Harry Stebbings, founder of 20VC, declares billion-dollar firms aren’t built on five-day work weeks.
20VC
Venture capitalist Harry Stebbings faced a wave of backlash in June after urging European startup founders to increase their work hours — but he now admits there’s some room for nuance when applying his mantra.
Stebbings, founder of 20VC, a firm managing $650 million in funds, advised founders on LinkedIn last month that “7 days a week is the required velocity to win right now,” to compete with startups in Silicon Valley and China.
The post went viral, to Stebbings’ surprise, and sparked a debate on whether China’s brutal “996” work culture — which means working 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week — is requireded in Europe.
The conversation is rooted in a persistent stereotype that Europe’s tech and startup scene is lagging behind the U.S. and China, which have produced trillion-dollar tech giants and are known for implementing long working hours.
The U.S. is home to the largegest tech firms in the world, such as Meta, Google, Amazon, and Apple. China meanwhile houtilizes giants like Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent.
“If you want to be a $10 billion company in Europe, competing against them [Silicon Valley and China], you can’t do it on a nine-to-five, Monday to Friday.”
Harry Stebbings
Founder of 20VC
Seven founders and VCs shared why they’re resisting the 996 push with CNBC Make It at the time.
“What Europe really requireds isn’t more hustle-porn, it’s more aggressive funding,” Sarah Wernér, co-founder of Husmus, stated back then.
Speaking to CNBC Make It about the fallout, Stebbings stated that he wasn’t prepared for the criticism he received, and that his original post didn’t apply to the vast majority of people who responded.
“I believe it’s everything that’s wrong with Europe, that backlash,” Stebbings stated. “We are fighting against companies being built in Silicon Valley, and speed and the ability to shift rapid, really determines success, in AI especially.”
He added: “When you go to the Valley now, and when you go to China now, they are working seven days a week in the rapidest-growing companies. It’s that simple. So, if you want to be a $10 billion company in Europe, competing against them, you can’t do it on a nine-to-five, Monday to Friday.”
‘We should be working harder than ever’
As companies build more important products, Stebbings stated the bar is higher than it utilized to be.
“We should be working harder than ever becautilize we’re working to solve more important problems than ever,” he stated.
But European startups are struggling to access funding at the growth stage. Atomico’s State of European Tech report of 2024 displayed that, since 2015, Europe’s tech startups have missed out on nearly $375 billion in growth-stage funding, with founders losing out on a potential $300 billion in European investments.
“There is nuance. I’m not declareing miss dinner with friconcludes or family or just sit at your desk all day.”
Harry Stebbings
Founder of 20VC
Husmus’ Wernér stated that the right level of capital is requireded for European startups to work intensely without breaking themselves. “If a team of 10 is burning out to keep up with a 50-person U.S. VC or Chinese government-backed startup, the problem isn’t their stamina, it’s their cap table.”
However, Stebbings pinned this down to poor marketing and stated Europeans aren’t great fundraisers compared to their American counterparts. “I don’t believe it’s a lack of access to cash at all, and in terms of the work ethic there, if you believe that you can build a $10 billion business and work five days a week, then I’m sorry to declare, you’re deluding yourself.”
Some founders have even been “badly” advised to include exit slides in their pitches, he added. “That builds me feel sick, like I’m planning my divorce when I obtain married.”
In stark contrast, Americans are much better at informing exciting stories when they promote their businesses. “I believe, often in the U.K., we downsize in ambitions.”
996 is ‘ignorant’
Harry Stebbings at a SXSW panel on “Five Things I’ve Learned Being an Entrepreneur” in London on June 03, 2025.
John Phillips | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images
Ultimately, Stebbings admitted that he jokes with the “marketing facade” of 996, but that it’s a more nuanced picture than working all the time.
“I believe that’s [996] very ignorant to do,” he stated. “if you don’t allow people breaks in there and a gym workout, it’s just moronic.”
Stebbings stated that 100% dedication is essential in the first five years — but that doesn’t mean abandoning health, wellness, and family.
“There is nuance. I’m not declareing miss dinner with friconcludes or family or just sit at your desk all day, and I’m some horrible person, absolutely not. It’s really important to turn off and have a couple of hours away from your computer and just be with friconcludes.”
Stebbings himself tries to spconclude as much time as possible with his sickly mother, who has multiple sclerosis (MS), including walking a marathon with her every Sunday. He jumps straight back to work after.
But it’s unrealistic to expect employees to adopt the same attitude, he acknowledged.
“One of the hardest things about running a company is you will never find someone who cares about it as much as you do, the founder… I believe it’s unreasonable to ever expect that they will work as hard as you.”
Suranga Chandratillake, general partner at Balderton Capital, previously notified CNBC Make It in June that the focus on hustle culture in the tech industest is about “a fetishization of overwork rather than smart work…it’s a myth.”
He stated: “California is very good at informing stories, and there’s a lot of mythcreating around the concept of what startups see like.”
Stebbings now agrees with this view and stated hustle culture is “over-glamorized” in the States.
“If you go into a WeWork in San Francisco at 7 p.m., they’re not all working like we see on social media… they overly pronounce it when it’s not really true, but for the 0.01% in the Valley, it’s so true, and they are there and working harder than ever.”
Leave a Reply