01/03/2026
Don’t Rush to Take an Apprentice Until You Understand This👇
Everybody wants to feel like a boss.
That feeling of someone calling you Madam or Oga while helping you sew.
It looks sweet from the outside.
But if you rush into it, it can scatter your peace, your business, and your focus.
Understand these points first:
1. Apprentices Don’t Save Time, They Cost Time First
You may think taking an apprentice will make your work faster.
At first, it won’t.
You’ll spend time teaching, correcting, redoing, and explaining the same thing again and again.
They will spoil fabric. They will sew wrong stitches.
And if you’re not patient, you’ll lose both your peace and your clients.
Apprentices are not instant help.
They are an investment of your time before they become useful.
So instead of rushing for “free help,” understand that you must give more before you gain.
2. Sewing Well Is Not the Same as Teaching Well
Some tailors sew beautifully but cannot teach to save their lives.
They get angry easily.
They can’t explain steps clearly.
They expect learners to understand everything instantly.
Teaching is a skill. It requires patience.
You must learn how to break things down slowly and clearly.
If you cannot explain with patience, you are not ready to train anyone.
3. Every Apprentice Needs Boundaries
Don’t make your apprentice your best friend or younger sister.
Set clear boundaries from the beginning:
• Time to resume and close
• Rules for touching fabrics and machines
• How mistakes will be handled
• Discipline for lateness or disobedience
When there is no structure, disrespect and misunderstanding will grow.
4. Have an Apprentice Agreement Form (Very Important)
This is where many tailors make mistakes, no written agreement.
Later, the apprentice may say,
“You didn’t teach me this,” or
“I didn’t agree to that.”
Create a simple apprentice agreement form. It should state:
• Duration of training
• Training fee (if any)
• What they will learn
• Rules of conduct
• What happens if they leave early
• What they are not allowed to do (like collecting clients directly)
This one step can save you from unnecessary drama in the future.
5. Never Take an Apprentice Out of Pity
Pity is not a business plan.
You can help people without carrying their full responsibility.
If you take someone just because “she begged,” you may end up training someone who does not respect your effort.
Be kind — but be wise.
If you’re not ready, help them find another training place.
Don’t destroy your peace because you feel sorry.
Taking an apprentice is not a bad thing.
In fact, it is a beautiful stage of growth.
But growth without structure brings stress.
Before you bring someone under your roof:
• Organize your business.
• Build patience.
• Create systems.
• Set boundaries.
Leadership is not about being called Oga.
It is about being responsible for someone else’s growth.
Prepare yourself first.
Because when you train someone the right way,
you’re not just raising an apprentice, you’re raising your
I saw this somewhere and decide to share it with u
Copy not my write up
But this is very very educating✊👏
A.S FASHION 👘👔👗 ZARIA