>>25535890
yes. you can get a job in enterprise sales. don't let anyone fucking tell you otherwise.
i just graduated too, albeit a top 10 program. but i came from a poor family and worked retail all the way through college while doing hard af classes (math based ECON) full-time.
in that time, at a fucking retail store, i was invited to the country club by CEOs i sold to, met multiple VPs and account exec types who gave me tips and networking opportunities, and even got invited to a stock trading group with some multi millionaire in his 40s.
get a sales job asap, and get good at it. find an enterprise sales position with high ticket items, and go interview showing your hard numbers of how much you can prospect and close. don't knock it. people these days are terrified of being evaluated objectively. but sales is THE BEST skill you can ever develop and you can take it ANYWHERE: dating, interviews, making friends etc.
i'll even tell you what industry to look for: look for a software company that sells SaaS or other suits to other companies. apply for an SDR or BDR role. if that doesn't work then look at heavy machinery, or mass orders of wholesale. doesn't matter, just make sure the pricetag is huge so you get an adrenaline rush when you close.
i am currently interviewing at Google and another tech company that fits the description i gave you based out of Germany. if both those fail i have friends from college at other firms i can reach out to.
remember, a career is a position where you make money based on your performance. if you don't get paid on performance, you simply have a job. not a career. (i'm looking at you back office types who think you're undervalued)
retail gives you a ton of skills and opportunity. figure those out while you're applying around. adapt or die anon.