Okay, so, about this “Edward Leon” thing. It all started when I was trying to get in touch with my financial advisor, right? I had a bunch of questions about my investments, and I wanted some advice on what steps to take next.
I remembered seeing something about a messaging service from Edward Jones. I thought, “Hey, that might be convenient.” So, I went ahead and tried to find more info about this Edward Leon guy who works for Edward Jones.
I found out that there’s this dude named Adam Epperson, also a financial advisor at Edward Jones, specifically in Puyallup. I thought that was interesting, but I was more curious about this “Edward Leon.” I stumbled upon some information about a person who left Edward Jones to start their own thing called Enso Wealth Management. I’m not sure if this is the same person, but it piqued my interest.
Here’s where it got a bit tricky.
I tried searching for “Edward Leon” on Google, but most of the results were about Edward Jones in general. I was like, “Come on, I just want to find out about this specific person!”
Then I tried a few other search engines, but I just kept running into similar issues. Mostly general information, or I’d get redirected to pages about other financial services.
I tried playing with some special search operators, like I learned from some blog posts.
- Use quotes “” to search the exactly word or phrase.
- Use site: to find the word or phrase in specific website.
- Try some other operators in Google or other search engines.
Here are some tips I learned:
I was able to use these operators to narrow down my search, but I still didn’t find exactly what I was looking for. I was feeling a little frustrated, to be honest. This whole thing was taking up way more time than I expected. I started to wonder if maybe I should just give up, but I decided to give it one last try.
I thought maybe I could try encoding my search terms. I’m not too familiar with URL encoding, but I figured it might help. Turns out, it’s mainly for translating special characters, so that wasn’t much use in this case. I tried to translate the keywords into Chinese, but that did not work either.
Then, I realized that maybe “Edward Leon” wasn’t a real person. It could be a feature or service offered by Edward Jones, or something else entirely. I felt a little silly for spending so much time on this wild goose chase.
In the end, I decided to just call my financial advisor directly. I figured that would be the easiest way to get the information I needed, rather than trying to decipher what “Edward Leon” was all about. And you know what? It worked! I got my questions answered, and I learned a valuable lesson about not getting too caught up in online searches. Sometimes, the simplest solution is the best one.
So, that’s my story about trying to track down “Edward Leon.” It was a bit of a bumpy ride, but I got there in the end. I hope my experience might help someone else out there who’s struggling to find information online.