Cook in McDonald's, Friegaplatos or Distributor of Newspapers: 28 Little glamorous jobs to which Jeff Bezos, Pope Francis, Trump and other celebrities dedicated

If we think about the situation of people who currently enjoy the most success and influence, such as Jeff Bezos, Barack Obama, Oprah Winfrey, etc.., it is normal for us to always imagine them in circumstances far removed from ours.

However, many of them started from below, accepting jobs with little glamor that would allow them to earn some money.Your posterior trajectory is history.

Here we tell you what were the jobs of these 28 people who currently enjoy worldwide.

Jeff Bezos worked on the McDonald's grill

Mario Tama/Getty Images

The Founder and CEO of Amazon began working on the McDonald's grill during his summers when he was a teenager, according to the Golden Opportunity book: Remarkable Careers That Began At McDonald's, by Cody Teets.

"The most challenging thing about this job was to keep everything working at the right pace when many orders had to be carried out.The manager of my McDonald's was excellent.He had many teenagers working for him and kept us concentrated even while we had fun, "Bezos explained.

President Donald Trump collected bottles

REUTERS/Jim Young

The current US government leader grew up being rich, but his father wanted him to learn the value of money from the beginning.

When he was a child, he took him to construction sites and asked him and his brother to collect bottles of empty soft drinks to redeem them for cash, according to Trump to Forbes.He says he didn't win much, but he taught him what it was to work and earn his own money.

Bernie Sanders worked as a carpenter and director of documentaries

REUTERS/David Ryder

Before Bernie Sanders became mayor of Burnlington, Vermont in 1981, and Vermont senator in 2007, AP has reported that she was an active member of the local civil rights movement while studying a degree in Political Science of the University of ChicagoIn 1964.

After graduating, he had several occasional jobs, including as a carpenter and documentary director.

Michael Bloomberg was an operator in a parking lot

REUTERS/Supri

The former mayor of New York City and presidential candidate currently has a fortune of approximately 51.866 million euros, according to Forbes, although it comes from a middle class family.

As a student at Johns Hopkins University, he worked as an operator in a parking lot to help pay his university loans.

Ellen Degeneres worked as an oyster peanut

Kevin Winter/ Getty Images

Before the famous presenter had her own interview program, Ellen worked as a waitress, vendingman saleswoman and even as an oyster peel.

In Ellen Degeneres: Biography told Lisa Iannucci: "When you live in New Orleans, it is very common to work peeling oysters, right?"

President Barack Obama served ice cream

AP

The former president of the United States, Barack Obama, worked at the counter of a Baskin-Robbins when he was a teenager in Honolulu.The 2012 campaign staff updated his Facebook chronology with the most prominent aspects of his life and career, including this fun information.

Elon Musk worked in a sawmill for $ 18 a hour

REUTERS/Mike Blake

Elon Musk, the South African businessman with a fortune of about 28.489 million euros, according to Forbes, worked first at his cousin's farm and then in a sawmill before founding Tesla and Spacex.For 18 dollars an hour, Musk put a suit for hazardous materials and cleaned the boiler room of the mill.

Cocinero en McDonald's, friegaplatos o repartidor de periódicos: 28 empleos poco glamurosos a los que se dedicaron Jeff Bezos, el Papa Francisco, Trump y otros famosos

Musk told Ashlee Vance, who wrote the biography Elon Musk: Tesla, Spacex and the search for a fantastic future, who entered 30 people but at the end of the first week there were only Musk and another 2.

Mark Cuban sold garbage bags

Tim Sharp/Reuters

In an Episode of GQ of Actually Me, Mark Cuban, owner and entrepreneur of the Dallas Mavericks, recalled his teenage experience selling garbage bags from door to door.

Richard Branson was a fan (tree specialist) and amateur bird breeding

REUTERS

Branson, the founding billionaire of Virgin Group, has been autonomous since the first day.

According to a LinkedIn post, at the age of 11 he and his best friend, Nik Powell, began to raise parakeets to sell them as pets to their classmates.Birds began to multiply faster than they could sell them, so they later tried luck in a different market.

As Christmas approached, they bought small firs and expected to get benefits once they grew up, but the rabbits destroyed the trees before they could grow, as he said himself.

Oprah Winfrey worked in a power store

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Winfrey's media empire made her the first black multimillionaire woman;She today has an estimated fortune of 2.513 million euros, according to Forbes.Before reaching the top, he fought to get out of a difficult and impoverished childhood.

When he lived with his father in Nashville as a teenager, he worked in a corner food store next to his father's barbershop, Forbes reports.

Pope Francis was a goalkeeper in a bar

Reuters

Before Jorge Mario Bergoglio joined the Jesuits as a priest, he became a archbishop of Buenos Aires, Cardinal, and finally in the Pope of Rome, thus becoming Pope Francis, he had several works of little glamor.

According to the Catholic News Service, in his youth, the Pontiff did tests in a chemical laboratory, he was a janitor and worked as a goalkeeper in a bar.

Doug McMillon worked at a Walmart distribution center

Walmart/flickr

As Business Insider published a long time ago, Walmart's current CEO joined the company for a summer campaign in a Walmart distribution center when I was 18, in 1984.

He left the company to go to college, but in 1990, while studying the master, McMillon returned to Walmart's ranks as manager's assistant in a store before moving to commercialization, according to Walmart.He rose from rank to several senior leadership positions and assumed the position of CEO in 2014.

Hillary Clinton supervised the activities of a playground

Ralph Freso/Getty Images

Clinton has written Hard Choices in his autobiography that achieved his first paid job, in addition to taking care of children, at age 13, supervising a small park a few km from his house in Park Ridge, Illinois, Chicago.

"My parents believed in self -sufficiency and hard work, and they made sure that children learn the value of a dollar and appreciate the dignity of a job well done," he writes.

Jack Ma was an English teacher

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Jack Ma, co -founder of Alibaba Group and the richest person in China, began his career as an English teacher at Hangzhou, China.

While giving a talk in the World Economic Forum in Davos, Ma spoke about the importance of a first job and his conviction that his experience as a teacher helped him recognize talented people and how to encourage them to grow.

Lloyd Blankfein sold snacks at Yankee Stadium

Chip Somodevilla/Getty

Blankfein, former executive director of Goldman Sachs, is one of the most influential people of Wall Street.

However, he made his way from below.According to his biography, Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came To Rule The World, Blankfein grew up in a social home in Brooklyn and had his first job as a sandwicon seller at the Yankee Stadium.

Neil Vogel sold costumes at a shopping center in Philadelphia

Neil Vogel

Dotdasha CEO (previously about.com) He spoke with Business Insider and said that his first job was renting esmóquines to the children who went to the graduation dance and weddings.

"Due to the commission plan, which did not pay us for basic rentals, but 10 dollars more or less every time you rented a tuxedo with fraid or a terrible combination of vest and braces, our efforts concentrated on renting customers the most suit the suit the most suitpossible as possible.

"Working in the retail sector gives you great lessons on how to deal with people and, of course, sales skills are invaluable.However, given the surprising amount of money we earned, perhaps the most important thing I learned is to be skeptical with those commissions paid for selling something to you, "Vogel explained.

Kat Cole was a hooters employee

CBS News screengrab

Before Cole became a president of Cinnabon and later Focus Brands, worked in Hooters for 15 years, starting as a host at age 17 and was finally promoted to Vice President when he was 26 years old.

Reed Hastings sold aspirators in cold door

Ore Huiying/Getty Images for Netflix

Before co -founding Netflix and becoming his CEO, Reed Hastings sold vacuum cleaners, an experience he remembers with love.The Bowdoin Orient published that a sabbatical year was taken before attending Bowdoin College to continue his summer work as a cold -on -door seller.

Warren Buffett was a newspaper deliveryman

Alex Wong/Getty

Buffett has shown interest in earning and saving money since he was a child.Today, the president and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway has an estimated fortune of 51.270 million euros, according to Forbes, which makes it one of the richest people in the world.

At the age of 13, Buffett spent the morning delivering copies of The Washington Post, according to Bio.

Indra Nooyi was a receptionist

Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Fortune

The Guardian published that when Indra Nooyi arrived for the first time from India to study at Yale University, he worked in a turn of 00:00 to 05:00 as a receptionist.Now is the Pepsico CEO and occupied the 11th place on the Forbes list "Power Women of 2017".

Robert Herjavec dedicated himself to collecting debts

"Shark Tank"/ABC

After graduating from the University of Toronto in 1984, and long before becoming a famous investor through "Shark Tank", Herjavec accepted a job as a debt collector.

"I learned a lot about work and some lessons, valuable lessons, remain with me today," he wrote in his book.

Among those lessons, he says that he learned that large sellers concentrate their energy only in serious objectives and that empathy is often more effective than aggression when it comes to making a sale.

Jacki Zehner sold hot dogs in hockey games

Getty Images/Jerod Harris

In 1996, the founding president of the charity organization Women Moving Millions became the first female partner of Goldman Sachs.

Before that, Zehner spent his adolescence in Canada working in a sales stand in the local team hockey field, the Kelowna Buckaroos.In a LinkedIn post, he says that the time he spent directing that position and gave him the perfect training for Wall Street.

John Paul Dejoria built and sold gardeners

Ethan Miller/Getty

The co -founder of John Paul Mitchell Systems and Patron Tequila said in an interview with Business Insider that, when growing, his family did not have much money, so he worked from a young age by building gardeners for 25 cents and selling them for 50.

"At age 11, I had a newspaper delivery route in the morning with La Examiner and earned $ 33 per month.I gave my mother's money so that we could live a better life.Having a job was an honor, "he said.

Michael Dell was Friegaplatos

AP

As founder and CEO of Dell Inc., achieved success during computers.Today, Dell has an approximate fortune of 15.667 million euros, according to Forbes.

He got his first job by scrubbing dishes for a Chinese restaurant at age 12, reports Bio.

David Murdock had a job in a gas station

Jemal Countess/Getty Images

Murdock, the president and executive director of Dole Foods, 91, made the company the largest producer and marketing of fruits and vegetables in the world.It has an estimated heritage of 2.430 million euros, according to Forbes, but grew in poverty and abandoned high school.

After leaving the studies, Murdock worked in a gas station until he was recruited by the army in 1943, Forbes reports.

T.Boone Pickens distributed newspapers

Stephen Lovekin/Getty

The president of the BP Capital Management Coverage Fund showed his aggressive business knowledge at an early age.

Like buffett, Pickens was a newspaper deliveryman.At the age of 12, he extended his delivery route from 28 houses to 156 when he took care of the routes of his competitors, according to Forbes.He has affirmed that this experience taught him the value of expanding the business through acquisitions.

Madeleine Albright sold fasteners

Mike Coppola/Getty

Albright became the first Woman Secretary of State during President Bill Clinton's mandate.He arrived in the United States as a political refugee of Czechoslovakia, since his antisovietic family was in danger for the communist party of his country, according to Bio.

He got his first job selling fasteners in a store in Denver, according to Forbes, and adds that although he won very little, this job gave him a lot of experience on how to deal with people in difficult situations.

Charles Schwab sold nuts and chickens

Justin Sullivan/Getty

Schwab Founder of Charles Schwab Corporation grew up in a high middle -class family in Sacramento, California, but wanted to earn his own money.When he was a child, he packed and sold nuts and raised chickens in the backyard of his house, some to sell and others like layers.

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