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C-Suitework-life balance

The key to work-life balance is loving what you do, says the CEO of $140 million fitness brand: ‘For me, work is not a punishment’

Ashley Lutz
By
Ashley Lutz
Ashley Lutz
Executive Director, Editorial Growth
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Ashley Lutz
By
Ashley Lutz
Ashley Lutz
Executive Director, Editorial Growth
Down Arrow Button Icon
October 30, 2025, 12:36 PM ET
Reinhold Beckmann, Christian Tötzke, CEO Upsolut und Hyrox, and Marco Klewenhagen, CEO Spobis, during the SPOBIS for NestWerk" by Reinhold Beckmann charity event at Restaurant "Der Player"on January 30, 2024 in Hamburg, Germany.
Reinhold Beckmann, Christian Tötzke, CEO Upsolut und Hyrox, and Marco Klewenhagen, CEO Spobis, during the SPOBIS for NestWerk" by Reinhold Beckmann charity event at Restaurant "Der Player"on January 30, 2024 in Hamburg, Germany.Tristar Media/Getty Images

HYROX’s cofounder and CEO Christian Toetzke says the only sustainable “work-life balance” is loving the work so much it becomes life—and he’s built a $140 million fitness-racing brand on that ethos while keeping the company lean and singularly focused on one product.​

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In a recent conversation on Brian Sozzi’s Opening Bid Unfiltered podcast, Toetzke described “balance” as alignment through passion, explaining his energy comes from building HYROX rather than segmenting hours. This view is consistent with his long history of organizing mass-participation events and his bias for speed over bureaucracy.

“I’m a massive believer in work-life balance, but the question is always how we look at this. And, I’m a very privileged person because I don’t consider what I do as work.” Toetzke said. “I do what I really love. It’s also my hobby. For me, work is not a punishment. It’s almost kind of a reward.”

He also highlighted HYROX’s bootstrap mentality and discipline in a single category, which underpins rapid growth without outside funding and positions the format for mainstream moments.​

What HYROX is

HYROX is a standardized global fitness race: Athletes complete eight 1-km runs, each followed by a functional workout station, in large indoor venues so results are comparable worldwide. The brand offers categories from Open and Pro to Doubles and Relay to make the sport accessible while preserving a unified benchmark, helping gym-goers train toward a consistent test across cities and seasons.

​HYROX is projected to generate approximately $140 million in revenue in 2025 through event ticket sales, affiliate gym memberships, and merchandise.

CEO background

Toetzke is a German entrepreneur who built and sold endurance-event businesses before cofounding HYROX in 2017 with Olympic field hockey champion Moritz Fürste, applying lessons from triathlon, cycling, and marathons to a single-product, tech-enabled operating model. He favors senior, autonomous teams, minimal hierarchy, and in-office collaboration, borrowing from big-tech playbooks to accelerate decisions and preserve culture as the race series scales globally.​

Commitment is key

Fortune’s recent reporting shows many high-profile leaders reject “balance” in favor of harmony or all-in commitment—Amazon founder Jeff Bezos prefers “work-life harmony,” Zoom CEO Eric Yuan says “work is life, life is work” with family first in conflicts, and founders like LinkedIn’s Reid Hoffman and Cerebras’ Andrew Feldman argue greatness demands far more than a 40-hour week.

Scale AI cofounder Lucy Guo echoes this sentiment: When work feels like love, traditional balance fades—an idea that closely maps to Toetzke’s framing of the proper role as making intensity sustainable.

​​For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

About the Author
Ashley Lutz
By Ashley LutzExecutive Director, Editorial Growth

Ashley Lutz is an executive editor at Fortune, overseeing the Success, Well, syndication, and social teams. She was previously an editorial leader at Bankrate, The Points Guy, and Business Insider, and a reporter at Bloomberg News. Ashley is a graduate of Ohio University's Scripps School of Journalism.

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