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Start Your Own Business as a Private Investigator

If you want to try to combine a career in criminal justice with owning your own business, having your own practice as a private investigator is a good option to consider.

Private investigators make some pretty good money, and their job is considerably easier these days, what with the conveniences the Internet offers.  But many private investigators also enjoy the benefits of being able to have a private practice and be their own boss.  Of course, the job also isn’t as romantic as PI novels and movies might make it seem, but those in the field enjoy it very much.

To become a private investigator, you’ll need both education and experience — if you want to be able to convince potential clients to hire you, that is.  A good friend of mine who wants to be a private investigator got his bachelor’s degree in criminal justice.  If you can’t put your life on hold to attend college, though, don’t worry — you can get your criminal justice degree online.  An online education degree makes your life that much easier because it doesn’t require that you rearrange your schedule in order to go to school — you can attend class and study on your own time, and from your own home.

The other thing you will need is experience — enough to reassure clients that you know what you are doing.  My friend has looked at jobs such as investigating claims for insurance companies and even hunting down people for a collection agency, but you may also get related experience by working as a police officer or a detective.

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