How to quit your job to start something new, according to real people who left Facebook, Google, and Apple

Sarah Jacobs

Quitting your job and moving onto something new is always a nerve-racking process.

But just think about how people who've left the biggest companies out there must feel.

Business Insider has spoken to numerous alumni of some of the most talked about companies.

Many of them described leaving to tackle new ventures and chart their own course in the business world.

Here's some advice from people who've quit jobs at companies like Google, Apple, and Facebook on how to seize control of your career:

Be upfrontWayUp

WayUp CEO and cofounder Liz Wessel got straight to the point in her interview with Google during her senior year in college.

She wasn't planning on sticking around forever.

"I said, 'I am really interested in taking this, but if I take it, I want to leave in two years and start a company. How do you guys feel about that?'" she previously told Business Insider.

Wessel knew from the get go that she wanted to found her own business early on in her career. The Google recruiters were extremely supportive of her plan. And sure enough, after two years at the tech giant, she left.

For Wessel, having a plan and finding an encouraging and educational environment like Google was a crucial step in her professional development.

"I was very adamant about starting a company while I was still young and could take big risks — not that you can't when you're older, but I just was really excited about the concept of it," Wessel said.



Listen to the marketJoe Meyer

Joe Meyer was CEO of startup HopStop when Apple acquired the business for $1 billion in 2013, according to Fortune.

He stuck around at Apple for two years, before leaving to found careers site ExecThread.

In the end, he said it was hard to leave.

"Apple was treating me very well and they made it very difficult for me to leave," he told Business Insider.

He said he has his positive experience at Apple to thank for some of the success of his new business, which now has around 20,000 users and has raised $6.5 million in funding.

Because he was in no hurry to leave, he worked on ExecThread as a side project until he was sure it was good enough to roll out.

"Apple really taught me to to do things well before you introduce them or market them," he said. "I wanted to make sure there was really something here."

Once his side hustle began receiving attention from other players in the recruiting industry, however, he knew it was time to leave.

"That was when I was like I need to focus on this full time," he said.



Find something to run toChris Gomersall

Chris Gomersall was Facebook and Instagram's first creative strategist. He loved his job. Still, he left it in 2015 to start cloud-based marketing software company Atomized.

He had started Atomized as a side project, but said it had never felt like extra work.

"I think in general when you find a job you love, it just doesn't feel like work," he previously told Business Insider. "It never felt like anything more than doing what I love."

Gomersall said that was how he knew it was time to move on and start something new. He recommends most people leave their job only when they're certain a better, more fulfilling opportunity awaits them.

"It was really more of a calling," he said. "I was running to something rather than away from something."



Take baby stepsKathryn Minshew

When it comes to seizing control of your career or leaving your job, there's nothing wrong with taking a few baby steps before you make a huge decision. In many cases, it can prevent you from making a catastrophic career move.

Kathryn Minshew, CEO and cofounder of career site The Muse, worked at McKinsey and the Clinton Health Access Initiative before going off to launch her own business.

She previously told Business Insider it's not a bad idea to start small, however. Running a side hustle or engaging in a hobby is a cautious and thoughtful way of figuring out whether your passion is worth pursuing full-time.

"Don't be afraid to start small," she says. "Find a nonprofit or a local organization where you could volunteer your skills on weekends or a couple of hours each week so you can start to build up some experience and begin to understand what the business of your passion looks like. Talk to people who have made that passion their full time job."



Ask yourself questionsNikola Otasevic

If you want to make a professional pivot, you're going to need to be honest with yourself about what you really want.

Refdash CEO and cofounder Nikola Otasevic spent two years at Google. Before leaving, he said he had to answer a few questions. Namely, he thought about whether he truly wanted to start his own business, what drove him in his career, and what sort of environment he wanted to work in.

"If you are someone who gets a lot of ideas — like you're showering in the morning and you just have an idea — in a startup, you can have that idea live and serving users by that afternoon," Otasevic previously told Business Insider. "In bigger companies like Google or Facebook, you'll probably need a month to roll that out. But everything you release in Google or Facebook will have millions of eyeballs on it."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

See Also:

SEE ALSO: An Apple alum is helping people land secret gigs on the 'hidden job market'

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