'I'm Not Scared Of Sundays,' Says HubSpot CEO, Who Beats The Sunday Scaries By Simply Working Through The Weekend
Turns out, a lot of people feel anxious on Sundays. According to a 2023 survey by HR software provider Ciphr, nearly half of senior managers in the UK report experiencing the 'Sunday scaries' multiple times a year.
On the other hand, HubSpot (NYSE:HUBS) CEO Yamini Rangan says she doesn't get the Sunday scaries. In fact, she skips right over them by turning Sundays into a full workday.
"I'm not scared of Sundays,' Rangan said on the recent episode of the 'Grit' podcast. 'I enjoy it because it's my time. I get to decide what I'm learning, what I'm doing, what I'm thinking, what I'm writing. It is completely my schedule.'
Don't Miss:
Hasbro, MGM, and Skechers trust this AI marketing firm —
'Scrolling To UBI' — Deloitte's #1 fastest-growing software company allows users to earn money on their phones.
Her version of a day off? Saturday. She completely disconnects from work after Friday night and doesn't pick it back up until Sunday morning. No emails, no messages, not even from the board. That one-day break is non-negotiable.
Then comes Sunday, which for her is anything but restful. She turns it into a dedicated workday: reading, thinking, planning, and writing. It's her time to prepare for the week ahead with focus and intention, without interruptions. "It is completely my schedule," she said. By the time most people are still winding down their weekend, she's already scheduled a full set of Monday morning emails, often timed to hit inboxes at 5 a.m.
This rhythm, she says, keeps her balanced. It's her way of eliminating the dread many feel about Mondays—by turning Sunday into a day of action instead of anxiety.
Trending: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing —
Rangan's approach may sound intense, but she's not alone in working this way. A recent survey by HR software firm Ciphr shows that stress and anxiety about the workweek are widespread among senior managers. Nearly half – 47% – of the 265 UK senior managers polled said they felt the Sunday scaries multiple times over the past year. About 13% felt them multiple times a month, and 5% said they felt them every week.
Only 8% of respondents said they had never experienced the Sunday scaries.
The top three causes of stress among senior leaders were high inflation and rising prices (34%), the cost-of-living crisis (33%) and burnout (27%).
Workload and to-do lists (24%), economic downturn (23%) and unfinished work tasks (21%) are also some of the reasons.
Rangan, who leads a company with more than 9,000 employees and billions in revenue, says the key to avoiding burnout is to find a rhythm that works and stick to it.
'Peak performance requires peak rest,' she said. So she made a rule: 'I've said to people that I will not respond on Saturday.' Even when board members send emails, Rangan says she holds firm to her Saturday boundary and doesn't reply.When Rangan took over as CEO in 2021, it wasn't under normal circumstances. HubSpot co-founder and then-CEO Brian Halligan was injured in a snowmobile accident and suddenly out of commission. Rangan, who joined as chief customer officer in 2020, stepped in.'He said, 'Remember I told you if I ever got hit by a bus, you'd have to run it? I need you to run it.''
Rangan accepted the interim CEO role, thinking Halligan would eventually return. He didn't. Six months later, the board made her appointment permanent.
Since then, she's guided the customer relationship management and marketing automation platform through pandemic growth, a sudden market slowdown, and the rise of AI. Each year, she says, requires reinvention.
"Every year I've been CEO, I've had to reinvent what I'm doing and my mental constructs," she said. 'Every year, there's something completely different we're trying to drive.'
Rangan's no stranger to pressure. She grew up in a 350-square-foot home in a small Indian town. She came to the U.S. with $300 and worked her way up through engineering and sales. Even now, she says, she often feels 'behind.'
'I've embraced that discomfort," she said. "If I'm not learning, I'm behind.'
Read Next:
Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:.
Inspired by Uber and Airbnb – Deloitte's fastest-growing software company is transforming 7 billion smartphones into income-generating assets – UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets.
Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga?
HUBSPOT (HUBS): Free Stock Analysis Report
This article 'I'm Not Scared Of Sundays,' Says HubSpot CEO, Who Beats The Sunday Scaries By Simply Working Through The Weekend originally appeared on Benzinga.com
© 2025 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Stargate UAE AI Deal Stalls Over U.S. Chip Rules
AI behemoth Stargate UAE has hit a roadblock because U.S. officials are still hashing out security terms for exporting advanced chips. Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), Oracle (NYSE:ORCL), OpenAI, Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO), SoftBank Group (SFTBY) and UAE's G42 teamed up last month after President Trump's Middle East stop to launch what could become a 5-gigawatt AI data-center powerhouse. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 4 Warning Signs with NVDA. The first 200-megawatt chunk was supposed to go live in 2026, operated by OpenAI and Oracle, but nobody's signed off on the chip-export rules yet, so the deal remains on ice. Although G42 says the project builds on the new U.S.-UAE AI Acceleration Partnership, which aims to foster safe, responsible AI, Washington still worries about the UAE's China tiesrecalling how the UAE let Huawei (now under U.S. fire) roll out 5G during Trump's first term. OpenAI and G42 both have Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) backing, but even that doesn't erase concerns that Chinese hardware or talent could leak U.S. tech to adversaries. Because of those unresolved security questionslike banning Chinese gear on site or limiting who can work therethe Commerce Department, Nvidia, OpenAI, G42, Microsoft, Oracle and SoftBank all declined to say when any approval might come. And adding drama, Elon Musk recently hinted he might torpedo the whole thing unless xAI gets a seat at the table. Investors should care because if the UAE pushes back on U.S. curbsinsisting on looser rulesthe entire Stargate plan could stall, undermining a high-profile attempt to export American AI clout. Watch for any new U.S. export guidelines and whether Abu Dhabi caves to get those cutting-edge chips; otherwise, this megaproject could sit stalled well past 2026. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump's $14B Power Play: Japan Buys US Steel--But America Keeps the Keys
The $14.1 billion takeover of United States Steel (NYSE:X) by Japan's Nippon Steel is alive, kickingand reportedly on track to close before a key June 18 deadline. Sources close to the matter say talks with the U.S. government are moving toward the finish line, with negotiations centering around national security, governance, andof coursepolitics. The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) hasn't wrapped up its investigation just yet, but insiders say it's likely to greenlight the deal before time runs out. Markets are pricing in success: US Steel shares have hovered above $53 since late May, brushing right up against Nippon's $55-a-share offer. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 8 Warning Sign with X. But this isn't your typical cross-border M&A deal. Under the current framework being discussed, US Steel will stay headquartered in Pittsburgh, retain an American CEO, and operate under a U.S.-majority boardwith some positions needing government signoff. Trump, who's taken a victory lap on the campaign trail, says his push added a $5,000 worker bonus and locked in $9.2 billion in future steel investments. He's also promised no layoffs, no outsourcing, and full blast furnace capacity for a decade. Whether all of that makes it into the final signed documents remains to be seenbut the direction is clear: Japanese capital, American command. There's still a court case technically underway, stemming from the Biden administration's earlier attempt to block the deal. The Justice Department just asked for an eight-day extension to keep negotiatinganother signal that both sides are close. And if this closes? Nippon Steel won't just own a symbol of American industry. It'll own a politically engineered hybridwith a Japanese parent and a very American playbook. This article first appeared on GuruFocus.
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Spain's $5B Telecom Breakup? Telefonica and Masorange Plot Bold Move on Vodafone
Telefonica (NYSE:TEF) and Masorange have kicked off informal discussions about a potential deal for Vodafone Spain, according to people familiar with the matter. While nothing is on paper yet, insiders say one idea being explored involves splitting up Vodafone Spain's fixed-line and mobile or enterprise operationspossibly to dodge antitrust objections. Masorange could also take over the Lowi brand, Vodafone's low-cost unit. The backdrop? Pressure is mounting in Spain's crowded telecom market, and consolidation is starting to look like the only way out. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 9 Warning Signs with TEF. Masorange, formed in 2024 from the 18.6 billion merger between Masmovil and Orange's local business, is now the country's biggest operator by customer base. Vodafone Spain, meanwhile, was acquired by Zegona for 5 billion last year but has continued to strugglepartly due to an aging fiber-optic network. It's already working with Masorange on a fiber venture, but a broader breakup-and-buyout could redraw Spain's telecom map. Telefonica still dominates business services, but Chairman Marc Murtra has made it clear: Europe's telecom players need to bulk up or risk getting left behind. But even if the strategic logic lines up, execution won't be easy. Telefonica's credit rating is hanging at the edge of investment-grade, leaving little room for risky moves. Murtra has said he won't jeopardize that rating, though some sources say creative funding structures might still be possible. A throwback to the 2020 Brazil playbookwhere Telefonica and two rivals jointly carved up Oi SAcould help navigate regulatory obstacles. For now, there's no formal proposal, but if talks progress, this could become one of the boldest moves in European telecom in years. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio