A friend and fellow businessman did a presentation to a group of Entrepreneurs titled: ‘The laziest Entrepreneur I know’ – he was talking about me.
I was offended, until I read the deck and realised he was pointing out that instead of buying into the ‘hustle’ culture I had created a culture built on sustainability.
Here’s what I’ve learnt over the past 17 years and the founder of three companies that still thrive today.
Workaholic culture
Startups believe that the only way to succeed is by working constant long hours, endless pivots and relentless pitching – the sleep under your desk and slam down energy drink hustle mentality and founders wear it like a badge of honour.
The narrative is that success comes from burning the candle at both ends and potentially, burning others in the process, even those closest to you. But too often, that fire leads to burnout and broken relationships not brilliance.
The truth is, a startup can only thrive if its people do and that certainly goes for the founder.
Wellbeing is often treated as an afterthought, something to implement “once we scale.”
What I’ve seen time and again, is that waiting is too late. Culture gets set early, and if the default rhythm is overdrive, it becomes ingrained.
So what does it look like to build startups that don’t just survive but thrive sustainably and still have your people and relationships intact along the way?
Redefining startup wellness
Wellness in startups has meant a fruit box in the kitchen or the occasional yoga class. But true wellness shouldn’t be seen as a perk but a performance strategy.
Think of it this way: a founder with four hours of sleep and constant mental load isn’t making sharper decisions by adding a kombucha fridge. They need sustainable rhythms that fuel energy, creativity, resilience, and leadership presence.
The blueprint is shifting from wellness as “nice-to-have” to wellbeing as an operating system, woven into how teams reconnect, reset and recharge.
A 60-second reset
At GreenX7, we built the Battery Check for this exact reason. A simple, 60-second reflection tool that helps leaders and teams quickly see where their energy is across four domains and suggests ways to recharge before the regress:
- Physical – stamina, rest, recovery
- Mental – clarity, focus, decision-making
- Emotional – resilience, stress regulation
- Social – connection, belonging, trust
Why does this matter for startups? Because energy is the most valuable currency in
an early-stage company or any company for that fact.
Running on empty leads to poor decisions, reactive leadership, and toxic culture and after measuring Australia’s workforce for seven years, we aren’t thriving, we are just functioning.
Case Study: Reconnect to recharge
We’ve been recently working with the Australian Federal Police (AFP). Using the Battery Check, we measures the team’s battery and look at what areas need recharging. We then tailor programs based on that data and see an average uplift at a team battery level from pre activity of 63% to post activity battery 79%.
During that session we also implement ways for those changes to be sustainable. What’s the
outcome? Better team culture, less burnout and better productivity.
The cost of not recharging
The World Health Organization classifies burnout as an occupational phenomenon.
In startups, it’s almost expected. But the costs are staggering: lost talent, reduced creativity, higher error rates, and investors losing confidence.
Founders often think they can’t afford to slow down, the reality is they can’t afford not to.
A burnt-out founder is a liability to their team, their customers, and their investors.
Building thriving startup cultures
So how do we go from surviving to thriving? A new blueprint needs five simple shifts:
- Check In’s – Awareness is the greatest agent for change.
- Normalise recovery – Rest is an investment in clarity and essential for
sustaining high performance. - Create rhythms – Build meeting schedules, sprints, and breaks with energy in
mind. - Connect, don’t just communicate – Prioritise belonging and psychological
safety as much as product-market fit. - Lead by example – Founders set the tone – If you want a thriving culture, start
by thriving yourself.
The startup ecosystem celebrates resilience and grit, but resilience without recovery isn’t resilience, it’s depletion.
The companies that will thrive in the next decade are those who understand that human energy is their ultimate competitive advantage.
When founders and teams are empowered to manage their energy intelligently, startups don’t just scale faster, they scale better and build cultures people want to be part of.
- Tim Jack Adams, author of Energised: The Daily Practice of Connected Leadership and Sustainable Wellbeing.


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