Overworking in a sentence as a noun

"When I read that, my first thought is overbilling, not overworking.

The overworking has nothing to do with changing the world - rather, it runs contrary to it.

And then they ***** at the engineers that they're underpaying/overworking when **** stops working.

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

It can involve giving you some cool perks to keep you healthy on the long run, or it can involve churning through new hires all the time and overworking them while they last.

If you're overworking the **** out of everybody, of course that the older-with-kids guys will underperform.

On one hand you equate youth with innovation, age with stagnation, and on the other you posit that overworking youth for below market wages is simply a cost of doing business.

Introversion/extroversion has little or nothing to do with overworking oneself.

I don't see this guy complaining about how low salaries are in Spain.> "In Europe there is a general belief that work is punishment and that the role of government is to protect people from overworking"No there's not...

If perpetual overworking is necessary for a startup, it's not pushing anything revolutionary enough to be considered changing the world, as the overworking serves entirely to get a product to market faster than someone else, given that someone else can produce an equivalent or superior product.

Overworking definitions

noun

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

See also: overwork