Your info shared is pretty limited but to repeat others you can't go wrong with a Tikka as a starter and more rifle. Most important aspect is fit and feel for YOU. Pay next to zero attention to guys behind a gun counter, they are there to SELL, and 80% have limited experience, or many on the firearms forums that are only too happy to tell you what THEY own. Rifle and cartridge are your personal choice and Both should fit You. I own or have owned over the years Savage, Browning, Tikka, Sako, CZ, Remington, Weatherby, Christensen, Cooper, Sauer, Winchester, etc and my opinion of what's right for you is nothing more than an opinion so I won't tell you my faves and which I think are trash. One mans trash is ... Pride of ownership is a biggie too and you don't have a lot of that if the rifle doesn't shoot well or needs constant tweaking and trips to the gunsmith.
Heres as unbiased as I can be. Consider what that rifle will get you in return when you decide to sell or expand upon, and chances are you will. Some rifles appreciate, some Hold their value, and many Depreciate. The old saying "Only Accurate Guns are Interesting" will have more meaning as you progress.
One general opinion: if you set a max price point and say thats $1000. Spend close to or same as that on the glass above. It'll help you and the rifle produce results. IF $1000.00 was your thought, even up to $1250.00 or more you won't find much if any that will win in as many categories as one specific brand. Accuracy out of the box, build quality, trigger, barrel, resaleability, reliability, initial cost, etc, Tikka is the hands down winner bar none. And for the record I'm no Tikka fanboy. I just know what's out there at comparable price points and there isn't much that will rival one. But, fit and feel first always, and shoot, shoot, shoot.