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re: 22 year old needing career advice

Posted on 6/3/21 at 4:03 pm to
Posted by Boring
Member since Feb 2019
3792 posts
Posted on 6/3/21 at 4:03 pm to
quote:

ideal job would be something like a right of way agent/landman for an o&g company


You don’t watch the news much, do you?
Posted by bbqguy
uppa LA
Member since Jul 2006
480 posts
Posted on 6/3/21 at 4:23 pm to
I work in the construction industry. There is a critical shortage of dependable skilled craftsmen in this country. If I was not nearing retirement age, I would go into plumbing as an on the job plumber. It's stupid what they are charging for their services now and the need for qualified journeyman plumbers will not go away in our lifetime. Steady work, good pay, and there will always be a demand.
Posted by jrobic4
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
7128 posts
Posted on 6/3/21 at 4:34 pm to
quote:

company until you've finished your degree program


1. You'll only be 22 once, enjoy it
2. Learn about the industry, who your competitors are, and who makes the real money in it
3. Banking jobs will always be there, especially in compliance. I agree with the other posters in that I would lose an arm before I would do that until I retired
Posted by LaLadyinTx
Cypress, TX
Member since Nov 2018
6069 posts
Posted on 6/3/21 at 4:37 pm to
quote:

The current job seems comfortable for now, but unless you get to 2nd in command or take over the business at some point, your going to have to jump ship anyway. At 22, you don't fully know the bullshite of bills, insurance, kid expenses, saving for retirement, etc



And it sounds like it's a family business. Yes, they're nice and sometimes you don't work very hard, but here's the big takeaway.

You are not family and you never will be. Any family member that ever works there will always be ahead of you.

Move somewhere that you can actually advance, has benefits, and where you get experience that is actually related to what you think you'd like to do.
Posted by LaLadyinTx
Cypress, TX
Member since Nov 2018
6069 posts
Posted on 6/3/21 at 4:40 pm to
quote:

Go to nursing school. I have a friend who was a firefighter paramedic and he went back to school to get his nursing degree. Him and his wife travel the country as travel nurses and make bank. Granted they don’t have kids so they can take all kind of great assignments.


If you're going into nursing for the money, you'll hate it and probably not last. It's not an easy or fun job. It's very hard work with very high expectations.
Posted by LaLadyinTx
Cypress, TX
Member since Nov 2018
6069 posts
Posted on 6/3/21 at 4:42 pm to
quote:

I realize this. The guys who I am emailing all day probably make twice what I make and they do the same job. He hired me a few months ago with no experience so I’m trying not to complain too much


How do you have no experience at 22? YOu should have had several jobs by now. You've got experience at something, right? You just have to present your experience properly.
Posted by justaniceguy
Member since Sep 2020
5476 posts
Posted on 6/5/21 at 7:53 pm to
Customer service and driving. That's about it
Posted by X123F45
Member since Apr 2015
27479 posts
Posted on 6/5/21 at 7:58 pm to
quote:

Possible position: AML (anti money laundering) analyst for a smallish bank. Basically I would be checking customers bank accounts for any suspicious activity (try to see if they are laundering money). Then I report it to the investigator and they investigate it.


...frick.

Define money laundering.
Posted by Freight Joker
Member since Aug 2019
2786 posts
Posted on 6/5/21 at 7:59 pm to
The Arby’s in PCB is advertising $14/hr and the McDonalds next door is advertising 401k and health benefits.
Posted by p0845330
Member since Aug 2013
5704 posts
Posted on 6/5/21 at 8:01 pm to
The bonus and benefits at the bank = a pretty decent overall raise for a young guy in entry level positions, and likely more opportunity to advance with experience and education.
Posted by RGJ18
Collierville, TN
Member since Feb 2010
8696 posts
Posted on 6/5/21 at 8:04 pm to
How the hell is an AML job paying only $12 an hour? Is this bank in Bunkie? Ask for much more then take that job.
This post was edited on 6/5/21 at 8:05 pm
Posted by CaptSpaulding
Member since Feb 2012
6522 posts
Posted on 6/5/21 at 8:42 pm to
I’m definitely not saying you shouldn’t save money, but a 401k does not seem worth it on $12/hr. Unless they are giving you some ridiculous matching, I’d probably just focus on saving cash, especially if you don’t have any kind of rainy day fund already.
Posted by DarthGadget
Member since Jun 2021
102 posts
Posted on 6/6/21 at 6:40 am to
Some good feedback in this thread, and you are wise to seek it.

AML/BSA/Fintech type here.

-for small business folks to find someone like you is incredibly difficult; posters on here are correct, you are far more valuable than you know.

-Most important: enjoy your 20's...they are like morning dew...poof they are gone.

-if you truly like AML/Regulatory, here is a suggestion: 1. Degree to get in the door. 2. A few years at a bank 3. become a state banking regulator - if you can cut it, they will train the crap out of you with joint schools given by FIDC, NCUA, Fed, FinCEN. 4. In 5 years they will spend $400-500K making you a commissioned bank/cu examiner; then you are stupid valuable. 5. in that time, you will do state exams jointly with the FDIC or NCUA. Federal EIC's (examiners in charge) will track you, and cherry pick you from your state position with near 2x the state salary in your 30's, because they want 20-30 years out of you. If you are exceptionally good, FDIC regional managers pull down $400K.

Bank Examiners are the max in salary and workload; less so with credit unions, Securities BD/IA & MSB - very possible to specialize and change while at the state level.

You have to be good at what you are doing in the regulatory world, but if you are and its your thing...you have few limits.

The downside with the above examinations is the 40-50% travel, and its a killer. 50% of new hires wash out within 3 years, spouses go nuts and exert massive pressure for ball games and birthday parties. When the economy cycles in the crapper several times over the long haul of your career, you will be worked to death. Mortgages and payments for material things at upper income levels will run you.

I worked a fun job in my 20's, managed the fun job in my 30's, and got into regulatory in my 40's. Very deliberately got married in my 50's (tough to do - had a long term girlfriend), working on winding down now in my 60's. I played/slayed a lot in my 20's and am very glad I did! My friends who tore into the corporate world at major corps in their 20's are looking at punching out earlier than I can, but I had about 10 years of solid play time in my 20's they never got...excellent trade for working just 3-5 more years on the backside.

Small business works well on youth and loyalty, but offer only a few senior employees a lasting benefit...the spoils go to the owner who takes the risk and sleepless nights. Corps are harder but give back more to you over the career. Something else: if you like structure at work, then go corporate or gov; employees at small business can get away with a lot more shenanigans.


This post was edited on 6/6/21 at 6:58 am
Posted by Sterling Archer
Austin
Member since Aug 2012
7335 posts
Posted on 6/6/21 at 6:56 am to
quote:

I made a career change and did this, paying off big for me but I have friends who can't even get a look. The competition is wild though since everyone and their mother (literally) are in bootcamps.


Would love to hear a little bit about your journey here. Im a CPA currently in tech industry and I’ve picked up sql. I know it’s not the same but thinking I could pick up some coding skills and leverage my previous experiences somehow
Posted by Bestbank Tiger
Premium Member
Member since Jan 2005
71358 posts
Posted on 6/6/21 at 8:43 am to
quote:

What are you majoring in and where do you live? Those pay options are pretty shitty with literally everyone looking for employees right now



Only for lousy jobs like flipping burgers.

It's an employer's market for office jobs. I'm looking to change jobs and there are postings on Indeed getting over 100 applicants. (And Indeed jobs don't get a lot of people who apply for everything whether they're qualified or not, because a lot of employers make you jump through hoops like skills tests.)
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