If you see any of yourself in these profiles, we have the path to
take you to the life and career that you desire, accompanied by the major
income, to do so.
The Executive:
- Your entire adult life, you were in demand.
- The work place was your
domain
- Head hunters were constantly
calling you
- Job offers were like buses, they
came along every hour
- You could see a healthy
retirement in the next 10 years.
Now, you are out of work with no
prospect of returning, mainly because of your age. The phone is not ringing and your 401k is now a
201k.
The Entrepreneur:
-
Sold your company, retired and the economy ripped your retirement portfolio
apart and you need to do something, once again.
-
Worked in the family business far too long and do not know how to cut the
cord
- Entrepreneurial
background but lack the traditional
paper degree to land in a corporate position, IF one were
available.
-
Maybe
you’re suddenly thrust into a job search for the first time in many years and the field is exceptionally
crowded.
- Were of the
franchise genre and have been victim of a collapsing economy and the completely drying up of franchise
expansion capital (GE Capital (Scottsdale, AZ) which had 85% of this niche market shuttered the entire
lending division in June of 2008.
The Attorney:
-
Many lawyers have brutal work schedules, tedious work, job stress, fear of financial instability, and a lack of
balance between work and life. And to add to the mix is the cookie cutter version of legal
services where everyone is attempting to mimic attorney work online...cheaply.
-
It is not uncommon for attorneys to say:
- " I spend more time with my Blackberry than my wife. My wife
refers to it as my mistress. "
-
" I have difficulty falling asleep in the bedroom, but would like to take a nap in the
courtroom. "
-
" I dream about doing something else but what, I put so much time in to becoming an
attorney."
The Physician:
Are these your statements?
-
“ I’ve
heard that there is a thing called vacation.”
-
“ I work to pay everyone else around me.”
-
“ My beeper needs to be surgically removed.”
-
“ I work to pay my malpractice insurance.”
-
“ Reimbursements are continuing to
decline.”
It is painfully obvious that the
doctor of today is caught in a world rife with challenges and changes, as reimbursements decline, litigation is an
ever looming fear and malpractice insurance continues its never ending upward spiral.
Most physicians have suffered a significant decrease in income
and a lifestyle restructure, over the last five years.
These stresses juxtaposed
with cost containment in the hospital/health cost arena that may cause concern over the
best interests of the
patient, are sometimes
overwhelming.
The perks of a private
practice are dwindling, for many.
Imagine, just for a moment,
before your beeper goes off again, the prospect of:
-
No longer having to interact with the insurance companies.
-
No longer having to be responsible
for everyone around you.
-
Be responsible for you and you alone
The Accountant:
Is you day consumed
with:
- Straightening out the same repetitive, mundane
tax problems that people create for themselves?
- Constantly sitting before a computer and the
drop down menus of Turbo Tax?
- Reading a never ending stream of narrative
from Tax Facts to see what is new and what you should be doing?
- Being able to dial IRS without even looking at
the phone keypad?
- Trying to figure out just how you became a slave
to your practice?
- Letting 200 clients add up to the same income,
you could earn from 5, if you only had the right solution for them?
The Teacher:
Are you the teacher or the professor who
has:
- Always had a second job, as you progressed
through the various steps of the salary structure?
- Been passed over numerous times, in favor of
those who are better connected?
- Tried different business venues to augment, your
salary?
- Continuously been calculating the pension
payout, your retirement date and where you may have to move to stretch your dollars?
- Would like to have a CEO type income that was
the direct result of your teaching skills?
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