Just think about it...
Outside of your house, the college for your child is going to be the biggest thing you invest in.
To send a student to an ivy league school is close to $80,000 a year when you add all the additional costs to tuition.
Would you invest $80,000 without knowing where you get your payoff?
(Hopefully Not)
Most parents will put their children in private high schools that focus on college prep that costs upwards of $40,000 per year...
...expecting the college counselors will take care of the entire process.
The cost of not knowing the college admissions process is the same as betting $80,000/year at the casino...
And I believe to my core that a child's future should never be left up to chance.
Parents can end up waiting until August of senior year before starting the college admissions process...
And their child ends up throwing together a pieced together application that ends up in the rejection pile.
Your child could end up at a low level college...
Or end up working at Target or McDonald’s not able to get a good job later down the road...
Only to be competing against students who were diligent the first time around.
I know this sounds harsh, but I have seen it all the time...
Parents not wrapping their head around how important this chapter is in their child’s life...
And ending up relying on college counselors at schools to do all the work.
Look, at public schools, some counselors are managing over 400 students.
That’s over 4,000 applications to review.
There is no way a counselor can do a good job, while writing 400 recommendation letters.
Families get torn up over this decision.
I have spoken to hundreds of moms only to hear they have lost so much sleep over this project.
This adds another massive task on their already long list of things to do.
And, their husbands do not have the time to invest into what is needed to help with this process.
I want to share my formula for the college admissions process.
Over the past twelve years, I’ve mastered the formula, and worked with an incredibly diverse group of students to get them into the Ivy Leagues...