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When working to learn, what lessons should you seek and when do you know it's time to move on?

A quick background about my situation. I’ve always run my own business until last year. I’ve had some business success in the past having sold my first business at 24. I have produced millions in revenue and am doing my own property development project. I’ve also had my fair share of failures. I’m 26 now.. I have a broad range of skills in business, marketing, property development and design. I now work for a big time property developer who has billions of dollars worth of projects per year.. My questions are; – do you think it is worth working for someone to learn? If so for how long? I was originally under the CEO who has 250+ staff, now he is busy so it’s hard to learn from him other than when I’m in meetings and he is present. – Is it best to just go out and run your own…

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Shaun Nestor, Content Marketing Advisor & Agency Consultant answered:

There is SO much here to unpack ......

First, congratulations on your past successes. That has certainly shaped you and made you who you are.

There are benefits to working for someone to learn, but if they simply see you as an employee - a replaceable widget maker - then it is time to move on. I think it only makes sense for you if the CEO or other executive is willing to mentor you in a formal agreement. I don't think waiting around to hopefully learn something is the best use of your time, and your employer may fault you for not doing your job (because you're looking to learn, first, do your "tasks" second).

In short, formalize your expectations with your employer. If it is a good fit for you both, stick around. If you don't feel like you're learning or meeting your objective, move on to something that fills that need.

Finally, read these books:
- "The CEO Next Door" http://amzn.to/2G2d2re
- "Built for Growth: How Builder Personality Shapes Your Business, Your Team, and Your Ability to Win" http://amzn.to/2FnzZV2

All the best,
-Shaun

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