The WHO estimates that a staggering 12 billion working days are lost every year to mental health conditions, costing the global economy US$1 trillion annually in lost productivity.
Meanwhile, the startup world is drowning in false narratives around startup wellbeing.
You see the posts: the 4 AM wake-ups, the 18-hour workdays, and the “sleep when you’re dead” mentality.
They call it a badge of honour for a founder.
And then insist that it’s a sacrifice for the sake of innovation.
However, it’s not.
And it’s costing you a lot. Along with your company.
You won’t become successful by glorifying self-destruction unrelentingly.
In fact, it’ll be a ticket to burnout for you and for your team.
The truth is that the greatest threat to your startup isn’t your competition.
It’s the resilience and wellbeing of your people.
Read on for the reat cost of wellbeing to your business, the ROI of investing in it and 3 ways to build human capital resilience.
Startup Wellbeing and The Real Cost of the Hustle
Ignoring startup wellbeing is an active choice.
However, it’s one that creates enormous financial and human consequences.
And the numbers don’t lie.
In fact, one study found that nearly 88% of entrepreneurs struggle with their mental health.
Moreover, the numbers are just as bleak for your team.
A 2024 Forbes article identified these key stressors as driving churn:
- Perfectionism and fear of failure
- Unpredictable job security
- Blurred work-life boundaries
- Lack of resources
If you’re ignoring these realities because you’re in the middle of a funding round, it’s like trying to win a race while your houseisn on fire.

The ROI of Giving a Damn About Startup Wellbeing
It’s not all doom and gloom. There is an upside.
And that’s to take the harmful narratives and flip the script.
What happens when you do that?
You make more money. It’s that simple.
McKinsey & Company research suggests that a focus on employee wellbeing could unlock $11.7 trillion in economic value globally.
It’s strategic.
And the gains don’t stop there.
Deloitte’s 2024 research is even more direct: for every £1 invested in mental health initiatives, businesses see an average return of £5 in productivity gains.
That’s a 5x ROI.
Show me a marketing strategy with that kind of return.
Furthermore, research from Modern Health shows that 73% of employees would stay longer at a company that prioritizes high-quality mental health support.
Particularly for a startup, high turnovercausese massive issues. They drain resources, create knowledge gaps and kill momentum.
Therefore, investing in startup wellbeing is a key investment in your company’s long-term health and profitability.

3 Ways to Build Real Startup Wellbeing
Are you ready to move from theory to action?
Then, use these 5 tangible ways to build human capital resilience in your company.
- Stop Talking About Culture and Start Leading it
Team culture is not shaped by what you say. It forms through who you are and what you do, especially during high pressure.
If you’re sending emails at 11 pm, you’re letting your team know that boundaries don’t matter.
Building wellbeing means that you model the behaviour you want to see.
Your actions are the metric that matters to your team.
2. Create Real Psychological Safety
Psychological safety is the cornerstone of organizational health.
It refers to the shared belief that you can speak up with concerns, mistakes, or ideas without being penalized for it.
If an employee delivers bad news, how do you respond?
Do you get defensive and blame others?
Or do you get curious and ask what you can learn from it?
An easy way to start is with a one-minute wellbeing check-in.
Ask people how they’re feeling, and normalize talking about stress and anxiety.
A simple way to start is with a one-minute wellbeing check-in during team meetings. Ask people how they are feeling, not just what they are doing. When you normalise conversations about stress and anxiety, you remove the stigma and build a team that trusts each other.
3. Build Guardrails
In the chaos of early-stage startups, roles are fluid.
At the same time, your team’s time and energy have limits. And hustling without limits is not a strategy. It’s the fast track to burnout.
Team norms aren’t goals. They’re shared agreements that keep culture on track when things get intense.
Moreover, you can work with your team to create them. Some examples include:
- Celebrating lessons from failures in addition to wins
- A clear policy on response times so staff don’t feel pressured to be online 24/7
- Make cameras optional for internal meetings as a way to manage online meeting fatigue
These aren’t restrictive rules; they are sustainable agreements that protect your team’s energy and focus.

Startup Founder: It All Sounds With You
As the founder, the responsibility for building a culture around organizational health starts with you.
And it requires you to do the hard internal work.
- Reflect on your emotional intelligence and be honest about what’s required to bridge the gaps
- Take critical feedback with openness, not defensiveness
- Navigate conflict with compassion for both yourself and your team.
Conclusion
Make wellbeing a priority.
Treat startup wellbeing as a necessity to protect the long-term health of your team and company.
It’s not just a competitive edge; it’s good for business.
The foundations start from the early days. And the small, intentional changes you make today translate into big wins in the future
Next Steps
If you would like to explore strategies to build wellbeing in your startup, get in touch.
I offer a 20-minute clarity call where we can connect and explore your requirements. Book here.
Author: Maniesha Blakey
About the Author: Maniesha Blakey

I’m Maniesha Blakey, a mental fitness coach for startup founders and teams. I support leaders navigating decision fatigue, lack of clarity, and co-founder or team friction, strengthening performance and psychological resilience. With experience in the startup ecosystem and specialist work in neurodiversity and addiction recovery, I integrate evidence-based coaching, counselling psychology, and somatic tools to build sustainable leadership capacity, so founders can scale without sacrificing their wellbeing, their teams, or their long-term impact.
FAQs
1. Why is startup wellbeing more than just a “nice-to-have”?
Because it’s a core business risk. Poor mental health drives absenteeism, disengagement, and turnover, all of which directly erode productivity and valuation. The WHO estimates that mental health conditions cost the global economy US$1 trillion annually, primarily from lost productivity. For startups, where every role is mission-critical, that impact compounds quickly.
2. Isn’t burnout just part of the founder journey?
That’s the myth and the trap. Founders often internalize “grind culture” as a badge of honour, but chronic overwork erodes decision-making, creativity, and emotional regulation. These are precisely the traits investors value most in early-stage leaders. Sustainable success isn’t about endurance. It’s about managing energy and resilience over time.
3. How does investing in wellbeing translate into financial ROI?
The returns are clear. Deloitte (2024) found that for every £1 invested in mental health initiatives, companies see an average £5 return through higher productivity and lower turnover. McKinsey estimates global wellbeing investments could unlock $11.7 trillion in value. In short: wellbeing isn’t a cost centre It’s an efficiency multiplier.
4. What are the most common wellbeing pitfalls in startups?
Four recurring ones stand out:
- Perfectionism and fear of failure disguised as “high standards.”
- Role chaos and boundary erosion (“we’re all doing everything”).
- Reactive leadership: founders mirroring their own anxiety onto the team.
- Ignoring warning signs until burnout or conflict forces intervention.
These are predictable and preventable, if addressed early.
5. How can founders start building wellbeing without slowing growth?
Start with micro-practices that strengthen resilience without sacrificing performance:
- Model healthy boundaries (no late-night emails).
- Run short wellbeing check-ins in team meetings.
- Set clear norms around communication and workload.
- Reward learning from failure, not just outcomes.
These shifts build momentum and psychological safety, which directly support innovation.
6. Isn’t this mostly an HR issue, not a founder priority?
No, culture is a leadership output, not an HR function. In a startup, the founder’s behaviour sets the cultural temperature. If the founder normalises overwork, the team mirrors it. If the founder models self-awareness, openness, and balance, the team adopts that too.
Wellbeing starts at the top, and scales from there.
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