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Businesses The Internet

Reddit Co-Founder Alexis Ohanian Speaks Out Against 'Always-On' Work Culture (wsj.com) 127

At The Wall Street Journal's Future of Everything Festival on Tuesday, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian spoke out against the toxicity of "hustle porn" and how always-on work culture creates "broken" people. An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from the report: I've spoken out quite a bit about things like 'hustle porn,' and this ceremony of showing off on social [media] about how hard you're working," said Mr. Ohanian, who previously co-founded online discussion forum Reddit. "Y'all see it on Instagram and you certainly see it in the startup community, and it becomes really toxic." Business men in his position are rarely asked about juggling the requirements of their roles outside of work, like in their family, he said, and that contributes to unrealistic expectations that a job can reflect the entirety of anyone's identity as a human being.

"All of us who decide to start a company, we're kind of broken as people," because founders are often singularly-focused on the success of their venture, said Mr. Ohanian. Even with great mentors and investors supporting their vision, entrepreneurs tend to put a great deal of pressure on themselves to work harder than anyone else to achieve success and profitability. That psychological pressure is compounded by what he and others refer to as "hustle culture." "You have this culture of posturing, and this culture that glorifies the most absurd things and ignores things like self-care, and ignores things like therapy, and ignores things like actually taking care of yourself as a physical being for the sake of work at all costs. It's a toxic problem," said Mr. Ohanian. This issue isn't limited to technology companies, he added, noting that his acquaintances in finance and other industries also promote an unhealthy attitude that encourages 12-hour work days and few breaks. "Social media has made it possible to weaponize it to the point where, if [bragging about your difficult workweek] gets hearts, you're incentivized to keep pushing" the limits.

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Reddit Co-Founder Alexis Ohanian Speaks Out Against 'Always-On' Work Culture

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  • Opps. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday May 22, 2019 @06:11PM (#58638486)

    A better answer is to not use social media. However, I can see why Alexis may not be on board with that. ;)

  • Managers manage (Score:2, Interesting)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 )

    Business men in his position are rarely asked about juggling the requirements of their roles outside of work, like in their family, he said, and that contributes to unrealistic expectations that a job can reflect the entirety of anyone's identity as a human being.

    By the time you're managing a company, you ought to be good enough at managing that you know how to "juggle requirements." Managing your own life is something you should be able to do before you manage other people.

    "Social media has made it possible to weaponize it to the point where, if [bragging about your difficult workweek] gets hearts, you're incentivized to keep pushing"

    So......peer pressure. It's something you're supposed to learn to handle in high school. Be your own person.

    • So......peer pressure. It's something you're supposed to learn to handle in high school. Be your own person.

      Not really. The only time they talk about avoiding peer pressure is in the "Drugs Are Bad, Mmmm'Kay" units.

      There is no attempt to teach it in the general sense. Though everybody is expected to learn how to repeat the words, and that the words are Virtuous. But if you were to describe an economic scenario involving peer pressure, few would understand that "cool" or "popular" means "peer pressure."

      Pretty much only the people who still dislike something after they find out it is popular would notice. And by de

    • So......peer pressure. It's something you're supposed to learn to handle in high school.

      Humans are social creatures. Almost no adults are immune to peer pressure. Including you.

  • Stopped reading at "toxic". I don't want to get contaminated.

  • You have this culture of posturing, and this culture that glorifies the most absurd things and ignores things like self-care

    I don't see where a culture of working hard does not also mean you can respect and support self-care. In fact it's people that work the hardest that probably also know what is needed personally to take real breaks to recharge as needed - no-one can work continuously forever, everyone needs to figure out what gives them energy and how they can make use of that.

    It's also true that diffe

    • A recent survey indicated that people really exaggerate their work hours in America.

      Now, if you really are working a 70 week and have insufficient time for exercise then you have ZERO time for social media.

      Yeah, yeah, come at me like an addict.

  • he's taking the millions he earned on the backs of early reddit employees working long hours and returning it to them. Oh, wait.
  • by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Wednesday May 22, 2019 @06:51PM (#58638656)

    The example I give to my kids is it does not matter how hard you work, it matters what you achieve. I point to a Rickshaw-wala (known as pedicab drivers in foo foo college campuses) to show a person who is obviously working much harder than me but not achieving a fraction of what I am achieving.
    All we have in this life is time. Money is just a representation of stored time. You spend your time to get money and then you pay others to do your chores so you can save time. Ultimately its all about time and if you dont value your own time than you dont value yourself.
    I have walked out of meetings using fake phone calls when I felt the meeting was drifting and no longer being usefull.
    I will stop responding to clients who waste my time.
    I will take the time to do leisure activities like playing video games.
    The whole point is to work efficiently and create enough value/money so that you have free time to pursue leisure otherwise their is no point to life.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      > I have walked out of meetings using fake phone calls when I felt the meeting was drifting and no longer being usefull.

      What a pussy. I just say there is no longer any reason for me to be present and leave.
      • by waspleg ( 316038 )

        Oh the irony of anon calling fake phone call guy a pussy. Best thing I've read all day. Thanks /.

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        Yeah that only works if you are a developer working on a small piece of code easily outsourced to India. if you are working with people who you will need favors from in the future than some amount of social white lies help preserve relationships while preserving your time.

    • Money is not stored time. That is fucking stupid.

      Who has more free time, you, or the drunk guy on the corner?

      Your screed needs a pile of caveats longer than the screed itself. Wouldn't it be simpler to use English? Money can buy goods and services, it cannot buy time.

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        The drunk guy on the corner has 0 free time. Free time is not defined as when you have nothing to do its defined as time you are free to spend as you wish. For that you rbasic needs like food, shelter, clothing, health,security need to be met before you can do any leisure activity. The drunk guy is busy 24 hrs a days just staying alive in an environment where he can be mugged at any moment. He has 0 free time to do things he wants to.

        BTW Just adding fucking to a sentence does not really turn it into a valid

        • You're an idiot. Stop and talk to that guy. Ask him if he has free time.

          Adopting an elitist definition of "leisure activity" does not actually take away a poor person's time.

          That guy is on the corner because he insists on using all his time for his own purposes. He could probably get various forms of assistance, but it requires giving up his time to spend it in waiting rooms, and talking to perverted assholes behind desks who love paperwork. That's their perspective. They can't be bothered. They've given up

  • by xtal ( 49134 ) on Wednesday May 22, 2019 @07:55PM (#58638964)

    They will accrue more experience, and beat you every time.

    But they'll burn out!

    Not everyone burns out. The winners will self-select.

    The only way to win is to not play. But we don't want to talk about that.

    If you're here, and you're programming, you're smart enough to do something else with your life. Law, medicine, plumbing, electrical, do anything else.

    Engineering and programming are terrible career choices with little or no protection in law.

    • They will accrue more experience, and beat you every time.

      They will also cause more outages, screw ups and losses as opposed to someone who is well rested and cognizant.

      But they'll burn out!

      Then someone who has rested will come to the recuse because they will be capable of thinking of solutions a tired mind cannot. Once they burn out, they are done. Churn and burn is a saying based on observation.

      Not everyone burns out. The winners will self-select.

      Unless they are doing something they genuinely love to do.

      The only way to win is to not play. But we don't want to talk about that.

      Of course. If you know you have rights you won't be a happy slave.

      If you're here, and you're programming, you're smart enough to do something else with your life. Law, medicine, plumbing, electrical, do anything else.

      Engineering and programming are terrible career choices with little or no protection in law.

      Law - boring. Medicine - very hard work mental breakdown mater

    • Do they really accrue more experience? Useful experience at least? I'm not so sure. From what I've seen a person is only going to do a certain amount of useful work in a day regardless of how long is spent "at work."
    • Coders unfortunately get punished for their passion - because they'd be coding in the evening even if they had a plumbing job. Engineers and doctors don't go home and practice their skills, they open the whisky or hit the golf course! Coders however are expected to keep abreast of the 100 different technologies it takes to succeed in the industry, usually in their own time - no wonder it's seen as a young person's career.
  • Nope, not me! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by p51d007 ( 656414 ) on Wednesday May 22, 2019 @08:41PM (#58639152)
    My work email on my phone is programmed to go silent, at 5:30 pm, not turn back on until 7:30am, and stay off at 5pm on Friday, until 7:30am Monday. If my boss wants me to do something, answer a question or anything else after work, PAY ME. Since he won't, my obligation STOPS at quitting time. I don't go for this you can get me anytime you want crap! You want me to perform a work related task outside of business hours, PAY ME.
    • by R3d M3rcury ( 871886 ) on Thursday May 23, 2019 @12:47AM (#58639898) Journal

      At one point, I was working for a company and they suddenly decided that each and every employee must be at their desks at 9:00AM. I had a long commute through LA traffic and would have to leave over an hour early to make sure that I got to work by 9:00AM. Needless to say, this did not apply to people who actually made this policy.

      So if they expect me in at 9:00AM, I would leave at 5:00PM. On the button. My alarm would go off and I would pack up everything up and walk out. Whether I was in a conversation or not--5:00PM and I'm done.

      I did this in front of the CEO at one point. When she asked why I left exactly at 5:00PM, I told her about this policy that had been enacted. Needless to say, the policy changed quickly after that.

    • Do you have a nieche skill or something that makes you irreplaceable?

      I have this nagging voice in the back of my head that no one cares about my degrees or certs and just let's me do stuff like this because I am in my thirties.
  • You may start out wanting to work reasonable hours and being willing to trade your own success for a less stressful life . But then you are part of or leader or a team, and you realize that by not putting in maximum effort you are hurting people other than yourself. Its much worse when the project is something you believe is important, not just something your and others are doing for a paycheck.

    • . But then you are part of or leader or a team, and you realize that by not putting in maximum effort you are hurting people other than yourself.

      Bullshit. If you're a leader, your entire job is to enable everyone else to put in maximum effort. Part of that is planning ahead. You can't plan if you're putting in maximum effort all the time. If all you do is fire-fight, you're not laying the foundations for a successful team.

      I'd be much more shit at my job and be doing a disservice to those around me if I was putting in maximum effort. Thoughtful planning and the capacity to react to emergencies massively trumps maximum effort. Being at maximum effort

      • I've worked with people who grind out 50+ hrs every week, and the chaos and fires that they create around them is almost never worth it.

        Not only that but those fucking clowns think they're *awesome* because they're always fixing fires and being the hero. Code arsonists?

      • In theory yes. In practice sometimes you don't have the resources (eg money you need), and no way to get it. I'm in physics not industry and its extremely cost competitive - different groups competing to build instrumentation are all pushing as hard as they can. If you try to work normal hours, you won't get any work. I wish it wasn't true, but it is. I warn people before I hire them that this isn't a job you do purely for money.

        I expect some parts of industry are similar.

  • It's just reason. If you're on social media posting pictures and comments about how hard you're working, you aren't actually working. Which is probably why you have to spend so much time at the office - you still have actual work to do.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I refuse to work more than 40. I also refuse to be salaried, and I'm in IT now for 21 years. If I have to work an occasional 40+, I WILL get paid for the difference. I don't want comp time, I want money. People need to get better at conveying their own value. I tell employers this in the interviews: "I am trading my time and talent for money and other tangible benefits. I will give you 40 hours of decent work every week. I will not arrive late nor leave early (barring unforeseen life events). I will not sta

  • by jbmartin6 ( 1232050 ) on Thursday May 23, 2019 @11:02AM (#58641780)
    Is working more actually more effective? This artical emade me think of Scott Adam's Out At 5 [tripod.com] essay. A bit of a summary:

    Happy employees are more productive and creative than unhappy ones
    There’s a limit to how much happiness you can get while you’re at work. Big gains in happiness can only be made by spending more time away from work.
    The average person is only mentally productive a few hours a day no matter how many hours are "worked".
    People know how to compress their activities to fit a reduced time. Doing so increases both their energy and their interests. The payoff is direct and personal –they go home early.
    A Company can’t do much to stimulate happiness and creativity, but it can do a lot to kill them. The trick for the company is to stay out of the way. When companies try to encourage creativity it’s like a bear dancing with an ant. Sooner or later the ant will realize it’s a bad idea, although the bear might not.

    • It depends. At some point its certainly not worth it. There are also different time scales. Short term (couple of weeks) I think most people can put in 12 hour days but beyond that I've found that they get less efficient. Long term it has to be less - but I think more gets done in 50 hour weeks than in 40 hour ones.

      I wish I knew how to reduce this problem in competitive work. .

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