The Work Thread..

You guys missed out.


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Started my studying today for my state licensing exam to sell insurance. Thankfully, my cousin decided to let me do it from home. It is 37 lessons long and each lesson averages about 30 mins (mostly video and powerpoint slides). I have gotten through 7 so far. My understanding is the test is 150-175 questions long. Pray for me in these trying times.
 
I had a first today. This is the first time in my career that I get the distinct pleasure of terminating a shithead for stealing toilet paper. The John Wayne wood pulp butt wipe. Yep. True story.
 
I have finished all of the insurance end of things (auto, home, business, corporate) and now I have to learn the lawyer BS end of insurance. This is going to be boring as hell, and the first video is 1hr 15 min long. :budd
 
Learned a new word while learning insurance stuff. The word of the day is appurtenant. Carry on.
 
Take my licensing test tomorrow. I was a little nervous after the first round of practice tests. but on the second go round I'm hitting in the 90s, so I'm feeling much better about it now.
 
I passed! I made a B, but I can now sell P&C lines of insurance in Texas and New Mexico. Now I get to start studying for my life insurance license. Once I pass that (hopefully) I can start selling.
 
I passed! I made a B, but I can now sell P&C lines of insurance in Texas and New Mexico. Now I get to start studying for my life insurance license. Once I pass that (hopefully) I can start selling.


Congratulations, brother.
 
Did you all know that an employer can take out a life insurance policy on an employee? I didn't. They are called key person(s) to a business and an employer can insure for them for what seems like any arbitrary amount. If they feel that person is deemed to be worth so much the business will lose, say $500,000, if they die, they can insure them for that amount. Just seemed weird to me.
 
Did you all know that an employer can take out a life insurance policy on an employee? I didn't. They are called key person(s) to a business and an employer can insure for them for what seems like any arbitrary amount. If they feel that person is deemed to be worth so much the business will lose, say $500,000, if they die, they can insure them for that amount. Just seemed weird to me.
I think some Walmart stores have been caught doing that on their employees
 
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