4 Entry-Level Jobs That Will Prep You for Entrepreneurial Success Success is a journey, not a destination, so think hard about where to start.
By Deep Patel Edited by Dan Bova
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.
Entrepreneurship might look like an unruly beast, especially when larger corporations are involved. However, those in the daily grind of entry-level positions are already developing the necessary skills to bring this wayward creature to heel.
"One of the first truths you'll learn about entrepreneurship is that you're 100 percent responsible for your success or failure," says fellow Entrepreneur columnist Mike Monroe.
Entry-level positions in many different areas -- including sales, marketing, development, project management and customer service -- provide the perfect environment for future entrepreneurs to learn that truth and hone their skills.
Learning to fly from the ground up.
While the average entrepreneur is 40 years old, younger people eager to make their own way have plenty of developmental opportunities that can help them hit the ground running. According to a 2017 survey from Heidrick & Struggles, nearly 15 percent of CEOs at Fortune 500 companies started in the sales department. These high-powered executives didn't waltz into the C-suite on day one; they learned the tricks of the trade on the front lines with everyone else.
If you crave the life of an entrepreneur, don't let the barriers to entry get you down. Take one of the following entry-level jobs and use your time in the workforce to get the experience you need to launch your own business.
Related: I Went From Entry-Level to Leader in My Field in Just 10 Years. Here's How I Did It.
1. Sales
Inbound or outbound, sales experience can give any would-be entrepreneur a leg up. Not only do you learn how to communicate effectively in a sales position; you must also understand the products you sell (and the brand behind them).
A job in sales will teach you to stop trying to convince people that they need what you have and start listening to what they want. Once you recognize that the market dictates what you sell, and not the other way around, you'll be prepared to run a successful startup.
Related: 11 Successful Entrepreneurs Reveal What They Learned From Their First Jobs
2. Human resources
HR pros keep businesses running. If you work as one, you will quickly learn how much things like timely payment, accurate sick-day counts and health insurance matter to workers. To keep your team happy, you'll need to know what employees consider to be important. What better way to learn that than to take a job where they let you know?
Jobs in HR also provide crash courses in communication skills and legal compliance. For example, it's much better to learn that a manager can't force an employee with folliculitis to shave his beard before the decision affects your pocketbook.
Related: 8 Tips for New HR Professionals
3. Customer service
It doesn't matter what industry you're in: If you deal directly with customers, you learn how to handle tasks quickly while keeping a friendly face.
Customers range from the kindest people you will ever meet to those who become enraged when they can't double their coupons. As an entrepreneur, you and your team will deal with all of them. Learn how to respond to customer complaints on someone else's dime, so that when it's your turn to do so, your learning experiences won't have a negative impact on your bottom line.
Related: 4 Reasons Employees See a Bleak Career Path and Quit
4. Leadership
To be a truly successful entrepreneur, you must learn how to lead a team. Leaders invariably learn some tough lessons at the helm, but if you wait until you are running the whole operation, those lessons could cost you some of your best workers.
This may seem like an odd suggestion for an article on entry-level positions, but note that you don't need to be in a leadership position to learn leadership skills. From your first day on a job, your supervisors will be sizing up your initiative-taking ability and your critical-thinking and time-management skills to determine whether you have the capabilities necessary to take on more complicated projects. Look for opportunities to listen effectively and motivate those around you -- this will help you hone your leadership craft until you get the opportunity to take on the role for yourself.
These positions and skill sets provide invaluable lessons for entrepreneurs, but they're hardly the only ones. Reporters, insurance adjusters, accountants, teachers and consultants -- these jobs and many others are full of learning opportunities for aspiring entrepreneurs.
If you have to work for someone else before you found your own company, don't treat the opportunity with disdain. Learn everything you can on the job, so that when your time comes you can use those lessons to lead your company to success.