>tfw 21
>graduating college next semester
>3.9GPA Finance major at decent school
>one internship in corporate/healthcare finance
>held a couple mcjobs
>interviewed and didn't get a local sales job
>interviewed at bank for post-graduation fin planner opportunities, they want me to start as a teller for up to four years first
>asshole is starting to pucker
Should I go ahead and lube up? I will be taking a series 7 course my last semester in hopes to land a job with a firm. Constantly being told about a demand for brokers/planners/advisers but is it remotely possible to land in one of these as a fresh graduate?
I have a decent network, primarily with healthcare employees, education employees, and military. Confident I could get >$2mil in asset management starting out.
How fucked am I, how deep is the shit that I'm going to have to wade through in this cesspool?
Youre probably fine. You just have to apply to shitloads of jobs and be willing to relocate if youre looking for something decent. If youre worried then accept the job and leave once you get offered something better. Calm down, my man
yeah also wait. i graduated this may at 22 i took a few months to move to a state with opportunity. i was patient and didnt jump on the first cuck job available(sales or any job advertising an excessive amount of training at the expense of your salary).
tldr dont be a typical dumb american, rushing your opportunities and chil
>>1572255
Where did you go and what are you doing now?
Heres what you do:
1. Get your resume looking fresh as FUCK
2. Upload to all major online nation job hunting sites (monster.com etc)
3. be willing to relocate
4. play the offers off of each other
5.$$$$$$(relocation bonus + great starting salary)
6. keep resume up after you get the job, and keep it updated because the best way to increase earning potential is to job hop every 2-3 years.
>>1570680
get a job in nyc at any cost.
that is all.
>>1570680
>working for someone else