There’s a dark side to startups, and it haunts 30% of the world’s most brilliant people
Austen Heinz
Austen Heinz

(Mike Alfred)
Austen Heinz taking a photo at Del Mar.

The smile on Austen Heinz's face was unguarded and brief. It was the involuntary, small upturn of the corners the mouth that escapes when something genuinely makes you happy.

For Heinz, it was seeing the surfers at Del Mar. He raised his phone to snap a photo for a friend.

Mike Alfred saw the grin on his face, so he took his own photo of his friend's happiness.

Heinz’s long, curly brown hair is whipping back in the wind secured only by a green San Francisco hat. A black North Face vest, one he’s wearing in most photographs, covers his dress shirt.

“He smiled for a brief moment, and it was so beautiful,” Alfred said. "That's the last picture I have of him smiling."

Heinz’s love of surfing with his sister, Jean, would be noted in his obituary, published a month later.

The founder and CEO of Cambrian Genomics took his own life May 24, two weeks after the trip to Del Mar. He was 31.

When news slowly spread on Twitter that Heinz had died by suicide, many were crushed and surprised.

"That was a reminder to me that you can’t predict which founders are struggling," said Y Combinator president Sam Altman.

There are other founders who have followed this path before. There was Aaron Swartz, the Reddit cofounder who faced hacking charges that many thought were unfounded and could have landed him in jail for decades. He ended his life shortly after. There was Jody Sherman, one of three Las Vegas entrepreneurs associated with the Downtown tech project, who shot himself in early 2013. There was Ilya Zhitomirskiy, who founded would-be Facebook competitor Diaspora; both he and his website are now gone.

These founder suicides are just the extreme outliers of the tech industry's quiet battle with depression, exacerbated by the stress of starting a company and trying to change the world. It's a problem that almost nobody wants to talk about. But the conversations are starting to happen.

Tech's dark secret

A recent study by Dr. Michael Freeman, a clinical professor at UCSF and an entrepreneur as well, was one of the first of its kind to link higher rates of mental health issues to entrepreneurship.

Of the 242 entrepreneurs surveyed, 49% reported having a mental-health condition. Depression was the No. 1 reported condition among them and was present in 30% of all entrepreneurs, followed by ADHD (29%) and anxiety problems (27%). That's a much higher percentage than the US population at large, where only about 7% identify as depressed.

More surprising was the incidence of mental health in the families of entrepreneurs: 72% said they either had mental-health problems themselves or in their immediate family.