📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Five Ways Today's Entrepreneur Can Stay Fighting Fit The smart entrepreneur knows that success comes in large part from being physically fit and mentally alert

By Neil Petch

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Middle East, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Shutterstock

Despite the general acceptance in the modern age that a healthy body leads to a healthy mind, there are still many entrepreneurs out there who fail to draw the link between physical and mental fitness and business success. If you ask me, keeping our health and wellbeing in check is just as important as balancing the books when it comes to making your business a successful one.

Unfortunately, many across the UAE do not share my viewpoint. Despite the incredible business success stories that occur on a daily basis in the Emirates, we are a society that, on the whole, drastically neglects its health. The numbers tell the story: over half the population is overweight, 20% are diabetic, and 40% have high blood pressure.

Today's entrepreneur indeed does not have it easy when it comes to staying fit. Poor nutrition, our sedentary lifestyles, high stress, and unhealthy habits such as smoking: do these describe you? Well, it is many of us. But the smart entrepreneur knows that success comes in large part from being physically fit and mentally alert, and the two go hand-in-hand. The smart entrepreneur therefore has a plan or regimen for their health– just as they do for their business.

Let's now take a look at how you can keep fit in mind and body by looking at five essential health habits that many entrepreneurs the world over –including some famous names you will no doubt recognize– swear by.

1. They train in intervals

As any entrepreneur will testify, there simply aren't enough hours in the day. When you work outside the shackles of the 9 to 5, your own leisure time is much less clearly defined, making setting aside time for regular activities –like working out– particularly difficult. A two-hour trip to the gym? No chance. A short workout that actually has more benefit than those long gym visits? That works.

It's called interval training, and it's all about rotating between a short, high-intensity period of exercise, followed by a short rest. And it can be virtually any type of activity, from running to weights to swimming to boxing– to a combination of different activities. And it can be over and done with in as little as 25 minutes. You push yourself very hard during that time, and yes, it is painful, but the effect is phenomenal, as the research shows.

The American Journal of Cardiovascular Disease, for example, recently found that high intensity exercise intervals of one-to-four minutes –followed by short periods of recovery time– are more effective than continuous moderate-intensity exercise when it comes blood pressure, cardiorespiratory fitness and insulin sensitivity. Another study by researchers at McMaster University in Canada revealed that three 20-minute sessions of interval training a week provide the same benefits as 10 hours of steady exercise over a two-week period.

2. They eat right

Of course, we're all well aware that what we put in our bodies has a huge bearing on our performance levels, but how many of us really make what we eat a top priority? Very few, actually. Eating right is not about crash dieting or calorie counting, but rather about avoiding bad foods. It has to be said that this is particularly hard to do with a busy schedule, when most of the "quick and easy" foods we have access to are packed with all the things our bodies hate.

For many entrepreneurs –and rumor has it that this includes Mark Zuckerberg– eating Paleo is the answer. Paleo essentially means eating as our ancestors did, getting a good mix of meats, vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds, eggs, natural fats and healthy oils– and avoiding pretty much everything else.

Getting your diet right is without a doubt one of the most important things you can do for your overall health, and in turn, your business. As well as helping you look and feel great, Paleo eating –rich in Omega 3 and other vital nutrients– is proven to aid concentration, improve brain function, and help keep overall energy levels in balance. If Paleo is not an essential addition to the entrepreneur's toolkit, I don't know what is.

3. They meditate

I know many of you out there will see meditation solely as the pastime of new-age hippies and uber-cool hipsters, but I'm telling you, an increasing number of people throughout the business world are doing it and they are most certainly seeing results.

Aside from the fact that the rest the brain experiences during meditation is equivalent to that of the deepest sleep –meaning, at the very least, you'll get an energy-boost from it– there are also many incredible changes occurring in the brain throughout the process.

For example, regular meditation has been shown to numb the link between the medial prefrontal cortex (which allows us to look at things from a rational or logical perspective and moderates our emotional responses) and the body's reaction to outside stimuli. What this does is it actually leads to a more rational outlook and a decrease in stress levels– ideal when your days are spent making sink or swim business decisions.

But that's not the only way meditation can give our brain a boost. It was also recently shown by the US National Library of Medicine to aid the areas of the brain that control learning, cognition, emotional regulation, empathy, and compassion, while shrinking the areas affecting anxiety, stress and fear. That sounds like the perfect recipe for successful entrepreneurial decision-making.

4. They get plenty of sleep

Getting a good night's sleep affects our emotional state, how we think, and our likelihood of developing diseases. In fact, around 90% of people who suffer from chronic lack of sleep are also thought to have another health disorder, ranging from diabetes through to heart disease.

Now what about on the cognitive front in particular? This one is important, and where it gets interesting. Our brain cells produce a waste by-product as we use them throughout the day, which is then flushed to the liver for elimination by cerebrospinal fluid. When we sleep, our brain's neurons shrink by half, making the fluid channels wider and speeding up the whole process, which is exactly why we awake feeling refreshed and alert after a quality night's kip.

Yes, you need sleep to make the right business decisions.

But don't just take my word for it. One of today's most prominent entrepreneurs, Arianna Huffington of The Huffington Post, has plenty to say on the matter. Huffington cites quality sleep as a key factor in her success and urges others in the business world to take it more seriously, as creativity, ingenuity, confidence, leadership and decision-making can all be enhanced simply by sleeping more.

5. Beyond business

Without a doubt, the healthier we are, the more focused and productive we are, and therefore the more consistently we are able to perform at the highest possible level. So if we are talking about why an entrepreneur should stay fit, therein lies the case for it.

But of course I will also remind you that there is more to life than business success, and a routine that gives us the best chance of maintaining a healthy mind and body is something all of us of any age should have, entrepreneur or not.

In other words, you aren't supposed to be healthy because you want to achieve a business goal or some other goal. You are simply supposed to be healthy. Full stop. And while it seems that this is becoming a bigger and bigger challenge in today's world, small steps can add up to big gains very quickly. So get to it.

Neil Petch

Founder and Chairman, Virtugroup

Neil Petch actively assists over 300 entrepreneurs and startups to conceive, plan, and build their businesses on a monthly basis.

After launching Virtuzone as the first private company formation business in the region over 10 years ago, Neil has led the company to set up more than 16,000 businesses, making it the largest, fastest-growing and best-known setup operator in the Middle East.

As the chairman of the holding company, Virtugroup, Neil also leads VirtuVest, an in-house angel investment vehicle; Virtuzone Mainland, a provider of directorship services, corporate sponsorship and facilitator of local Dubai and Abu Dhabi company setups; and Next Generation Equity, a citizenship-by-investment firm. Virtugroup has invested in and supported the growth of multiple companies and delivered passports in over 10 different jurisdictions. Virtugroup also enjoys partnerships with Dubai FDI, the Chamber of Commerce, Dubai Holdings (ARN), VFS, Regus, Etisalat, KPMG, Aramex and Beehive, and has received awards from Arabian Business and Entrepreneur Magazine, among others.

In addition to starting up businesses, Neil has held leadership roles in several companies. He helped establish ITP, the largest media publishing house in the Gulf, which he oversaw growing from two to 600 employees. At ITP, he spearheaded the launch of over 60 digital and print titles, including Time Out, Harper’s Bazaar, Arabian Business, Ahlan and Grazia.

As Managing Director of ENG Media, Neil launched the Coast FM radio station and numerous magazines, including MediaWeek. For the last seven years, Neil has also served as Chairman of GMG, the world’s first interbank financial brokerage based out of Dubai, with offices in DIFC and London. Due to his extensive knowledge and expertise, Neil has been appointed a member of the ‘Ease of Banking’ panel organised by the Chamber of Commerce.

Having lived in over a dozen countries and with a career spanning over 25 years in the UAE, Neil has the ability to merge astute cultural insight with fresh thinking, leveraging his seasoned business acumen, intuition and black book to repeatedly bring ideas to living, breathing success stories.

Neil has appeared in BBC (Dubai Dreams) and ITV (Piers Morgan) features on Dubai, as well as programmes on BBC World and Sky. He has participated as a judge on the radio programme Falcons’ Lair, an entrepreneurship reality show loosely based on the BBC production Dragons’ Den, as well as a similar TV competition hosted by MAD Talks. He now hosts Starting Up on Dubai Eye 103.8FM, the only national weekly show for the startup community in the world’s startup capital.

Neil also lends his in-depth market insight to fellow entrepreneurs and helps cultivate Public Private Partnerships as a Task Force Member of the Advisory Council, a coalition of key decision-makers and prominent movers of the UAE business landscape, led by EMIR and the Ministry of Economy.

He is also a regular speaker, panelist, and economic commentator, specialising in the SME sector.

Business News

'Everyone Is in Complete Shock': A 500-Person Tesla Team Found Out 'in the Middle of the Night' Their Charger Division Was Laid Off

Other car companies that use the technology, such as General Motors and Ford, also weren't expecting the news, according to reports.

Entrepreneurs

Big Goals, Bold Choices: Katrina Mankani, Managing Director And Director Of Positive Education, Fortes Education

"Positive education isn't just an educational philosophy; it's a revolution we're leading at Fortes Education. Think of it as educating the head, heart, and hands."

Living

61 Books Elon Musk Thinks You Should Read

The billionaire entrepreneur is also a prolific reader.

Side Hustle

He Started a Salty Backyard Side Hustle That Out-Earned His Full-Time Job and Now Makes Over $1 Million a Year: 'Take the Leap'

In 2011, Kyle Needham turned his passion for oysters into a business that saw consistent monthly revenue "right away."

Business News

Meta Spent $27.1 Million on 'Other Compensation' for Mark Zuckerberg in 2022 Including Security Costs and Private Plane

While the Meta CEO is paid a humble annual salary of $1, his security costs have racked up quite a tab.

Growth Strategies

Saudi Arabia's Economic Transformation: Educating For A Diversified Future

Recognizing that a grand future needs solid foundations, Vision 2030 places education at its core.