It's been a long time since I posted something so personal, but I could really use some feedback. After talking to my family, my girlfriend, and my closest friends (some of whom would be better consulted once I get my thoughts in order... I know you're reading this, Mike ) I realized that the core CB7tuner group is comprised of people that I have a great deal of respect for... and who better to ask for additional input?
Anyway, I apologize if this is lengthy. I ask that you please read before giving feedback, since I'm going to do my best to illustrate where I've been, where I am currently, and where I hope to be in the near future. Everything above the double line is background stuff. Beyond that is what I'm genuinely looking for insight on.
First, where I've been:
I graduated from Rutgers in 2005 with a BA in Psychology, to add to my AS in Business from community college. My intention at the time was to become a Marriage and Family Therapist... for which I would need at least a Master's Degree. I got engaged shortly after graduating, and continued working as a waiter until I got married in 2006. The plan was for my wife to get a stable job, and for me to go to grad school.
Less than a month after getting married, I started a new job doing foreclosure investigations. Initially, it was supposed to be a supplemental income... a few hundred bucks for a day's work. It ended up getting busier as the housing market began to crash, and I bailed on being a waiter altogether. With the money I was making working just 2-3 days a week, I could afford (time and money) to go back to school. It was great.
My marriage ended a few months later. Not only was the emotional impact fairly severe, but I was also left with 2 mortgages, a car loan, and plenty of other bills. I buried myself in work. I found additional work as an inspector, and ended up working upwards of 120 hours a week at times. As the market crashed, business boomed. There were times when the money was VERY good.
What had started as a supplemental job intended to get me through grad school ended up being more than a full time job... and the money kept me at it. I realized that I wasn't doing anything to build a future, and that even if the work kept up, I certainly couldn't. Still, I plugged way, day in and day out. Comfortable and content. I was essentially self-employed. I had people to answer to, but only if I didn't meet my deadlines.
At that point, school was always a consideration, but always something for the future. My interest in becoming a therapist of any kind, or working in the mental health field at all, for that matter, has dwindled away to nothing over the years.
Where I am now:
Now, nearly 9 years after I started doing the foreclosure inspection work, I'm done. I'm through with the depressing work. I'm through with wearing a bulletproof vest every day. I'm through with the irregular paychecks, and unpredictable workload. I've logged nearly half a million miles on various cars (400,000 on the Fit alone)... and I'm done.
Now it's time for a career change. Or, rather, a career. Period. I am 35 years old, and I'm still trying to figure out what i want to be when I grow up.
I am engaged again (well, about to be... she bought a dress before I bought the ring... ) Thanks to the more profitable years of my foreclosure inspecting work, I have been able to pay off all major debts aside from my mortgage... and I've paid that down a great deal as well. The cost of living is cheap, and with someone to help me shoulder it, I can once again look into taking a step back in order to take a number of steps forward.
Those steps forward are where I could use some advice, insight, and feedback.
Where I want to be:
In the next 5 years, maximum, I want to be in a stable job. Daytime hours, vacation time, 401k, health insurance... I'm hoping to have a decent salary. I don't have lofty aspirations... I don't have any expectation or desire to own a 4,000 square foot home, or ever have any vehicle bearing a prancing horse in my driveway.
__________________________________________________ ________
__________________________________________________ ________
SO, here are my education/career options... at least as far as they've developed.
1) Paralegal.
Currently, I am enrolled in a 1 year ABA accredited paralegal certificate program for people that already hold a degree. It's an intense program. Paralegal jobs in my area are fairly numerous... even more so if I'm willing to work in Philadelphia. Pay can range from a measly $25,000/yr to a whopping $80,000/yr. Given my lack of experience (though my previous work WAS related to real estate law...) and my lack of desire to work at a high pressure firm in the city, I'm realistically looking at starting no higher than $35,000, and topping out no higher than $55,000. Not bad. Not great, but not bad.
The program I've enrolled in starts in 6 weeks. I'll be going to class during the day, 3 days a week... meaning I will be unable to hold a "normal" job as I'm there (so it's back to waiting tables...) It will cost about $5000 in total. I have until the first day of class (September 2nd) to withdraw, if I so choose.
The kicker is this: NJ doesn't require anything but a highschool diploma to be a paralegal. The certification I would receive from this class would be useful in other states, if we were to move in the future... but in NJ, it's useless. However, seeing as I have no experience or education as a paralegal, taking such a class for the educational value itself would be worthwhile, I feel. Of course, I would be entering a job market as someone with no experience... competing with people like my cousin, who spent years working her way up as a paralegal. People with experience, who started out making peanuts... but are now far more valuable to a firm than I would be.
While the idea of being a paralegal intrigues me, and the lower-stress positions (while not terribly profitable) will provide me with the schedule and regularity that I desire.
2) MBA.
On a whim, I decided to look into the cost of graduate degrees. I've come across MANY job openings that look for people holding an MBA. Seeing as my original major was business (I switched from the Rutgers School of Business to the regular University College, when I decided to pursue Psychology instead) it makes sense.
Money is limited, so obviously I'm not expecting to go to Harvard or Wharton. Online programs appeal to me the most, because I'd be able to work a normal job, while fitting my studies around it. The search for an affordable online MBA program led me to Amberton University. Specifically their MBA in Strategic Leadership (here, if you want to check it out.)
From what I've learned in researching the school over the past couple weeks, it seems that Amberton's online MBA program actually isn't too bad. It is regionally accredited, which is a very good thing. Not quite as good as national accreditation, but apparently that really only matters if I'd be interested in teaching business at the university level... which I'm not. Amberton is an actual brick and mortar non-profit school in Texas, rather than some online diploma mill.
No need for any sort of entrance exam (which is fortunate, because I took the GRE once... did well... grades expired... and now I have NO desire to do that again!) No need for an undergraduate degree in a related field (which is great, because psychology =/= business!)
Best of all, even if I have to take every prerequisite, bringing me to a total of 48 necessary credit hours... it will end up costing me only about $15,000.
HOWEVER, unlike the paralegal program, which will have me ripe for a job in the field in a year's time... the MBA program will take 2-3 years to complete. Maybe more, if the courseload forces me to go more slowly. And unlike the paralegal program, which grooms me for a specific position, the MBA is rather general. More prestigious, more valuable... but not geared to any one particular field, which will make a job search broader and more complicated.
Now, unlike most people I see asking online about starting salaries for MBA grads, I don't expect to wave my magical degree and find myself sitting happily in a $90,000/yr job. I fully understand that an MBA without real world experience isn't terribly useful. I would HOPE that having it would allow me to start somewhere in the high $40k or low $50k range, which would be lovely. At that point, I can start building experience and making myself more valuable. The average starting salary for first-year MBA grads is in the low $50k range.
Given that the online MBA program is extremely flexible and affordable, I can also afford to get my relevant work experience while I'm working on the degree. If I work for 3 years in some form of business-related field as I'm earning my degree, I'll be a decent candidate for a quality job upon completion (most jobs looking for MBA grads also want 3, 5, even 10 years "related experience". )
Right now, it's obvious that I'm leaning toward the MBA... but it's a lengthy commitment, which is intimidating.
Ideally, if I go for the MBA, I would be aiming for a position as an analyst/consultant, either improving existing business structures, or implementing new ones for emerging companies. That would combine both my business knowledge ANY my psychology training (I did excel at organizational/industrial psychology, after all...)
I COULD go for the paralegal certification, land a day job as a paralegal by this time next year, and then begin the MBA course... but $5000 and a full year of my life, just to start what may be a low-paying (and intentionally temporary) job... might be a waste of time and money.
Basically, I'm just hoping you guys (and ladies) will let me use you as a sounding board. Just to get this stuff out of my head and in front of my face, so I can assess my options more thoroughly.
I'd be grateful for any feedback. Especially if anyone has any experience with what I'm looking at.
-If you've been (or are) a paralegal, I'd love to hear from you.
-If you have an MBA, are working on one, or have researched getting one, I'd love to hear from you.
-If you or anyone you know has had any experience with Amberton University, especially their online programs, I'd love to hear from you.
-If you read all of this (thank you!) and you want to give me encouragement, advice, or simply tell me that I'm being an idiot... I'd love to hear from you.
tl;dr
Career change.
Going back to school for Paralegal Studies OR getting an MBA.
Need advice, insight, feedback.
I have six weeks to make up my mind.
Just read the damn novel I wrote above... I'm pouring my heart out here!
Anyway, I apologize if this is lengthy. I ask that you please read before giving feedback, since I'm going to do my best to illustrate where I've been, where I am currently, and where I hope to be in the near future. Everything above the double line is background stuff. Beyond that is what I'm genuinely looking for insight on.
First, where I've been:
I graduated from Rutgers in 2005 with a BA in Psychology, to add to my AS in Business from community college. My intention at the time was to become a Marriage and Family Therapist... for which I would need at least a Master's Degree. I got engaged shortly after graduating, and continued working as a waiter until I got married in 2006. The plan was for my wife to get a stable job, and for me to go to grad school.
Less than a month after getting married, I started a new job doing foreclosure investigations. Initially, it was supposed to be a supplemental income... a few hundred bucks for a day's work. It ended up getting busier as the housing market began to crash, and I bailed on being a waiter altogether. With the money I was making working just 2-3 days a week, I could afford (time and money) to go back to school. It was great.
My marriage ended a few months later. Not only was the emotional impact fairly severe, but I was also left with 2 mortgages, a car loan, and plenty of other bills. I buried myself in work. I found additional work as an inspector, and ended up working upwards of 120 hours a week at times. As the market crashed, business boomed. There were times when the money was VERY good.
What had started as a supplemental job intended to get me through grad school ended up being more than a full time job... and the money kept me at it. I realized that I wasn't doing anything to build a future, and that even if the work kept up, I certainly couldn't. Still, I plugged way, day in and day out. Comfortable and content. I was essentially self-employed. I had people to answer to, but only if I didn't meet my deadlines.
At that point, school was always a consideration, but always something for the future. My interest in becoming a therapist of any kind, or working in the mental health field at all, for that matter, has dwindled away to nothing over the years.
Where I am now:
Now, nearly 9 years after I started doing the foreclosure inspection work, I'm done. I'm through with the depressing work. I'm through with wearing a bulletproof vest every day. I'm through with the irregular paychecks, and unpredictable workload. I've logged nearly half a million miles on various cars (400,000 on the Fit alone)... and I'm done.
Now it's time for a career change. Or, rather, a career. Period. I am 35 years old, and I'm still trying to figure out what i want to be when I grow up.
I am engaged again (well, about to be... she bought a dress before I bought the ring... ) Thanks to the more profitable years of my foreclosure inspecting work, I have been able to pay off all major debts aside from my mortgage... and I've paid that down a great deal as well. The cost of living is cheap, and with someone to help me shoulder it, I can once again look into taking a step back in order to take a number of steps forward.
Those steps forward are where I could use some advice, insight, and feedback.
Where I want to be:
In the next 5 years, maximum, I want to be in a stable job. Daytime hours, vacation time, 401k, health insurance... I'm hoping to have a decent salary. I don't have lofty aspirations... I don't have any expectation or desire to own a 4,000 square foot home, or ever have any vehicle bearing a prancing horse in my driveway.
__________________________________________________ ________
__________________________________________________ ________
SO, here are my education/career options... at least as far as they've developed.
1) Paralegal.
Currently, I am enrolled in a 1 year ABA accredited paralegal certificate program for people that already hold a degree. It's an intense program. Paralegal jobs in my area are fairly numerous... even more so if I'm willing to work in Philadelphia. Pay can range from a measly $25,000/yr to a whopping $80,000/yr. Given my lack of experience (though my previous work WAS related to real estate law...) and my lack of desire to work at a high pressure firm in the city, I'm realistically looking at starting no higher than $35,000, and topping out no higher than $55,000. Not bad. Not great, but not bad.
The program I've enrolled in starts in 6 weeks. I'll be going to class during the day, 3 days a week... meaning I will be unable to hold a "normal" job as I'm there (so it's back to waiting tables...) It will cost about $5000 in total. I have until the first day of class (September 2nd) to withdraw, if I so choose.
The kicker is this: NJ doesn't require anything but a highschool diploma to be a paralegal. The certification I would receive from this class would be useful in other states, if we were to move in the future... but in NJ, it's useless. However, seeing as I have no experience or education as a paralegal, taking such a class for the educational value itself would be worthwhile, I feel. Of course, I would be entering a job market as someone with no experience... competing with people like my cousin, who spent years working her way up as a paralegal. People with experience, who started out making peanuts... but are now far more valuable to a firm than I would be.
While the idea of being a paralegal intrigues me, and the lower-stress positions (while not terribly profitable) will provide me with the schedule and regularity that I desire.
2) MBA.
On a whim, I decided to look into the cost of graduate degrees. I've come across MANY job openings that look for people holding an MBA. Seeing as my original major was business (I switched from the Rutgers School of Business to the regular University College, when I decided to pursue Psychology instead) it makes sense.
Money is limited, so obviously I'm not expecting to go to Harvard or Wharton. Online programs appeal to me the most, because I'd be able to work a normal job, while fitting my studies around it. The search for an affordable online MBA program led me to Amberton University. Specifically their MBA in Strategic Leadership (here, if you want to check it out.)
From what I've learned in researching the school over the past couple weeks, it seems that Amberton's online MBA program actually isn't too bad. It is regionally accredited, which is a very good thing. Not quite as good as national accreditation, but apparently that really only matters if I'd be interested in teaching business at the university level... which I'm not. Amberton is an actual brick and mortar non-profit school in Texas, rather than some online diploma mill.
No need for any sort of entrance exam (which is fortunate, because I took the GRE once... did well... grades expired... and now I have NO desire to do that again!) No need for an undergraduate degree in a related field (which is great, because psychology =/= business!)
Best of all, even if I have to take every prerequisite, bringing me to a total of 48 necessary credit hours... it will end up costing me only about $15,000.
HOWEVER, unlike the paralegal program, which will have me ripe for a job in the field in a year's time... the MBA program will take 2-3 years to complete. Maybe more, if the courseload forces me to go more slowly. And unlike the paralegal program, which grooms me for a specific position, the MBA is rather general. More prestigious, more valuable... but not geared to any one particular field, which will make a job search broader and more complicated.
Now, unlike most people I see asking online about starting salaries for MBA grads, I don't expect to wave my magical degree and find myself sitting happily in a $90,000/yr job. I fully understand that an MBA without real world experience isn't terribly useful. I would HOPE that having it would allow me to start somewhere in the high $40k or low $50k range, which would be lovely. At that point, I can start building experience and making myself more valuable. The average starting salary for first-year MBA grads is in the low $50k range.
Given that the online MBA program is extremely flexible and affordable, I can also afford to get my relevant work experience while I'm working on the degree. If I work for 3 years in some form of business-related field as I'm earning my degree, I'll be a decent candidate for a quality job upon completion (most jobs looking for MBA grads also want 3, 5, even 10 years "related experience". )
Right now, it's obvious that I'm leaning toward the MBA... but it's a lengthy commitment, which is intimidating.
Ideally, if I go for the MBA, I would be aiming for a position as an analyst/consultant, either improving existing business structures, or implementing new ones for emerging companies. That would combine both my business knowledge ANY my psychology training (I did excel at organizational/industrial psychology, after all...)
I COULD go for the paralegal certification, land a day job as a paralegal by this time next year, and then begin the MBA course... but $5000 and a full year of my life, just to start what may be a low-paying (and intentionally temporary) job... might be a waste of time and money.
Basically, I'm just hoping you guys (and ladies) will let me use you as a sounding board. Just to get this stuff out of my head and in front of my face, so I can assess my options more thoroughly.
I'd be grateful for any feedback. Especially if anyone has any experience with what I'm looking at.
-If you've been (or are) a paralegal, I'd love to hear from you.
-If you have an MBA, are working on one, or have researched getting one, I'd love to hear from you.
-If you or anyone you know has had any experience with Amberton University, especially their online programs, I'd love to hear from you.
-If you read all of this (thank you!) and you want to give me encouragement, advice, or simply tell me that I'm being an idiot... I'd love to hear from you.
tl;dr
Career change.
Going back to school for Paralegal Studies OR getting an MBA.
Need advice, insight, feedback.
I have six weeks to make up my mind.
Just read the damn novel I wrote above... I'm pouring my heart out here!
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