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Startup Life: Behind the Hustle and Hope
The Myth of “Typical” Startup Hours:
Startups are often sold as flexible, creative havens, but the truth about working hours varies dramatically. While some offer autonomy, many demand relentless commitment, often 50 to 60 hours a week, with founders clocking 70 to 100 hours.
Why that’s problematic:
A stanford study cited by CNBC shows productivity sharply declines after 50 hours. Beyond 55, the output barely increases despite the extra time. Overworking is often counterproductive especially for creative or high-focus roles like coding or content development.
What drives the long hours?
A. Hustle Culture Pressure: Startup founders often emulate tech icons like Elon Musk, believing endless hours equals success. This culture glamorizes overwork, even if it’s exaggerated for public image.
B. Blurring Work-Life Boundaries: With Hybrid and remote models, “switching off” becomes difficult. Founders, emotionally and financially invested in their business often find it hard to disconnect creating a ripple effect across teams.
C. External Expectations : Founders juggle promises to investors, clients, employees and families. These pressures create environments where long hours become the norm rather than the exception.
D. Gatekeeping Through Workload: Mandating 60+ hour weeks subtly excludes those with family responsibilities or mental health needs. This disproportionately impacts single parents, women, older professionals and marginalised groups.
The Illusion of Ownership and Autonomy:
Startups pitch “impact” and “ownership” to employees, but early stage firms have rigid systems already in place. Junior staff may struggle to influence processes. Additionally, emotional attachment to a startup can backfire when things collapse, the fallout feels deeply personal despite limited actual ownership.
Startups and Culture: From Meritocracy to Office Politics:
Startups may begin with energy and transparency, but as they grow (post-series a funding, 30+ people), office politics and internal frictions creep in. Unlike larger firms, startups offer little internal mobility-if your manager’s unsupportive, your only choice might be to quit.
Learning Vs Career Growth:
The Upside: Startups provide broad exposure and accelerated learning.
The Downside: Growth opportunities are tired to company success. If the startup doesn’t scale, your role may stagnate. Waiting for a title bump that never comes can stall your career.
Tech at Startups: Not Always Cutting Edge
Despite appearances, startup tech stacks are often rushed and messy. Their priority is speed-to-market, not architectural elegance. Unless you are in a technically ambitious startup (e.g. AI-Focused), you may not gain experience in advanced systems.
Choosing your Path:
Choosing to work at a startup is not inherently bad, but it demands a conscious weighing of trade-offs. It’s easy to lose oneself in the dream of rapid success but your career path should align with your goals, not just the founder’s vision. At ImPerfect Psychotherapy, we support professionals navigating workplace stress, identity crises, burnout and more. If Startup life feels overwhelming or misaligned, we are here to help you reconnect with your own purpose. Are you building your dream or helping someone else build theirs at the cost of your well-being?
By Urveez Kakalia and Krupa Abraham
Reference:
1. https://www.karllhughes.com/posts/working-hours
2. https://medium.com/@nikitasushkov/the-real-side-of-working-as-a-startup-employee-1ffd2dbbe0b5
Further Readings:
Bhide, A. (1994). How entrepreneurs craft strategies that work. Harvard Business Review, 72(1994), 03.
Bankman, J., & Gilson, R. J. (1999). Why start-ups?. Stanford Law Review, 289-308.
Blank, S. (2018, June). Why the lean start-up changes everything.