Aestu wrote:
Azelma wrote:
Minor quibble.....people refer to it as "UC" or "Cincinnati" - never heard it called UCinn (a la UConn). If you're going to be a Bearcat you should know that!

Pride in alma mater has no place in my value system. I call it UCinn because that is shorter than Cincinnati (and I can't spell the word without spellcheck anyway) and to differentiate it from the better-known (and more prestigious) University of California. Besides, I am a CA native...
People don't ever just call it UC...they identify the campus, right? IE: UC-Davis, UC-Santa Barbara, UC-Irvine, UCLA, UC-Berkeley, etc.
In any case, fair enough, call it what you will.
Aestu wrote:
Azelma wrote:
Personally, though, I think you're going about it all wrong. You should get into freelance writing or editing, and you can do it without a degree. Your strength is very clearly English. You could set up your own web site and do writing for people...some of it might suck and be technical writing, but some might be genuinely interesting.
I saw some stuff on CL. There's enough suckers in the sellers' row that subcontractors can demand endless "free samples" and never have to pay anyone. Honestly the writing market is so glutted I don't believe there's much hope. How would I make connections?
As someone who owns a business that utilizes contracted writers from time to time, asking for endless samples and not paying anyone would never work. If they are a proper business, not some scam, they will ask for 1. a resume and 2. a random writing sample of anything (just so they can see your abilities). As soon as they actually give you a real project, they'll pay you for it. Anyone who would work on a project as a "sample" and not expect payment is an idiot.
How do you make connections?
Step 1. Register "ethanfarber.com" and set it up
Step 2. Put your resume on it.
Step 3. Use it to post some creative writing as well
Step 4. Search for freelance writer databases you can join:
https://www.elance.com/ ,
http://www.freelancewriting.com/ , etc. etc.
Step 5: Also look on Craigslist for freelance writing gigs, direct people to your web site when you sign up
Step 6: Gather loads of emails from blogs on topics you're interested in (video games, greek literature, etc.) and write them a generic email introducing yourself and saying that you're willing to write guest posts for them (set your price as something like...hmm 50 bucks maybe for 1000-2000 words)
The connections will come rolling in if you keep at it. The first thing you have to do is try.
Aestu wrote:
Most legitimately successful people in America are ruthless douchebags, e.g., Steve Jobs.
Define legitimately successful. I don't even think I'd call Steve Jobs "legitimate" -- he never built anything, he just had the uncanny ability to order people around and get what he wanted. He was able to bully and take advantage of Steve Wozniak's genius. Not that legitimate.
Anyway, I'm successful, and I'm not a ruthless douchebag. I think many "successful" people aren't douchebags...but again I guess it depends on how you define success.
Aestu wrote:
I understand that the approach is unlikely to succeed; as I said, my intent is to take an incidental approach. If it works, great, if not, oh well, have to pony up. As I see it, they are the weasels for making me take on so much debt to get an education, so they can build their own little private empires out of what is supposed to be a public education system. They have burned many people, and if they get burned in turn, that's the breaks.
Cincinnati is a public university, subsidized by the tax dollars of Ohio taxpayers. The reason you'll have to pay more is because you'd be out of state...meaning as a non-Ohio resident you don't get the discount tuition because neither you (nor your parents) ever paid Ohio taxes for it.
But if you're rallying against the institution of higher education as a whole...I do agree with you. All colleges are too expensive (if you look at tuition increases versus inflation it's hilarious). Still, depending on the loans you get (federal / private) you'll probably be fucking over taxpayers if you don't pay them and default. So....yeah.
Aestu wrote:
Azelma wrote:
If you commit to something, commit to it. Go all out. Tell yourself "okay, I'm going to kick ass in the classroom, and then I'm not stopping until someone hires me"
I have little interest in getting hired. I want to be self-employed. I should have rephrased my OP better; I am worried there isn't enough freelance CPA work to go around.
If you want to freelance as a CPA you'll need connections anyway...so you might as well set up your personal web site now.
I don't know much of anything about the freelance CPA market...I know you won't be able to compete with large firms in terms of volume or reputation. You'll have to build it the old fashioned way. Where you'll have to compete is in your quality service and low prices. You'll have to pound the pavement and find small businesses, mom & pop stores etc., and offer your services. You'll have to tell them why you'll give them better treatment. You'll have to find successful business owners and get to know them...and convince them that you're trustworthy and will do them right, save them money, and keep them away from any kind of trouble.
You'll need to form your own LLC.
No matter what you do, you're going to have to give it your all, be trustworthy and likeable. You can't be ruthless and douchebag your way into it. Not if you want to be your own boss.