China Daily (Hong Kong)

After CEO death, techies ponder 9-to-9 workday

- By BLOOMBERG

The premature death of the 44-year-old founder of a prominent mobile health app startup has spurred a bout of soulsearch­ing in the Chinese tech community, where working long hours in the hope of making a quick fortune has become a way of life.

Zhang Rui, founder and chief executive officer of the startup Chunyu Doctor, died from a heart attack on Oct 5. Heart attacks can have many causes and Chunyu spokesman Tan Wanneng said there’s no evidence that Zhang’s death was due to overwork.

Yet, as tech executives mourn his passing, that hasn’t stopped some from wondering about the deeply competitiv­e nature of their industry and the potential health burdens they face.

“The stress and loneliness that startup founders feel can’t be comprehend­ed by normal people,” Leon Li, founder of Huobi, one of China’s largest bitcoin exchanges, wrote on his WeChat account in response to Zhang’s death. “Especially in the internet sector, where entry barriers are low and competitio­n is fierce, it’s like stepping on thin ice.”

Inspired by the rise of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, which raised $25 billion in a 2014 initial public offering, China’s new generation of entreprene­urs has been engaged in a fierce battle for capital and talent.

The country saw the startup of 1.2 new internet companies every day in the second quarter. While Silicon Valley is also renowned for its competitiv­e culture and lengthy hours, China’s entreprene­urs face a unique set of challenges because the industry is more nascent, and regulation­s and funding are in constant flux.

“The China startup community is under a lot of pressure, if not as much but even more than in the Valley or in the States,” said Dave McClure, the founding partner of Mountain View, California-based venture firm 500 Startups. “Unfortunat­ely, I think people don’t think about health issues that much.”

McClure said that among the more than 3,000 founders that he has invested in globally, at least six have passed away, with even one committing suicide.

Zhang died at a critical juncture for Chunyu. In June, it completed a 1.2 billion yuan ($178 million) round of Series D fundraisin­g at a valuation of about $1 billion and was planning to go public, according to Tan. Startups with a valuation exceeding that mark are known as “unicorns.”

For a few months when Chunyu was first founded, the company sometimes required a so-called “996 schedule” — Chinese slang for working from 9 am to 9 pm six days a week — Tan said, adding that the company is long past that stage.

Zhang started out as a journalist at a Beijing newspaper, and worked as deputy editorin-chief at NetEase, a Chinese internet portal. In 2011, he founded Chunyu, which allows patients to have online consultati­ons with doctors, skipping the wait at overcrowde­d public hospitals.

Chinese executives have for years talked about the difficulti­es in balancing work and life. After fighting cancer, Kai-Fu Lee, a longtime tech executive, published a book last year saying that he saw the disease as a sign of protest from his body after decades of 15-hour workdays during a high-flying career.

Lee is currently running his own company called Sinovation Ventures that invests in startups and he previously held jobs at Apple Inc and Microsoft Corp, and served as Google Inc’s Greater China vice president from 2005 to 2009. Jean Liu, president of taxi-hailing app Didi Chuxing, has encouraged her staff to exercise more and take care of their health.

People who work for more than 55 hours a week face an increased risk of stroke and coronary heart disease compared to those working the standard hours of 35 to 40 a week, according to a study based on data from more than 600,000 i ndividuals, published l ast October i n the medical journal The Lancet.

The unexpected death of a founder can also highlight the importance of succession plans, according to Paul Asel, Palo Alto, California-based managing partner at Nokia Growth Partners. Chunyu in an Oct 6 statement said its businesses are operating as normal with Zhang’s duties taken up by co-founder Li Guanghui.

Startup executives face long hours, conflicts with partners and fa mily, and worries about fundraisin­g, Wang Lifen, founder of Youmi, a provider of training courses for entreprene­urs, said in an article mourning Zhang’s death in her Weibo microblog.

“This is a group of people who are surrounded by envious looks from outsiders, who appear at forums and under the spotlight bearing the fine title of entreprene­urs, but do not have a moment of peace in their hearts,” said Wang.

The China startup community is under a lot of pressure, if not as much but even more than in the Valley or in the States.” Dave Mcclure, the founding partner of 500 Startups, a venture firm based in Mountain View, California

 ??  ??
 ?? CHEN NING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A worker dismantles a scrapped car at an auto recycling station in Dongying, Shandong province.
CHEN NING / FOR CHINA DAILY A worker dismantles a scrapped car at an auto recycling station in Dongying, Shandong province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China