What running a tech startup on Teams taught me about over-connection and under-recovery

đź§­ Introduction

It started with one Teams call. Then another. Then a “quick chat” turned into 90 minutes, followed by four follow-ups and a doc review.

Before I knew it, I’d spent six hours communicating, two hours context-switching, and maybe 40 minutes doing deep work. Sound familiar?

In the world of remote tech leadership, especially when you’re building ambitious innovative technology, the tools that keep you connected can quietly wear you down.


đź’» The Illusion of Remote Freedom

We sold ourselves a dream:

“Work from anywhere. Empower your team. Just send a link.”

And don’t get me wrong — I love the tools. Teams, OneNote, SharePoint, synced calendars, integrated wikis… they’ve helped Marine Zero scale remotely with clarity.

But here’s the catch:
Remote tech can hide burnout better than any office ever did.


🔍 The Symptoms I Didn’t Spot at First

SymptomLooked likeActually was
Replying instantly to every ping“Engaged leader”Boundary-less overdrive
Constant availability“Supportive culture”Chronic context-switching
Back-to-back Teams calls“Agile collaboration”No time to think, breathe, or build

⚙️ What I’ve Learned (the hard way)

  1. Being online ≠ being productive
    Most high-value thinking doesn’t happen in a call. It happens in the quiet moments in between.
  2. Presence isn’t performance
    Logging long hours on Teams doesn’t mean things are moving forward. Sometimes, it’s just motion sickness.
  3. Ops and systems reduce brain load
    Every decision delegated, every SOP written, every async update = one less thing my brain carries.

đź§  My Survival Tactics

  • Create hard stops: If I don’t block downtime, I burn time.
  • Use async over live: If it can be written, it doesn’t need a call.
  • Keep calls sacred: Limit “catch-ups” unless they truly matter.
  • Track stress like you track metrics: If your KPI dashboard is glowing green but you’re not sleeping… something’s off.

🔧 What I’d Tell Another Remote Founder

You can’t scale a business from burnout.
And you definitely can’t scale clarity when your brain is split between five calls and twenty pings.

Tools like Teams are incredible — but without guardrails, they become your digital cage.


âš“ Final Thought

The goal isn’t to be “always on.”
The goal is to build systems, teams, and habits that work even when you’re not.

Because sometimes, logging off is the most productive thing you’ll do all day.


➡️ Call to Action

Have you hit this kind of remote wall before? Drop me a message or connect on LinkedIn.