- Dec 6, 2009
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I want to become a talent agent in HW. Obviously the career path begins being very rough and it takes a while before one can actually become an agent's assistant and eventually an agent.
I'm a little disillusioned by what I'm reading about the career though. I've read that agent salaries range from 23k to upper 80k /yr. That can't be right. At the peak of my career I'd be making 80k/yr? At a big Hollywood talent agency?
The shitty early stages one must go through to rise through the ranks are fine by me as the final job is imo exciting, but based on those numbers it doesn't seem to be truly financially rewarding.
I'm in college right now about to commit to a major(s) and think about a career path. I go to the third best small liberal arts school in the country and based on the experience of friends from this school I feel comfortable that I could go to a top 14 law school or if I majored in economics, land internships such that I could do investment banking or be an analyst for a couple years out of school and then go to business school, and then get hired by one of those firms as an associate. Obviously both of those careers become lucrative much earlier on than being a talent agent. That said, I had always thought that being a talent agent could very well be a lucrative job... I just can't find statistics to support this.
Further, do you think it would be valuable for me to go to graduate school such as law school and then try to become a talent agent? Agents have to have to be familiar with a lot of legal matters in order to negotiate the best contracts for the clients they represent... would this be something that might get me further in the door, and quicker, at a talent agency?
I'm a little disillusioned by what I'm reading about the career though. I've read that agent salaries range from 23k to upper 80k /yr. That can't be right. At the peak of my career I'd be making 80k/yr? At a big Hollywood talent agency?
The shitty early stages one must go through to rise through the ranks are fine by me as the final job is imo exciting, but based on those numbers it doesn't seem to be truly financially rewarding.
I'm in college right now about to commit to a major(s) and think about a career path. I go to the third best small liberal arts school in the country and based on the experience of friends from this school I feel comfortable that I could go to a top 14 law school or if I majored in economics, land internships such that I could do investment banking or be an analyst for a couple years out of school and then go to business school, and then get hired by one of those firms as an associate. Obviously both of those careers become lucrative much earlier on than being a talent agent. That said, I had always thought that being a talent agent could very well be a lucrative job... I just can't find statistics to support this.
Further, do you think it would be valuable for me to go to graduate school such as law school and then try to become a talent agent? Agents have to have to be familiar with a lot of legal matters in order to negotiate the best contracts for the clients they represent... would this be something that might get me further in the door, and quicker, at a talent agency?