Inventory Management × Career Path: Entrepreneurship

9 jobs found.

Empty Bottle Wholesaler

This job involves purchasing empty bottles collected from restaurants and manufacturers, sorting, cleaning, and managing inventory, and wholesaling them to retailers and recycling companies.

Mobile Salesperson

Mobile salespeople use vehicles such as trucks or wagons to directly sell products like food and sundries in various locations.

Floriculture (ki) Retail Store Manager

Floriculture retail store managers oversee procurement and inventory management of fresh flowers and potted plants, sales, overall store operations, sales management, and staff guidance.

Bag Wholesaler Owner

Owns and manages a wholesale store specializing in bags, procuring and selling products to retailers. A specialized managerial position.

Managing Barber

A specialist responsible for hygiene management of barber shops, store operations, staff training, etc., managing the entire store.

Cafeteria Owner (Primarily engaged in customer service work)

A cafeteria owner primarily handles customer service for guests in a dining establishment, taking orders, serving food, handling payments, and more. They also manage overall operations such as shift scheduling, inventory control, and hygiene management.

Textile Waste Wholesaler

A profession that collects and purchases textile waste (fiber waste) and wholesales it to processors or markets as recycled resources. It involves gauging demand to perform inventory management, quality inspection, logistics coordination, and transaction negotiations.

Central Wholesale Market Intermediary

Central wholesale market intermediaries procure fresh foods and other items at the central wholesale market and sell them to retailers and restaurants. They handle procurement, quality control, price negotiation, inventory management, delivery coordination, and more.

Stall Salesperson

A job that sells products directly from stalls or mobile sales vehicles without a fixed store, providing face-to-face customer service.