Staying up all night, working nonstop, eating on the run and skipping meals are often telltale signs of starting a new business. But research shows this constant hustle – which is often glorified as the key to success – can have a negative impact not only on an entrepreneur’s health and well-being but also his or her business.

New research led by suggests that engaging in recovery may help entrepreneurs reduce the negative impact of stress.

β€œEntrepreneurs who work really hard and grind on their business and who most need to recover, don’t take a break,” says Gish, who also has studied how lack of sleep impacted entrepreneurs’ decision-making ability. β€œThat incessant grind, fueled by the autonomy that accompanies self-employment, hinders or hampers them from taking time to recover. This creates a tension between the good and bad associated with entrepreneurial careers, which leads to strange well-being outcomes. We’re trying to fix that.”

Gish builds on his previous research that documented the link between entrepreneurial well-being and the stressors that affect it. In this study, which was recently published in the scholarly journal Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, Gish proposes recovery interventions to enhance entrepreneurial well-being.

To help entrepreneurs recover, Gish and his co-authors recommend three recovery-intervention categories they’ve dubbed the 3 Rs: Respite, Reappraisal and Regimen.

β€œRespite is just taking a break or pushing β€˜pause’ on work. Reappraisal is changing how you think about stress,” says Gish, noting that writing in a journal can help someone understand how they look at stress or failure and then reframe it. β€œAnd the last one is regimen, just adding structure to respite and reappraisal.”

Gish recommends setting work aside, even for just a few minutes, to take a walk, listen to music or engage in other non-work-related activities. The study notes that even micro-breaks, which may span just 5-10 minutes, can provide physical and mental relief from stress, aid in recovery and boost productivity.

β€œIf you’re always working and always on, that can impair recovery and eventually harm a host of well-being outcomes,” he says.

The study, a comprehensive review of the literature around entrepreneur well-being, stressors and their effects, also offers guidance on how entrepreneurs can reframe how they look at self-care and recovery, and then how to build it into their routines.

Gish joined Β in 2019. Co-authors for the research are Amanda Jasmine Williamson, lecturer in Innovation and Strategy at University of Waikato in New Zealand; and Ute Stephan, professor of entrepreneurship, King’s College London, and Technische UniversitΓ€t Dresden.