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Separating self from startup: Founders open up about how to manage your mental health in the stressful business world

In the high pressure stakes of the business world, what can you do to look after yourself, as well as your business?
Jamie Pride mental health
Jamie Pride, author of Unicorn Tears: Why Startups Fail and How to Avoid it. Source: Supplied

People working in startups and small businesses are disproportionately at risk of depression and anxiety. But when everyone is sharing stories of million-dollar funding rounds, big-name backers and revenue booms, thereโ€™s not a lot of space left for talking about the potential personal costs of running a business.

In 2017, Evermind conducted a survey of people working in small businesses in New South Wales measuring participantsโ€™ symptoms of depression. It found 55% fell into the “at risk” category, compared to 37% of the general population, while 9.5% fell into the “severe” risk category, and 10.1% were considered to be at “extremely severe” risk.

The results are similar for anxiety, with 51% at some risk and 16.4% at “extremely severe risk”, compared to 27% and 9% of the general population, respectively.

In his bookย Unicorn Tears: Why Startups Fail and How to Avoid it, entrepreneur and venture capitalistย Jamie Pride, outlines his own experiences of stress, sleepless nights and depression, following the ASX listing of his employment solutions company REFFIND in 2015.

โ€œI started thinking dark thoughts, I felt I had no one to turn to โ€ฆ After six months, I was a physical and mental wreck. I had never felt this bad before. I felt like a failure at work and at home,โ€ he says in the book.ย 

Pride ended up in hospital with severe chest pains, thinking he was having a heart attack, before he re-evaluated his priorities.

Speaking to StartupSmart, Pride says founders tend to portray a โ€œfacade that theyโ€™re crushing itโ€, bottling up their problems or numbing them with drugs or alcohol.

โ€œTheyโ€™re essentially stressing out, dealing with anxiety or depression or both,โ€ he says.ย 

According to Pride, 92% of startups will fail. He says: โ€œAccessibility into the ecosystem is greater than ever โ€” anyone can found a startup.โ€

โ€œWhat are we doing to prepare those founders?โ€

 

Jamie Pride, author of Unicorn Tears: Why Startups Fail and How to Avoid it. Source: Supplied

Equally, when founders push themselves to burnout, it can have a negative effect on performance. Angela Henderson, a mental health clinician and business consultant, says when small business owners โ€œbecome obsessed with their businessโ€, they often start making careless mistakes. She knows of one case where those mistakes translated to a string of bad reviews.

โ€œThatโ€™s one example where itโ€™s not actually helping your business grow, itโ€™s a hindrance,โ€ she tells SmartCompany.ย 

As Emma Perera, co-founder of WellBeing GROW, a startup providing corporate wellbeing solutions, explains, โ€œprevention is better than cure, and that is overwhelmingly the case in this instance.โ€

So what can you do to look after yourself, as well as your business? We asked some founders for their tips on maintaining mental wellbeing.

Separate the self from the startup

Pride calls this โ€œdecoupling [your] identity from the startupโ€, or trying not to equate the entirety of your self-worth with your business.

Brian McCarthy, co-founder of Brandello, says, for some people, starting a business is an โ€œexistential eventโ€.

โ€œBuilding the business is part of their identity, and if something goes wrong it hurts their identity,โ€ he explains.ย 

โ€œIf they admit theyโ€™re having a tough time, they think people might interpret that as the brand having a tough time.โ€

In reality, that โ€œcouldnโ€™t be further from the truthโ€, he says, but it can still feel like opening up simply isnโ€™t an option.

โ€œPart of the secret to keeping a balance is consciously thinking about things that are outside of the bubble,โ€ McCarthy says (although he admits โ€œitโ€™s really difficultโ€ to do).

Emma Perera (far left) and the Wellbeing GROW executive team. Source: Supplied

Be aware of your triggers

Perera advises entrepreneurs to get informed about their own mental health, building โ€œself-awareness around your own triggersโ€.

This is particularly true, she says, for those who have teams around them.

โ€œEmotions are contagious and leaders need to lead strongly,โ€ she says.

โ€œIf your feelings are out of control, no matter how large your team is, that does trickle down.โ€

Thereโ€™s a perception that leaders should “eat last”, but Pride says, โ€œthatโ€™s not rightโ€.

โ€œLeaders need to be taking care of themselves so theyโ€™re not irritable, tired, grumpy, and so theyโ€™re at their most creative.โ€

Focus on capacity, not capability

According to Pride, founders tend to focus on building their capabilities to handle any and all problems, but for some, it can be more effective to improve mental capacity instead.

โ€œThey see taking care of themselves as a future event,โ€ Pride says, rather than prioritising their own needs and making sure they have โ€œa full tank when there are moments of crisisโ€.

Perera places significant importance on rest.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t even mean sleeping, but rest and switch off for a moment, to just take stock,โ€ she says.ย 

โ€œYou canโ€™t do that without prioritising your time,โ€ she says.

For McCarthy and Pride, this “rest” comes from exercise. McCarthy says he makes a point of exercising โ€œevery single day, no matter whatโ€, even if itโ€™s just a run around the block.

Angela Henderson, business consultant and coach. Source: Supplied

Help tackle the stigma

In the startup world, Perera says, โ€œweโ€™re all about promotion, raising capital, not showing weakness โ€” crushing it, โ€˜boomโ€™.โ€

However, she says there has been an increase in founders coming forward to say theyโ€™re reassessing their priorities.

โ€œThe more we put this on the agenda, the more weโ€™ll reduce the stigma,โ€ she says.

โ€œBut it doesnโ€™t come naturally for people to talk about.โ€

Pride says that reluctance to talk about failure can make founders feel even more isolated if theyโ€™re not in fact “crushing it”.

โ€œThey feel like theyโ€™re the only one thatโ€™s failing,โ€ he says.

This isnโ€™t an issue thatโ€™s unique to entrepreneurs, itโ€™s just more prominent among them.

Henderson notes that startup founders and entrepreneurs are still predominantly male, and in general, men are less likely to reach out for help than women. Particularly in the US, she says, all the “big name” entrepreneurs are men.

โ€œI donโ€™t hear them talk about mental health and the burnout associated with it,โ€ she says.ย 

Brian McCarthy and Marco Muscat, co-founders of Brandollo. Source: Supplied

Find a peer support group

McCarthy recalls the isolation he felt after leaving a conventional office environment to work solely on Brandollo, from home.

โ€œWhen [founders] leave the conventional working environment, they leave behind conventional support networks as well, and no one really talks about that,โ€ he reflects.ย 

โ€œThe first time you realise that is when youโ€™re sitting alone in your living room with only yourself to talk to.โ€

Even very basic support is crucial, he says. If you work in an office, โ€œpeople know if you donโ€™t turn upโ€. If you work alone, and canโ€™t bring yourself to get out of bed in the morning, that could easily go unnoticed.

McCarthy recommends finding people to communicate with. Once he met his co-founder, Marco Muscat, at a shared workspace, he went from โ€œdealing with all the problems and the unknown, to having someone to share them withโ€.

Henderson adds that founders tend to compare themselves to other founders to โ€œdefine successโ€. But theyโ€™re all portraying a rose-tinted version of their own affairs, so โ€œthe baseline of normal has shiftedโ€.

While the startup community can be very supportive with regards to advancing business, Pride says thereโ€™s not a lot of space for โ€œtalking about youโ€.

Pride has set up The Founder Circle, a not-for-profit designed to meet that very need through free weekly sessions, โ€œhelping founders to come forward and be more authentic and talk about the real challenges faced every dayโ€.

If you or someone you know is living with mental health issues, contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or beyondblue on 1300 22 4636.

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