept.-Dec.) and know I need to keep making money and eventually prosper into a nice lucrative career by next year around this time.
I LOVE real estate, but sales is a much different game than rentals and with school starting this Sept. I will not have the focus needed to close those types of deals. That's not to say that when the times comes, it may be the right thing for me (residential, commercial, land, anything with RE).
Now this is where the possibility of NAA comes in, and please, don't start talking trash of NAA, but rather look at it from MY prospective and what it is for ME, please. From what I understand, in MA, all thats needed is a life license (which I know is much easier to get than the Series 6,7, etc.) to work for NAA.
I want to know if it is a lucrative opportunity to hobby in order to make money while 1. Going to School 2. Obtaining my Series Licenses and 3. Finding other opportunities to make money.
I am not talking about NAA being a life-changing career opportunity for me, but rather a nice inflow of cash while getting the jist of the differences in selling and closing in the industry.
Let me know what you guys think! Sorry for the lengthy post!