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Kushang Tailor
Kushang Tailor

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From Data Entry at a CA Office to Senior WordPress Developer — My 9-Year Journey

From Data Entry at a CA Office to Senior WordPress Developer — My 9-Year Journey

I didn't start my career in front of a MacBook with a cup of
coffee, writing clean code in a cozy home office.

I started in a textile market, standing 12 hours a day, earning
₹3,000 a month.

This is my honest story — the struggles, the fake promises, the
wrong turns, and how WordPress changed everything for me.


Chapter 1: The Textile Market — Where It All Began

After my SSC exams, there were a few months before results came
out. I needed money. So I took up work in the textile market in near by area.

For those who don't know — Gujarat is one of India's largest textile hubs. And the people who keep it running work incredibly hard. I'm talking 12 to 18 hour shifts, six or seven days a week, in hot, loud, and physically exhausting environments. The workers who load, unload, sort, and manage fabric rolls earn somewhere between ₹3,000 to ₹8,000 per month — with no paid leave, no sick leave, no fixed hours, and certainly no work-from-home option.

I was earning ₹3,000 a month. For 12 hours of work every day.

That's roughly ₹8 per hour.

I wasn't complaining — it was honest work and it taught me
discipline. But I knew this wasn't the life I wanted. I knew
there had to be another way.


Chapter 2: The Dream of a Degree — And Why I Let It Go

When my SSC results came, I passed. I was eligible to apply for a BE degree through the diploma-to-degree route. That was the
"expected" path — get a degree, get a stable job.

But my financial situation at home made that impossible.
Engineering fees, books, travel — it wasn't happening.

So I made a different choice. I enrolled in an Android
Development course for ₹12,000. It wasn't a degree. But it was
a skill. And I believed skills could open doors too.

What IT taught me later: In the tech world, nobody asks
where your degree is from. They ask what you've built. Your
GitHub, your portfolio, your live projects — that's your real
resume.


Chapter 3: Data Entry by Day, Android by Dawn

To pay for the course, I joined a CA office as a full-time data
entry operator. My stipend was ₹7,000 per month.

My daily routine looked like this:

  • Early morning — Android development classes
  • All day until 7–8 PM — Data entry at the CA office
  • Night — Study, practice, repeat

Data entry work is underrated in how mentally demanding it is.
You need to be precise, fast, and consistent — for hours on end.
I also picked up accounting work using Tally, which added more
responsibility to my plate.

I was good at it. My speed improved. My accuracy was solid.

But here's the hard truth about this career path — salary growth
is painfully slow. Even in well-established banks and finance
firms, the reality is difficult. A bank clerk or junior
accountant in India earns roughly ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 per month.
A bank manager might earn ₹50,000 to ₹80,000 — but only after
10 to 15 years of service, late night shifts in some branches,
and very rigid working hours. There is no remote work. There is
no flexibility. And the ceiling is always visible from where you
stand.

I paid my entire ₹12,000 course fee in EMIs from my data entry
salary. Every month, a piece of my stipend went toward buying
myself a better future.

What IT taught me later: In tech, salaries can grow 3x to
5x within the first five years alone — based on your skills, not
your seniority years. A senior developer today earns what a bank
manager takes decades to reach.


Chapter 4: The Fake Course — The Hardest Lesson

After completing the Android development course, the institute
had promised job placement. That was part of the deal.

They didn't deliver.

I pushed myself. I traveled outside my city for interviews — as
a fresher, with no experience, competing against candidates from
engineering colleges. I gave multiple interviews. I learned from
each one.

But the institute had made commitments they were never capable
of keeping. The "placement support" was practically non-existent.
No real industry connections. No resume guidance. No interview
preparation. Just hollow promises made to sell a course.

This is a reality that thousands of students across India face
every year. Coaching institutes and private training centers
often market themselves with big claims — "100% job guarantee",
"placement in top companies" — but deliver very little. They
collect the fees, run a basic course, and when it comes to
actually finding you a job, you're on your own.

I had paid ₹12,000 — money I had earned through months of early
mornings and long workdays — and I had nothing to show for it
professionally.

It was a frustrating and expensive lesson. But it also forced me
to take control of my own career. Nobody was going to hand me a
job. I had to find it myself.


Chapter 5: ₹4,000 a Month and a Bet on WordPress

In 2017, I found a web development company willing to take me
as a fresher.

The stipend was ₹4,000 per month.

Less than what I was earning in data entry. Less than what I
made in the textile market.

But I took it — because I saw the future clearly.

Within 3 months, my dedication was noticed and my salary was
increased to ₹8,000 per month. Progress — but still not enough
to live comfortably.

So I did what most people wouldn't expect from a developer —
I signed up as a Swiggy delivery partner.

Yes, after coding all day, I was delivering food orders in the
evening. And honestly? The money was good. Better than my
development stipend at the time. Swiggy delivery in a busy city
like Surat can earn you ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 per month depending
on your hours and orders — so it genuinely helped me stay
financially stable during a critical phase of my learning.

But after 2 to 3 months, I made a decision that changed
everything. I quit the Swiggy job completely.

Not because it was bad money. But because I realized I was
splitting my energy at exactly the wrong time. The evening hours
I was spending on deliveries were hours I could spend practising
code, building projects, and growing faster as a developer.
Short-term comfort was slowing down my long-term growth.

I quit. I went all in on web development. And I never looked back.

Here's why web development made sense to me and still does in
2026:

Salary growth is real and fast. A fresher web developer in
India starts at ₹10,000 to ₹20,000 per month. Within 3 years,
a skilled developer can earn ₹40,000 to ₹80,000. Senior
developers and specialists working with global clients can earn
₹1,00,000 to ₹3,00,000+ per month — or the equivalent in USD
working remotely.

Remote work is a reality. The job I do today, I can do from
my home, from a café, or from another country entirely. No
commute. No rigid office hours. No standing for 12 hours in a
warehouse.

The work culture is different. 8-hour workdays are standard.
Paid leaves, sick leaves, and casual leaves are normal. Many
companies provide hardware support — laptops, monitors,
peripherals — so you don't need to invest your own money to do
your job. Some even provide internet allowances.

Skills compound over time. Every project I do makes me
better at the next one. In data entry, doing more data entry
just made me faster at data entry. In WordPress development,
learning PHP leads to WooCommerce. WooCommerce leads to plugin
development. Plugin development leads to React and headless
architecture. The learning never stops — and neither does the
income growth.


Where I Am Today

It's 2026. That ₹4,000/month fresher is now a Senior WordPress
Developer with 9 years of experience.

I've built and published plugins on WordPress.org. I've handled
data migrations, performance optimizations, WooCommerce
customizations, and headless WordPress projects. I work with
modern tools — React, Next.js, Tailwind CSS, Cursor AI — and
collaborate with global teams using Slack, Basecamp, and more.

The textile market taught me discipline.
The CA office taught me precision.
The fake course taught me self-reliance.
The Swiggy bag taught me that shortcuts don't exist —
only trade-offs.
And WordPress gave me a career.


If you're reading this from a similar background — a small town,
a tight budget, a job that doesn't feel like it's going anywhere
— I want you to know that the path isn't always straight. Mine
certainly wasn't.

But if you find the right skill and commit to it fully, the
direction changes.

Keep building. 🙌

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