Anonymous wrote:We hired a woman recommended by a friend. Cost $5K. Was totally worth it and we are not wealthy. DD ended up getting into Northwestern ED and she was THRILLED!
Anonymous wrote:They have and do pay that much.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do I find reputable ones? Witg good track records?
I’m also hearing the “good ones” are about 50-75,000 a year. Ones like IvyWise; IvyCoach; Crimson etc.
lol no one with real money ie rich paid that
. That’s my cronies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not as easy to say if it is worth it or not - even with school results. What if they accepted your student based on something having nothing to do with the counselor's work? We hired a counselor once, not a high end one, and it helped us and our student. Since we have three kids, I can make a decent case that paying the first time helped across all three kids.
You hire a counselor to do one or more of the following:
1. College prospect selection without parent/high school bias
2. Set and manage a process
3. Overall story of the student and making sure it comes through the app
4. Additional eyes on essays and ideas for same
5. How to complete the common app
6. Any secret sauce on differentiation, how different colleges work, etc.
7. Maybe most important - you don't have to be the task master and sour your relationship with your student, the counselor does that (in a nice way).
For a family making a lot of money, spending 5k-10k won't matter. For the rest of us, I would say you can do a lot of this on your own for less. Or hire for specific areas of need, for example essay review.
College counselor here. This is a good post, although I'd add a #8 which is managing parent anxiety. This is increasingly part of the job for me and for other counselors I speak with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any names or referrals for companies or counselors?
We tried to do it on our own for first child (too stressful plus SN). We hired Richard Montauk for no. 2. It went very well. Paid by the hour. Total was about $3500. Well worth it and same child is now using him for grad school applications. I found him by his Amazon author page (he's written a number of books about admissions). He works long distance. I don't know where he lives but DC loved him and the process went much better for us without mom and dad nagging
Aaaand…there it is. Folks, be skeptical of any name that just “happens” to pop up again and again and again, especially when so many of the posts have the whiff of inauthenticity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any names or referrals for companies or counselors?
We tried to do it on our own for first child (too stressful plus SN). We hired Richard Montauk for no. 2. It went very well. Paid by the hour. Total was about $3500. Well worth it and same child is now using him for grad school applications. I found him by his Amazon author page (he's written a number of books about admissions). He works long distance. I don't know where he lives but DC loved him and the process went much better for us without mom and dad nagging
Aaaand…there it is. Folks, be skeptical of any name that just “happens” to pop up again and again and again, especially when so many of the posts have the whiff of inauthenticity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any names or referrals for companies or counselors?
We tried to do it on our own for first child (too stressful plus SN). We hired Richard Montauk for no. 2. It went very well. Paid by the hour. Total was about $3500. Well worth it and same child is now using him for grad school applications. I found him by his Amazon author page (he's written a number of books about admissions). He works long distance. I don't know where he lives but DC loved him and the process went much better for us without mom and dad nagging
Aaaand…there it is. Folks, be skeptical of any name that just “happens” to pop up again and again and again, especially when so many of the posts have the whiff of inauthenticity.
Anonymous wrote:How did it work out for your kid so far, to date, in ED, or REA/EA? What schools/results?
If non-DMV, can you list state?
If rejected or deferred, has your counselors advice, been helpful, comprehensive and specific as your kid enters the RD process? What types of suggestions have they made and what types of schools did they add to your kid’s list?
If you have to do it all over again, would you hire that firm or company?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any names or referrals for companies or counselors?
We tried to do it on our own for first child (too stressful plus SN). We hired Richard Montauk for no. 2. It went very well. Paid by the hour. Total was about $3500. Well worth it and same child is now using him for grad school applications. I found him by his Amazon author page (he's written a number of books about admissions). He works long distance. I don't know where he lives but DC loved him and the process went much better for us without mom and dad nagging
Anonymous wrote:Any names or referrals for companies or counselors?
Anonymous wrote:Two things come to mind:
There’s a sucker born every minute
A fool and his money are soon parted