Setting the Business on Autopilot: Why Maintenance Buys Freedom
In my last post, I mentioned that my wife and I are heading to Thailand this December to trade the biting cold for some tropical sun.
But here’s the reality, You can’t truly relax on a beach if you’re worried that the “heart” of your business is about to flatline.
To enjoy that escape, I need to know that the machinery of this blog is running smoothly without me.
The Digital Pacemaker
Just like the “battery” in my chest keeps my physical body in the game, small business habits act as the pacemaker for my professional life.
Lately, that has meant diving into the deep end of website maintenance. I’ve been battling the technical “heart conditions” that keep many business owners awake at night.
JavaScript errors, LCP (Largest Contentful Paint) issues, and those frustrating technical gremlins that slow everything down.
The “Do It Today” Rule in Practice
The tagline of this site is.
Do it today, as tomorrow maybe too late!
I apply this to my website code for one simple reason.
I don’t want to be fixing a “JavaScript error” from a hotel room in Bangkok.
I want to do the boring, proactive maintenance now, so that my business is “fit to play” while I’m away.
The “Do It Today” Rule for Business Health
The tagline of this site is: Do it today, as tomorrow maybe too late! I don’t say that to be dramatic; I say it because ignored technical debt is a silent killer of growth.
When your website slows down or your links break, it’s a digital flatline. Most owners wait for a crisis to fix these things, but the most successful small business habits are built on prevention, not just “fire-fighting.”
The 1-Hour Rule: Protecting Your Business Infrastructure
Whether it’s fixing a JavaScript error or following up on a warm lead, consistency is the secret. This is where the 1-Hour Rule comes in:
3 Hours a Week: Dedicated to “Maintenance” (Technical health and proactive outreach).
The Result: A business that doesn’t just survive, but thrives.
Just like a pacemaker keeps a heart in rhythm, these proactive habits keep your business “fit to play” the long game. If I hadn’t spent those protected hours diving into the technical weeds of this blog, it wouldn’t be here for you to read today.
My three hours a week next week will be to improve the design of Ropho website, as I am aware it needs work.
However that is whole purpose of Ropho don’t wait for perfect, do it now.
Overcoming Technical Hurdles After 60
We don’t need to be Silicon Valley coders to run a successful venture in our second act. We just need to be disciplined. Don’t let a “JavaScript error” or a messy pipeline be the thing that stops your progress.
What’s the one technical or administrative “repair” you’ve been putting off? Don’t wait for a total system failure. Do it today.
If any of this resonates please subscribe for no- nonsense business advice, that works.
We are all living on slightly different terms in our sixties.
But a health challenge doesn’t have to be the end of the road; it’s just a change in the operating manual for your active lifestyle.
I’d love to hear from you: What “repairs” or challenges have you had to overcome?
Sharing these stories isn’t about complaining, it’s about showing others that with the right mindset, you can stay strong, active, and very much in the game.
Looking Ahead: Escaping the Cold
The reason I’m so disciplined with these habits isn’t just about health for health’s sake. It’s about what that health allows us to do.
My wife and I are planning a trip to Thailand this December to escape the winter cold. To make that happen, to truly switch off and enjoy the heat, I need both my physical “battery” and my business engine to be in top shape.
Tomorrow, I’m going to share the second half of this equation:
The Business “Pacemaker.” I’ll be diving into how I’ve been “fixing the machinery” of this blog (JavaScript, LCP, and all the technical gremlins) to ensure the business can run smoothly while I’m on a beach in Thailand.
Keep an eye out for tomorrow’s post on how a few small habits today buy you the freedom of tomorrow.
When people talk about strength training after 60, the conversation often becomes unnecessarily polarised.
It’s usually framed as a choice between extremes: go to the gym or train at home.
That may change for me in the future. With your help, I quite like the idea of reviewing gyms around the country and exploring which ones actually work best for us older members, not just in theory, but in reality.
For now, though, because of my current lifestyle and where my fitness level is, I train at home.
I aim for 45 minutes to an hour of strength training, three times a week.
To look after my cardio, I try to walk 5,000 to 8,000 steps a day.
Something I’ll be honest about and say I still struggle with, largely because I spend far too much time at my laptop.
So I break it down.
Two 15-minute walks with Poppy, now a little slower than they once were, as she’s 13, and one 30-minute brisk walk to keep my heart rate up.
Nothing extreme, nothing complicated, just what fits my life, and what I can repeat.
Bands or Dumbbells
resistance bands or
dumbbells or
nothing at all because it feels too risky
The reality is far simpler.
I use both resistance bands and dumbbells, for different reasons, and at different times.
Not to chase numbers, not to impress anyone, but to stay strong, capable, and injury-free.
What Strength Really Means After 60
Strength isn’t about lifting the heaviest weight possible.
It’s about:
maintaining muscle mass
protecting joints
staying confident in everyday movement
slowing the gradual loss of strength that comes with age
After 60, the goal shifts from maximising performance to preserving capability.
That’s where choosing the right tool (bands or weights) matters.
Why Resistance Bands Are So Joint-Friendly
Resistance bands are often underestimated, but they’re incredibly useful.
What Bands Do Well
Provide constant tension through the movement
Reduce stress at vulnerable joint positions
Encourage controlled, slower movement
Allow easy adjustment without heavy loading
For shoulders, elbows, knees and hips — especially on days when things feel a bit stiff — bands are ideal.
They’re also excellent for:
warm-ups
mobility-focused strength
higher-rep, lower-strain work
This is why bands are a cornerstone of my routine.
Where Dumbbells Come In
Resistance bands are excellent, but they do have limitations.
If your goal includes maintaining or increasing muscle mass, some external load is helpful.
That’s where dumbbells earn their place.
What Dumbbells Do Better
Provide clear, measurable load
Stimulate muscle growth more effectively
Help maintain bone density
Improve real-world strength for lifting and carrying
Used sensibly, dumbbells support strength in a way bands alone sometimes can’t.
The key word is sensibly.
The Joint Question (This Is the Important Bit)
The concern many people have with dumbbells is joint strain, and that concern is valid if they’re used poorly.
In my experience, joints tolerate dumbbells well when:
weights are moderate
movements are controlled
ranges of motion are pain-free
ego is left out of it
Heavy, fast, sloppy reps are the problem, not the dumbbells themselves.
How I Combine Bands and Dumbbells
I don’t overthink it.
A typical approach looks like this:
Resistance Bands
Shoulder work
Back and posture exercises
Warm-ups and recovery days
Higher reps, lower strain
Dumbbells
Leg work (squats, step-ups, lunges)
Chest and arm strength
Controlled compound movements
Lower reps, manageable weight
Both serve a purpose. Neither needs to dominate.
Progress Without Punishment
Improving muscle mass after 60 doesn’t mean:
training every day
lifting heavy
pushing through pain
It means:
consistency
gradual progression
listening to joints as much as muscles
Some weeks bands do more work, some weeks dumbbells do.
That flexibility is what keeps me training, and not injured.
How This Fits the 1-Hour Rule
This approach works because it’s repeatable.
Two or three one-hour sessions a week. Some band work. Some dumbbell work. Always controlled.
Just like business, strength improves when you:
stop chasing extremes
focus on what you can sustain
make small, deliberate improvements
Keep It Sensible
If there’s one message worth holding onto, it’s this:
You don’t choose between bands or dumbbells. You choose what supports your body now, and adjust as needed.
Strength after 60 should feel:
supportive
confidence-building
and sustainable
That’s what keeps you moving, today and long term.
Coming up next week, the actual workout plan I try to follow as strictly as I can, complete with pics of me doing some of the exercises, with the resistance bands I use.
Everyone’s health situation is different. This content reflects personal experience and general guidance, not medical advice. If you have existing conditions or concerns, it’s always sensible to check with your GP or a qualified professional before changing exercise routines.
When a quote doesn’t land, most of us default to the same explanation.
“They wanted it cheaper.”
It’s comforting. It lets us move on quickly. And most of the time, it’s wrong.
In reality, price is rarely the real reason a customer walks away. More often, the issue is perceived value, or more accurately, how clearly that value was understood.
A Real Example From the Weekend
This post was partly inspired by a conversation I had at the weekend with a former client.
They ran a small electrical contracting business that, on paper, should have been doing well, but wasn’t growing.
The company operated in two very different markets.
Domestic work, dealing directly with homeowners
Contract work, supplying building contractors in the luxury housing and commercial sectors
The two partners worked extremely hard.
They had:
Three permanently employed electricians
A network of self-employed electricians and labourers
Both partners managing jobs and working on the tools
Both partners preparing quotes for their respective sectors
Despite all that effort, their win rate was poor.
As competition increased, margins tightened and frustration grew. They were seriously considering letting staff go and retreating back to small domestic jobs, essentially going back to where they’d started.
The Problem Wasn’t Effort, Or Price
When we analysed the business properly, there were several issues.
But one thing stood out immediately.
Very little time was being spent on building value into their quotations.
Quotes were technically accurate. Prices were competitive. But they told the customer almost nothing about why this business was the right choice.
Like many owners, they were:
Quoting late at night
Rushing between jobs
Treating quotes as admin rather than sales tools
Price was left to do all the work.
Stepping Back for One Hour Changed Everything
This is where the 1-Hour Rule came in.
Rather than chasing more work or cutting prices, we agreed on something much simpler:
One protected hour, three times a week, focused purely on quotations.
During that hour, they:
Reviewed lost quotes without emotion
Asked what risks the customer was really trying to avoid
Added clarity around experience, process and reliability
Explained how problems would be handled, not just what would be installed
Benefits: Antioxidants, enjoyment matters Ideas: A small evening treat, not mindless snacking
🧀 Cheese (in moderation)
Benefits: Calcium, flavour, satisfaction Ideas: Grated over meals rather than eaten in chunks
🥣 Full-Fat Greek Yoghurt
Benefits: Filling, probiotic Ideas: Dessert alternative with berries or nuts
Portion Control — The Simple Rule
You don’t need scales or calorie counting.
Rule of thumb: 👍 A thumb-sized portion = roughly one serving of fats.
That might be:
a drizzle of olive oil
a small handful of nuts
half an avocado
a knob of cheese
Fats are calorie-dense, but they’re also satiating. Get the portion right and they help control appetite rather than sabotage it.
How This Fits With Movement and Strength
Healthy fats and movement work together.
If you’re:
walking more
using resistance bands
doing light strength work
…your body needs fats to:
recover properly
reduce inflammation
keep joints comfortable
This isn’t about dieting. It’s about fueling a body you still expect to work well.
The ROPHO View on Food
Food after 60 shouldn’t be:
joyless
restrictive
or built on fear
It should support:
strength
energy
enjoyment
longevity
Healthy fats tick all four, when used sensibly.
A Gentle Reminder
Everyone’s health situation is different. The information shared here is based on personal experience and general guidance, not medical advice.
If you have an existing health condition, are recovering from illness or injury, or are unsure what’s appropriate for you, it’s always sensible to speak with your GP or a qualified health professional before making changes to your diet or exercise routine.
This post forms part of the ROPHO approach — practical habits that support energy, health and longevity after 60. If this resonates, subscribe for simple, no-nonsense guidance on living and working well later in life.