Wil Schroter
There are very few problems at a startup worth actually stressing about — but that doesn't keep us from burning ourselves out about them.
Startups are nothing but problems. Everything about this epic shit show that we've created is a problem. We're building a company that has never existed, in a market we invented, with a team that got here 5 minutes ago. What about that would breed anything but problems?
Even if we can agree that the fire hose of problems will never be turned off, we can at least understand how to treat those problems differently, separating the ones that may end us from the ones that are "just another day at the office." If we can't, we will crush ourselves with stress and anxiety.
First off, we really need to understand how to calibrate between "yet another problem" with our startup and an "extinction-level event." Early on, there were a lot of problems that could absolutely make or break our startup. If a major customer bails, we lose a key employee, or our servers go down — we could go out of business.
Those are apocalyptic problems to be sure. Those should keep us up at night and we're going to be insanely stressed out about them. The thing is, most of our problems aren't those problems (thankfully!)
Anything that's not an apocalypse is frankly "just a problem." That's not to minimize problems, it's to categorize them so we can apply the appropriate amount of attention (stress) to them. Frankly, there aren't that many truly apocalyptic problems, and the longer we run our startups, the fewer of them there actually are, because we tend to become more stable over time.
If we treat every problem like the apocalypse, we're going to run ourselves into the ground. And let's face it — we're not exactly bursting with energy to begin with. Building a startup is a very long marathon, so learning to pace ourselves versus burning out at every sign of an issue, is critically important.
If we apply the same level of stress every time an employee complains, or someone says something negative on social media, or every time someone misses a deadline - we're going to have a very short-lived career.
We need those stress cycles for the big problems. When shit hits the fan, we're going to need all of that energy to solve those problems and go into overtime. Remember too, that we're not just burning out our own cycles, we're burning out everyone around us that we're putting on high alert all of the time. It's very costly to run in high alert mode nonstop, especially if we don't have to.
If our thought is that we need to solve all of these problems now so that we "won't have any problems anymore" — we're in for a rude awakening. There will always be problems. The only thing that will change is the number of people that have them (more headcount) and the number of zeros behind the cost.
When I built my first ad agency, we had $1,000 per month of payroll (yes, not a typo). Within 7 years we had $10,000,000 per month of payroll (also, not a typo). The issues were almost identical, we just had way more zeros behind them. No matter how well we did, our problems of selling new clients, keeping staff happy, maintaining culture, and trying to eke out a profit were identical in nature.
What did happen over time is that our problems came with more resources (money, people) to solve them. But there will always be angry customers, there will always be unsatisfied team members, and there will always be that one feature that didn't get shipped on time. Those are the constants in our startups, and they will never go away no matter how much we stress about them.
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How I Harness My Insane Startup Anxiety There are two types of Founders: those that admit they are wracked with anxiety, and those that are lying about it. We’re all going to deal with it for the rest of our lives — so why not use it as a superpower, instead of reacting like it’s kryptonite?
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