I've read that Hoiberg hates recruiting. Seems like we have a lot of kids from all over the place out there, though. Someone please tell me he can get a few legit players in Lincoln. Miles was actually able to do that.
Honestly, I think most coaches hate it but they all know you have to do it. Some embrace it but it seems like the second you do that you are seen as a slimeball.Well I guess he did say this back in 2017 in reference to his recruiting days at ISU.
I've read that Hoiberg hates recruiting. Seems like we have a lot of kids from all over the place out there, though. Someone please tell me he can get a few legit players in Lincoln. Miles was actually able to do that.
Yeah, I feel the same way. There are probably a few that like the chase...sort of like being in sales, I think most salespersons (as to not offend anyone) hate sales but there are a few that freaking love chasing that big whale.You show me a college basketball coach that enjoys recruiting and I'll show you a liar.
Yeah, I feel the same way. There are probably a few that like the chase...sort of like being in sales, I think most salespersons (as to not offend anyone) hate sales but there are a few that freaking love chasing that big whale.
I always thought real estate would be sort of the "easy" version of sales, but it also seems so saturated now and I am sure clients jump all the time.I was in sales before and it is like that. I ended up hating it. When you hit a big deal, I was in real estate for a few years it is awesome. You lose so many though and that whole process never ends. Just like Hoiberg I f%$'n hated it lol.
I always thought real estate would be sort of the "easy" version of sales, but it also seems so saturated now and I am sure clients jump all the time.
You sold real estate in the city? That had to be annoying! How often did you get the "Can we look at something in the burbs too" clients and then you drive an hour to burbs only for them to immediately not like how far it is from "the atmosphere of the city"Yeah if anything it was the clients that drove you mad. They lied quite a bit which wasn't shocking but when you had to deal with it all the time it drove you nuts and in the end you lost deals because of it. Definitely saturated here in Chicago too. :blink:
You sold real estate in the city? That had to be annoying! How often did you get the "Can we look at something in the burbs too" clients and then you drive an hour to burbs only for them to immediately not like how far it is from "the atmosphere of the city"
Ha! By the lake!Haha. Oh yeah. All the time. It generally was 'we really want something by the lake but we're open to something out west too...' Credit scores that were 2 to 300 points off from what they'd tell you. I f'n hated it lol. Parts of it were cool though and I never sold in the suburbs and still wonder if that would have been a lot better.