I finished my undergraduate degree through correspondence in the 1990s. Opened up a ca state approved level vocational mortgage school in 2000. We had 2 locations, and had a few corporate clients. (And 1 illegal competitor, Trump University). Good salespeople always made money as loan officers when mortgage business is hot. Really good salespeople who learned product knowledge and wanted to make it a career instead of a paycheck, have steady careers. Cheap investment to get a national sales license that's required. My wife's territory from a national mortgage company is west of the Mississippi. Her broker's in Tx are currently doing a lot of the company's volume. Just a thought. Also, from having been in the vocational educational field. Caveat emptor. Let the buyer beware. There are good schools, and many bad. Junior colleges often offer the same programs advertised on tv at fraction of cost. Ask to sit in on a class. Or take a crash course in getting a national sales mortgage license, and find a job. You have sales experience. Valuable commodity when combined with product knowledge. An MBA doesn't teach that, but will burden you will unneeded expenses. Capitalize on your sales experience.