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13 Successful Entrepreneurs Reveal Their First Jobs

The average person’s first job usually involves flipping burgers, delivering newspapers or working retail. The first jobs for many of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs fall into one of those categories, too. On the other hand, some were teenage wunderkinds who worked as programmers or started their own companies before they could legally vote.

These 13 entrepreneurs took different paths on their way to heading up their own companies, but they all ended up at the top. Read on to learn about the first jobs of business titans like Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, Mark Cuban and others.

Jeff Bezos

As the founder and CEO of Amazon, Jeff Bezos is now the richest person in the world. He founded the e-commerce giant out of his garage in Seattle in 1994, but long before that, he had a more ordinary job.

Jeff Bezos' First Job

Bezos spent a summer in high school working as a fry cook at McDonald’s, during which he studied the company’s improvements in automation, Wired reported. He also learned a valuable lesson about customer service: “I learned that it’s really hard,” he told Fast Company.

Although not exactly applicable to running his own company, Bezos did take away another useful skill from his high school job.

One of the great gifts I got from that job is that I can crack eggs with one hand,” he said.

Richard Branson

Richard Branson has reached billionaire status thanks to his conglomerate of businesses that include Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Galactic. His first real business was a mail-order record company he founded 50 years ago, but Branson started another business when he was even younger.

Richard Branson's First Job

Branson has never held a corporate job and has always worked for himself — and he began early. At age 11, he started a business with his best friend breeding a type of bird called budgerigars, or “budgies” for short.

We saw a gap in the market to sell budgies as they were very popular with kids in school at the time,” Branson wrote in a LinkedIn post.

Sadly, this business was short-lived. The birds multiplied faster than he was able to sell them, and when he went back to school, his mother freed the remainder of his unsold birds. Branson did take away something valuable from the experience, however.

Perhaps [it] ignited my passion for animals, which has stayed with me all of my life,” he wrote. “Now we breed endangered lemurs on Necker Island, and Virgin Unite [supports] animal conservation schemes from sharks to rhinos, rays to elephants.”