In an era where burnout looms large and conversations around mental health at work are becoming mainstream, a New York-based startup founder has sparked widespread debate on LinkedIn and Reddit after he rejected a job candidate for simply mentioning “work-life balance” in their very first interview.
The CEO, who remains unnamed but self-described as a passionate entrepreneur clocking in 80+ hour workweeks, took to LinkedIn to share a long, unsolicited message he sent the candidate after rejecting them. The tone, however, has left many questioning where the line lies between hustle culture and healthy boundaries.
The Message That Launched a Thousand Comments
The post reads more like a manifesto than a rejection note. The CEO wrote, “Mentioning you are prioritizing work-life balance was a nonstarter. For your other interviews, I’d really reconsider how you’re approaching things. If you truly desire work-life balance, it is probably a sign you haven’t found work you truly love.”
In the message, he explained that startups require intense dedication and long hours, implying that true passion for one’s work renders work-life balance irrelevant. “I work 80+ hour weeks and it never feels like work because I love it,” he added.
The advice-turned-lecture ended with a sharp take: “Even big companies like Google that are notorious for lazy employees don’t want to hear that you’re focused more on balancing your life than helping them succeed in your first interview. Team players care about the team, and no one likes working with people who aren’t one.”
Reddit’s Verdict: A Reality Check for the CEO
The post quickly found its way to Reddit’s popular subreddit r/LinkedInLunatics under the scathing title: “Here’s some unsolicited advice so I can more easily underpay you.” What followed was a tidal wave of comments, criticism, and commentary—much of it calling out what they saw as a toxic and outdated approach to recruitment.
One Redditor summed up the backlash succinctly: “You failed the sales pitch. You want those 80-hour weeks? You want people to believe in the mission? Then maybe don’t act like a jerk during the interview.”
Another wrote, “Were you offering advice or just clinging to the brief power trip you hold over a jobseeker as a means of reprieve?” Others shared similar horror stories—like an HR worker admitting that candidates who ask about hybrid work policies are immediately dismissed.
Is Passion an Excuse for Exploitation?
The LinkedIn post’s core assumption—that loving your job means you won’t care about work-life balance—has been at the heart of the criticism. One commenter pointed out that the startup model today is full of risk with no guaranteed payoff. “The startup community has been hit for a long time with a very high risk of no successful exits at all. Employees are hedging,” they wrote, suggesting that even passionate workers are looking for financial and personal security early on.
In fact, the post ironically offers a glimpse into a broader cultural shift—one where employees are no longer afraid to question hustle culture or the expectation of blind loyalty without clear returns.