Check the National Association of Professional Process Servers Web site (https://www.napps.org) for process servers in your state. Contact some of these people who are working in the field now and ask for information. Speaking to attorneys, or to a local constable or sheriff's deputy, could also be helpful. Since most court records are public, you could look at actual files of court cases to familiarize yourself with the types of papers served and examine affidavits filed by process servers.
- Airport Security Personnel
- Arbitrators
- Bail Bondsmen
- Bailiffs
- Bankruptcy Lawyers
- Biotechnology Patent Lawyers
- Bodyguards
- Border Patrol Agents
- Bounty Hunters
- Civil Litigation Lawyers
- Corporate Lawyers
- Corrections Officers
- Court Interpreters and Translators
- Court Reporters
- Crime Analysts
- Criminal Lawyers
- Deputy U.S. Marshals
- Detectives
- Elder Law Attorneys
- Emergency Services Dispatchers
- Environmental Lawyers
- Family Lawyers
- FBI Agents
- Forensic Experts
- Forensic Meteorologists
- Fraud Examiners, Investigators, and Analysts
- Genetic Genealogists
- Hedge Fund Lawyers
- Intellectual Property Lawyers
- Judges
- Law Librarians
- Lawyers
- Legal Nurse Consultants
- Legal Operations Specialists
- Legal Secretaries
- Litigation Support/eDiscovery Analysts
- Mergers and Acquisitions Attorneys
- Paralegals
- Parole Officers
- Patent Agents
- Patent Lawyers
- Police Officers
- Polygraph Examiners
- Public Interest Lawyers
- Real Estate Lawyers
- Secret Service Special Agents
- Security Consultants
- Security Guards
- Space Lawyers
- Tax Attorneys