Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Carter Osborne"


4 mentions found


Carter Osborne spent two months agonizing over whether to leave his full-time job for his tutoring side hustle. By that November, he was looking for a new full-time job — and realized none of his options had "that deep, passionate, resonate feeling that education has,'" says Osborne, 29. Decision made: Tutoring would become his full-time job. Osborne left the PR firm in January, and is already finding that with more availability, he can take on more clients. Despite spring being a slow season for college admission tutoring, he already has 24 clients on his roster, he says.
Persons: Carter Osborne, , Osborne, I've Organizations: CNBC, Pitzer College Locations: Claremont , California
Stanford graduate Carter Osborne started a side hustle tutoring high school students on their college application essays in 2017. Osborne shared three tips for students writing their college application essays with Business Insider — including how to use and not use AI chatbots. Students should stick to their personal storiesOsborne told BI the key to writing college essays is making it personal. An AI chatbot like ChatGPT can help brainstorm — but it can't write it for youOsborne would never write his students' essays for them, he said. But AI can provide an outline to help students structure the first draft of their essays, he added.
Persons: Stanford, Carter Osborne, Osborne, they've, ChatGPT Organizations: Business
Carter Osborne's side hustle, advising high schoolers on their college application essays, has more than doubled his income over the last two years, he says. He never dreamed his side hustle, advising high school seniors on their college application essays, would give him a six-figure income. Coming from a family of educators, he'd actually enjoyed his own college application process. Applying to 10 schools — an ambitious but not uncommon number — means writing upwards of 25 essays, Osborne says. At first, the teen was hesitant to include the hobby in his college application, Osborne says.
Persons: Carter, Carter Osborne, Osborne, he'd, He'd, Here's, , I've Organizations: University of Washington, Seattle, Stanford University, CNBC, National Football League
It was 2017 and Osborne realized he could get paid to advise high school seniors on their college admissions essays. He went back to that mentor for help getting the side hustle off the ground. The upside: The side hustle costs almost nothing to start, he says. Here, Osborne details how he started and maintains his six-figure side hustle:CNBC Make It: Do you think your side hustle is replicable? How do you help students improve their essays without making it yours?
Persons: they've, Carter Osborne, Osborne, There's, you've, who's, I'm, I'd, Warren Buffett Organizations: CNBC, Stanford University Locations: Seattle , Washington
Total: 4