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How Founders Can Switch Off Pitch Mode and Build Better Personal Relationships

Why some founders turn every personal conversation into a pitch and how they can switch off to build better relationships

by Faith Amonimo
March 16, 2026
in African Startup Ecosystem
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Techsoma Africa

A viral X thread captured a modern tech tension in plain words. A user who goes by Marketing Angel wrote that her first call with a “tech bro” turned into a two-hour monologue about his startup and “new product.” She said she “ran for my dear life” after the call. Other users pushed back, joked about turning the pair into “technical and non-technical founders,” and described the call as a “pitch call” instead of a night call. Another reply defended the founder mindset and asked how a talking stage works if he cannot talk about what he is building.

That small screenshot reflects a bigger trend. Tech now trains people to sell all the time. Founders do it for survival. Employees do it to stay relevant. The problem starts when pitch habits spill into private life and push people away.

Marketing Angel’s post describes a simple mismatch. She expected a two-way conversation. He treated the call like a product demo. She did not complain about ambition. She reacted to the lack of balance and basic curiosity.

The replies show the split in how people read the moment. Some saw an opportunity to build together. Some saw poor social timing. Another person argued that dating a builder means hearing about the work. Everyone talked past the same point. People need consent and context before they launch into work talk.

The market pressure makes everyone sell harder

Founders today operate in an intense, highly competitive funding environment where capital is available but highly concentrated among a small group of companies. This concentration pushes many founders to remain constantly visible, promoting their startups and staying active in investor conversations to stand out. The rapid growth of AI startups has added another layer of competition, drawing significant investor attention and making it harder for companies outside that space to secure funding.

At the same time, the dominance of large investment rounds means fewer startups receive meaningful backing, further increasing pressure on founders to keep pitching and maintaining visibility. Liquidity challenges within the venture ecosystem have also made investors more cautious, reinforcing the sense among founders that they must always be ready to pitch, to explain, and to sell the vision behind what they are building to avoid missing the next funding opportunity.

Social media pushes founders to perform constantly

Many founders now “build in public” to gain early visibility and distribution. The approach can be useful because it helps founders attract users, investors, and early supporters while the product is still evolving. However, it can also blur the line between genuine conversation and constant promotion. Mercury describes building in public as sharing parts of the startup journey while still maintaining boundaries to avoid distraction and pressure. When those boundaries fade, founders may begin to narrate everyday life like a progress update.

That habit does not always stay online. Founders who regularly practice pitching in public spaces can carry the same communication style into calls, hangouts, and even dates. Without realizing it, the conversation can start to sound more like a product explanation than a two-way interaction. The result is not necessarily arrogance, but a shift in focus, from connection to seeking validation and explaining the vision behind the work.

Tech dating culture now mirrors work culture

An article from Business Insider highlighted a similar pattern through personal stories from people working in the tech industry. One tech worker explained that many professionals approach relationships the same way they approach work projects, focusing on productivity, goals, and outcomes while sometimes missing social cues in the process. The stories also showed that the dynamic can work when both partners understand the lifestyle and agree on boundaries. The problem is not ambition. The problem starts when a work mindset takes over moments that require presence, curiosity, and genuine conversation.

Work stress can also shape how people show up in their personal lives. TechCrunch tracked a steady wave of layoffs across 2025 and framed it as part of a longer reset in how companies run. When people work in environments where job security feels uncertain, the pressure to constantly prove value can follow them outside the office. In those situations, conversations can turn into subtle self-promotion, as people feel the need to explain what they do and why it matters in every room they enter.

How founders can talk like humans again

A founder can keep ambition and still respect the moment. That starts with naming the context. If you want to talk about your startup on a personal call, ask first and accept a no. When someone says yes, timebox the topic and return the question. You keep the energy without hijacking the conversation.

Next, treat curiosity as a skill, not a mood. Ask what the other person did today. Ask what they care about this month. Then listen and follow the thread. People remember how you made them feel, and they also remember if you treated them like an audience.

Also, drop pitch language in personal spaces. Founders love words like traction, roadmap, product, and GTM. Those words belong in a work call. In a private conversation, describe the work in plain terms and stop after the core point. You can say, “I built a tool that helps small shops track inventory.” Then you move on.

Finally, protect your own brain. Pitch mode exhausts you. The market already asks founders to sell nonstop. You do not need to extend the performance into your relationships. The best founders learn when to stop talking and start connecting.

The healthier version of hustle looks like balance

The X thread went viral because it felt familiar. Many people now live near tech, or work around tech, and they see the same pattern. Startups reward intensity. The current funding cycle rewards visibility and speed. That does not mean people must accept pitch behaviour everywhere.

A founder who learns boundaries does not lose edge. They gain trust. They also gain range. In a tight market, that range becomes a real advantage.

Faith Amonimo

Faith Amonimo

Moyo Faith Amonimo is a Tech Writer and Newsletter Editor at Techsoma Africa, where she reports on technology and digital...

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