Want to become a Financial Advisor? 100k+ opportunity?
Location: bay area, CA The company is one of the fortune 100 companies in the world. They are seeking to hire financial advisors to service clients in the banking, investment, and insurance industry. The reason that they are looking for a financial advisors is because there is great need in the east bay area. They are looking to open a new office in Piedmont. As a financial advisor, You will be able to work in 3 sectors. Real estate, Insurance, and Investments. You will be working with about 2000 provider companies like ING, Fidelity, and Prudential. Your core business as a financial advisor is help people plan for their retirement, plan for their kids' education, investments, and insurance. Requirement: 1. Self-motivated 2. Willing to learn 3. Want to retire in 10 years or less. Are you interested in hearing more about this opportunity? Please shoot me an email with your resume. We'll talk!
Public Comments
- I went to college so I didn't have to become a salesman! I've had several brokerage houses recruiting me during my senior year to come be a financial adviser for them. It all sounded good until they came to two points: Point number one: Door to door sales and cold calling. I'm not a salesman. I'm an analytical thinker and my time is better spent figuring out yield curves or indexing the volatility of derivative markets. Point number two: There isn't any thinking involved. All financial advisers do is push what corporate headquarters tells them to. Typical "advisement" meeting with a client: Client - So what should I put my money into? Adviser - Whatever my brokerage firm tells me to push today. Client - I'm too dumb to know the difference because I'm fiscally illiterate, so I'll let you talk me into whatever. I was just too smart to enter the world of financial advising. I'd rather look for arbitrage in For-Ex markets than let a computer tell me what to "sell" someone who wants to start a college fund. CFA>CFP any day of the year. For those considering this offer let me give you some advice. Series 7.......Series 63......jokes of the industry. A kid in high school could pass those with two months of training. CFA? 2 years of REAL knowledge with an 80% attrition rate. You want to make money? Get a CFA after college and let your peers who got C's in finance class go be financial advisers and push stocks for the highest bidder.
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