Overwork in a sentence as a noun

His model is to fund a heap of cheap companies that overwork work young, naive people.

Why is it that software companies think that overworking software developers is a net positive?

It lays obligations like "come to work, follow orders, and don't steal your boss's secrets" on the employee, just as it sets obligations like "pay wages and don't overwork people" on employers.

I thought this was going to be an article about overwork, or about charging for what you build as a way of proving your market, or about how employee stock options are often a bad bet.

Not to sound mean but what could possibly motivate you to do otherwise, than lust for power?$300 million and you could be everything to your child but you insist on attempting to overwork?

Overwork in a sentence as a verb

Tomorrow's news today: "Chinese NSA break-in was caused by unpatched code, overwork and corner-cutting after staffing was reduced in the name of limiting access to secure data, sources say."

Working at Google is not defined by the presence of cafeterias, alcoholism is not a way of life, and overwork is no more prevalent than any other Silicon Valley company I've worked at.

So does that mean the employee isn't wrong and his team was abused and given little opportunity to rest after a long pre-launch crunch, and that Zynga staffers only 'slightly' lied about future value of stock to encourage people to overwork themselves?

Is this some survivorship bias or does overwork in startups really lead to shipping sooner and achieving product/market fit faster?It's never been my experience that sustained overwork of software developers leads to actual, measurable productivity increases due to the "two steps forward, one step back" phenomenon.

Overwork definitions

noun

the act of working too much or too long; "he became ill from overwork"

See also: overworking

verb

use too much; "This play has been overworked"

verb

work excessively hard; "he is exploiting the students"

See also: exploit