My primary fastlane vehicle.
This is a curriculum design and professional staff development company marketing to public and private post-secondary institutions such as University of Georgia and ITT Technical Institute. The company will specialize in courses and programs covering all disciplines of financial education. My plan is to accomplish what Robert Kiyosaki set out to do but either poorly or never properly executes. I will be introducing degree and certificate programs (under compliance with appropriate accrediting agencies) to foster verifiable financial intelligence and literacy in consumers.
THE PROBLEM:
We get our financial educations from salespeople...Mr. Kiyosaki included (ironically). If you want to learn about cars, you don't seek out a mechanic at an auto repair shop. If you want to know who to vote for in an election, you don't read the New York Times or watch Fox News. If you are looking for the best-tasting chicken sandwich, the last place you go is Chick-Fil-A and ask their opinion. Further, as we all well know, financial education is as critical to life as scholastic and professional education.
MY PROPOSAL:
"To take basic school economics a massive step further by encouraging the infusion of mandatory personal finance and money management core courses in middle schools, high schools, colleges, and private institutions—alongside mathematics, sciences, social studies, and grammar."
*This idea--and the marketing plan that drives it--will evolve in stages, so that I don't bite off too much at once.*
I want to make financial education more readily available and easily assessable to individuals and families through partnerships with private post-secondary institutions, public universities, high schools and middle schools. Courses and curricula will cover myriad disciplines and topics related to personal finance, investing, consumer credit & debt, insurance, taxes & the IRS, estate planning, wealth creation & preservation, banking, consumerism, macro & microeconomics, globalization, and all financial topics related to business
I'm going to do what so many of you and others have been talking about and wishing for...what society has been needing for so many generations. I am sick and tired of waiting for this problem to be solved.
This is my primary fastlane vehicle.
bturner@mychiefemployee.com
This is a curriculum design and professional staff development company marketing to public and private post-secondary institutions such as University of Georgia and ITT Technical Institute. The company will specialize in courses and programs covering all disciplines of financial education. My plan is to accomplish what Robert Kiyosaki set out to do but either poorly or never properly executes. I will be introducing degree and certificate programs (under compliance with appropriate accrediting agencies) to foster verifiable financial intelligence and literacy in consumers.
THE PROBLEM:
We get our financial educations from salespeople...Mr. Kiyosaki included (ironically). If you want to learn about cars, you don't seek out a mechanic at an auto repair shop. If you want to know who to vote for in an election, you don't read the New York Times or watch Fox News. If you are looking for the best-tasting chicken sandwich, the last place you go is Chick-Fil-A and ask their opinion. Further, as we all well know, financial education is as critical to life as scholastic and professional education.
MY PROPOSAL:
"To take basic school economics a massive step further by encouraging the infusion of mandatory personal finance and money management core courses in middle schools, high schools, colleges, and private institutions—alongside mathematics, sciences, social studies, and grammar."
*This idea--and the marketing plan that drives it--will evolve in stages, so that I don't bite off too much at once.*
I want to make financial education more readily available and easily assessable to individuals and families through partnerships with private post-secondary institutions, public universities, high schools and middle schools. Courses and curricula will cover myriad disciplines and topics related to personal finance, investing, consumer credit & debt, insurance, taxes & the IRS, estate planning, wealth creation & preservation, banking, consumerism, macro & microeconomics, globalization, and all financial topics related to business
I'm going to do what so many of you and others have been talking about and wishing for...what society has been needing for so many generations. I am sick and tired of waiting for this problem to be solved.
This is my primary fastlane vehicle.
bturner@mychiefemployee.com
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