Low and fast- don't work in industry, have been in account management sales support for a chemical company, and we are facing layoffs weekly given the economic climate of our primary customers. I am almost 40 and started back to college 3 years ago, almost completed my Bachelors in BA, but realized I like the sales aspect and product/people pipeline. That started my desire to look at insurance.
Started studying the prelicense test for Indiana( went through AD Banker) and sit for it next week, if all goes according to plan. Obviously am trying to have a safety net should the layoff ax come by way.
I have read a lot on the forum and finally registered to ask questions and try to become part of the community. I watched David Duford videos of part time FE to learn the business but quite frankly, I could be full time at any minute given layoffs. I visited TR King and the ILIAA website and found a lot of information there to be interesting for a new agent.
Seems to be a mixed bag of opinions here- work for a company learn the business basics for 3-12 months and then become independent. Join IMO/FMO and learn the hard way. Seems to be the only common advice is which companies to avoid as a newly licensed agent.
Can someone who knows nothing join an IMO/FMO and be successful, hopefully finding a mentor type somewhere, or do you need to work and pay the dues to grasp this bettter?
Started studying the prelicense test for Indiana( went through AD Banker) and sit for it next week, if all goes according to plan. Obviously am trying to have a safety net should the layoff ax come by way.
I have read a lot on the forum and finally registered to ask questions and try to become part of the community. I watched David Duford videos of part time FE to learn the business but quite frankly, I could be full time at any minute given layoffs. I visited TR King and the ILIAA website and found a lot of information there to be interesting for a new agent.
Seems to be a mixed bag of opinions here- work for a company learn the business basics for 3-12 months and then become independent. Join IMO/FMO and learn the hard way. Seems to be the only common advice is which companies to avoid as a newly licensed agent.
Can someone who knows nothing join an IMO/FMO and be successful, hopefully finding a mentor type somewhere, or do you need to work and pay the dues to grasp this bettter?