Thanks for marginalizing the importance of knowing WTF is happening with and inside your airplane.
Au Contraire, mate. I was marginalizing the dramatic twist you placed on the massive leap from mere piston pilot to mighty turbine pilot. The self-service of the statement got to me. Flying turbojet airplanes is a leap backward in difficulty, a leap forward in simplicity. Messing up a piston engine is easy messing up a turbine engine is hard.
The myth of the turbine world is perpetuated by those that cross the bridge, and looking back at where they were, try to support the aura of mystique and complexity. The truth is, that turbine engines are easier to operate than piston engines (and no...any student pilot in a four cylinder horizontally opposed engine should have been taught about thermally managing the engine...if having received competent instruction). With the systems simplicity in function in most modern turboprops, flying the aircraft is easier than most lighter, simpler aircraft.
You really think a second seat in a Citation is going to eat somebodies lunch? I don't think so. Ever stop to think that the military graduates folks with the same amount of time that most civillian flight instructors have starting out...but into tactical turbojet aircraft. No problem. Turbojets are safe, simple, and hard to screw up.
The fact that the citation moves slightly faster than soap on a windy day means that a new pilot isn't overwhelmed by speed beyond comprehension. The fact that the citation was originally intended to be a single pilot airplane, and an entry level straight forward airplane at that, attests to the fact that we're not talking a F-104 here. I'd be willing to bet that I could put almost any private pilot in the airplane and have them flying it comfortably in less time than it takes to do a tailwheel transition.
Learn the annunciator panel, learn the bold face items. Learn the limitations, then go fly.
Study the systems. You should know them. You can't do much about them in the airplane, but you should still know them. The systems are simple. They are straight forward. They are color coded, for crying out loud. We're talking a paint by the numbers airplane, and it was designed that way for a reason.
World of hurt? World of pain? Garbage. If you can grasp the basics for a private pilot, I can explain the rest of what you need to know in an afternoon over lunch...it's just not that complicated, nor is it above the realm of understanding for an inquisitive private pilot who just wants to know more. It's an airplane, just a simple machine, with simple systems, and contrary to what some might tell you, it is easily mastered.
Left to right. English. Sucks in, blows out. Push forward to go fast. Now go fly.