After graduating from New York’s St. Thomas Aquinas College in 1971, “Shark Tank” star and real estate maven Barbara Corcoran knows firsthand how stressful it is to look for a job after graduation — Corcoran previously revealed that she worked 22 jobs by the time she was 23.
In a TikTok video viewed over 42,600 times, Corcoran offered advice to new graduates about the “real world” and what to consider before accepting a job offer.
Sometimes the pressure to make a quick decision can be detrimental in the long run, she said.
Related: Barbara Corcoran Says If You Want to Become a Millionaire Do This 1 Thing: ‘I Out-Try Anyone’
@barbara.corcoran Congratulations to the class of 2024! ?? Here is my very best advice before you step foot into the real world. Share this with a graduate! #graduation #collegegrad #collegegraduation #congratsgrad #congratulations #graduates #degree #collegedegree #collegeeducation ♬ original sound – Barbara Corcoran
Corcoran told graduates not to pigeonhole themselves into only choosing a career that only aligns with their major.
“Try a lot on before you decide what you want to do with your life,” she explained. “It pays big time — don’t get stuck in your major.”
She also said to make a decision based on “how much [the job] will teach you” and to look beyond salary, if possible.
“Take the money out of the equation and focus on one thing only — try to find something you do very, very well,” she explained. “And then practice the hell out of it until you become very, very good at it.”
Corcoran also told graduates to choose a job with a good boss.
“Having a good boss will have more to do with your happiness at work than actually what you do with the day,” she says.
Finally, she suggested closing out any interview with this one question: “Is there anything standing in the way of you hiring me?”
Corcoran sold her real estate firm, Corcoran Group, for $66 million in 2001.
Related: ‘Everybody’s Scared’: Barbara Corcoran Says Now Is the ‘Very Best Time to Buy a House’ — Here’s Why
Her net worth as of Tuesday morning was an estimated $400 million.
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