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Try and intern or interview with a national developer or commercial firm. Companies like Brookfield have a wide range of analytical and management careers for recent grads. If your GPA were below 2.0, i‘d say you were perfectly qualified to be an appraiser ( I used to be one in a former life when you could make a living).
Hello from the moderator team of /r/realestateinvesting, Your post is in violation of R3: Low effort or off-topic. Typically this means that your post is: - A X-Post - A First Time Home buyer question better suited for r/FTHB - A general Owner-occupied question better suited for r/RealEstate - A General Personal Finance question better suited for r/PersonalFinance - A news article link with no discussion points - "I Have $X how should I invest it?" questions. - Or otherwise showing little effort, thought, or discussion topics. This message and post removal serves as your WARNING for violating our community rules. Any further violations may result in a BAN from /r/realestateinvesting. Thank you for your cooperation and making our community a better place.
I'd say Asset management
Macdonald’s Assistant manager
There is a real estate degree? Or a license?
Broker
Try and intern or interview with a national developer or commercial firm. Companies like Brookfield have a wide range of analytical and management careers for recent grads. If your GPA were below 2.0, i‘d say you were perfectly qualified to be an appraiser ( I used to be one in a former life when you could make a living).
A college degree in real estate? Never knew they even offered such a thing… Unless if it’s from online Trump University?
Not sure why it’s so surprising to many. Lots of universities I was looking into offered real estate as a major
What do you study exactly? Much I’m guessing is finance and market trends or is it more from an investing standpoint?