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Think work-life balance is overrated? You're hired!

Mint Kolkata

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July 08, 2025

Corporate jobs stress long hours, a competitive business environment and the importance of hustle

- Lindsay Ellis

Shopify wants a product manager who can "keep up with an unrelenting pace." Solace, a healthcare marketplace, tells job seekers: "If you're looking for work-life balance, this isn't it."

A job posting for a senior engineer at software company Rilla urges applicants "please don't join" unless they are eager to work 70 hours a week—in person.

If you think free time is overrated, this is the job market for you. Corporate job listings this summer stress long hours, a competitive business environment and the importance of hustle.

It might seem impractical to recruit applicants with a pitch that loosely translates to "This is going to hurt." But we're a long way from 2022.

Americans are facing monthslong job searches and competition from laid-off workers as companies shrink headcount. Though the U.S. is still adding jobs every month, the pace of hiring has slowed and some of the country's largest employers are cutting their white-collar workforces.

In the tougher environment, many applicants find that managers are taking a harder line. They're not just reining in flexible schedules, remote work and perks that became staples of the previously tight job market. They're warning prospective and new employees to get ready for the grind—and they're not afraid to say it out loud.

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