“I ended up living with another family in high school who developed a winter park ski resort, they had ski teams coming through there from all over the world, Swedes, French, German and more. I got worldly experiences at a very young age. But as high school ended I couldn’t go much further in the sport, because of money.” Art says he picked a sport where money is not in abundance. “Talent only takes you so far in certain sports in America,” says Art, “if you don’t have the bucks to back your career you can’t continue.”
Art says he pursued his dream, then after graduating high school, he decided he’d better go to college. “I’d been chasing gates for most of my life, but then I enrolled in the University of Utah. I thought I might be a dentist at first, but then I started studying pre-law as well as Philosophy and English. The English course helped me develop my skill of writing, which is truly a passion of mine. I like to take the constant inner view of my life, define it and write about it.”
Now when he’s not selling health coverage or helping his agents do the same, Art is creating art.
“When I’m not working, I spend a lot of time writing,” he says. “I’m writing and telling my story of adversity.” Art says his greatest adversity has been the divorce process he went through from March of 2016 until early last year. “It’s not an easy subject to talk about,” says Art. “I take responsibility for my side of the street, but what started out as amicable, became exactly the opposite. I went from having everything to losing everything. There was a point I was essentially homeless. I walked out of court one day and all I had was my dress shirt, dress pants and the boots I was wearing, nothing else.”
After leaving his corporate job during that time period, Art had worked in construction job for about a year, but once his divorce case cleared the courts, he says he was ready to change everything.
“I had the opportunity to take the leap of faith to do something else, but nothing felt right,” he says. “But then I interviewed with Ron and Sherene Smith at USHEALTH Advisors. I was very transparent, I laid it all on the table for them, which I thought might not be the politically correct thing to do. But it clicked, it resonated with them, they saw the unrefined mineral that I was and they offered me the opportunity.”
Starting in March of 2018, Art submitted nearly 600,000 in annual volume for health and supplemental policies during the remaining 30 weeks of 2018 and never looked back, recently being promoted to the Field Training Agent role. Art says the greatest secret to his success is easy, it’s the training and mentorship from his leaders, like Ron and Sherene.