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Exercising options: CEOs go to lengths to squeeze in workouts while traveling.


As chief executive of Mastercraft, the luxury powerboat builder based in Tennessee, John Dorton travels about 100 days a year, to boat shows and races near and far. Wherever the job takes him, Dorton, a self-avowed fitness buff, manages to squeeze in a workout. On a recent trip to the Amazon, of all places, he headed out for a run. "I didn't realize," he says, "that jaguars were watching my every move."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

While Dorton's jog through the jungle (albeit on a paved road) may sound extreme, it's hardly uncommon for CEOs to take pains Verb 1. take pains - try very hard to do something
be at pains

endeavor, endeavour, strive - attempt by employing effort; "we endeavor to make our customers happy"
 to keep up their exercise regimens on the road. In fact, many say, it's just as important, if not more so, to work out regularly while traveling than while staying at home. Exercise helps combat jet lag jet lag

Period of adjustment of biological rhythm after moving from one time zone to another, experienced as fatigue and lowered efficiency. It reflects a delay in the synchronization of changes in the level of blood cortisol, the major steroid produced by the adrenal cortex
, reinvigorating you for a full day of meetings and site visits that begin mere hours after you touch down from an exhausting flight. It's also the perfect way to work off the elaborate meals served at ceremonial dinners in, say, Asia or Europe, where it can be culturally insensitive to skip a course or two. (Dessert is another story: Many CEOs avoid it no matter what.)

Chief executives have become so exercise-conscious that some have started choosing hotels to stay in based on how well-equipped their gyms are, a trend that has raised the standard far above the old, musty exercise room in the basement (see sidebar, right). "I look for a hotel that has at least an adequate gym," says Dorothy Herman, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
. "In Florida, I stay at The Breakers in Palm Beach, which has facilities on site. I try to work out at three to four times a week; sometimes as much as six depending on my schedule. My favorite My Favorite is an independent synthpop band from Long Island, New York. They released two CDs: Love at Absolute Zero and Happiest Days of Our Lives. My Favorite broke up on September 14, 2005, when singer Andrea Vaughn left the band.  exercise is a spin class. I've also done Pilates classes on vacation in St. Martens."

Similarly, Roger Staubach Roger Thomas Staubach (born February 5, 1942 in Cincinnati, Ohio) is a businessman, Heisman Trophy winner and former American professional football player where he was the quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys for most of the 1970s during their reign as America's Team. , the Hall of Fame quarterback who is CEO of The Staubach Company, a Dallas-based global real estate firm, makes a point of staying in the same place each time he visits a city for work. In New York, he prefers the University Club. "I'm somewhat picky pick·y  
adj. pick·i·er, pick·i·est Informal
Excessively meticulous; fussy.


picky
Adjective

[pickier, pickiest] Brit, Austral & NZ
 about what equipment I use and I prefer equipment I'm familiar with," says Staubach, 62. "I usually work out at 6 a.m. and have our meetings at around 8 a.m. Morning is best for most people, but later in the day is good if you can't do a morning routine."

Herman, a youthful-looking 50 years old, is so fitness-conscious that she's hired personal trainers in multiple locations. "One for my New York apartment, one for my home on Long Island and the third for the office in the Hamptons," she says.

Trying to get your workout in while traveling overseas can be more of an adventure. "If you're in a Sofitel-type hotel in Europe, you can find good on-site equipment," says Bill Gossman, CEO of Seattle-based Revenue Science, a company that provides behavioral targeting Delivering ads based on a user's habits. If a customer registers with an e-commerce site to make a purchase, those sales along with the user's site navigation history are often stored and analyzed to make targeted offers the next time.  services that help Web advertisers determine their audiences. "I love the Hotel Montgomery in Brussels, but you'll be on your own in terms of exercise." And if you step out for a run in a foreign city, there's always the risk of getting lost and showing up late to or missing that crucial meeting you flew across the world to attend. Tokyo, in particular, Gossman says, is a labyrinth that's easy to get lost in.

There's also the inconvenience of having to deal with sweaty workout clothes. Some CEOs say they hang them up over the shower rod and hope they dry before it's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a  to pack up. If not, they toss their damp togs into a plastic laundry bag and wash them when they get home. A piece of advice: Wear Lycra instead of cotton, says Mastercraft's Dorton. It dries faster.

What's driving chief executives to hit the exercise room and the running trail with such ardor ar·dor  
n.
1. Fiery intensity of feeling. See Synonyms at passion.

2. Strong enthusiasm or devotion; zeal: "The dazzling conquest of Mexico gave a new impulse to the ardor of discovery" 
? In large part, it's the stress relief that a hard workout provides. "I would even use the word therapeutic," says Wally Parker, president of New York-based KeySpan Energy Delivery, who at age 55 is a svelte 5-foot-10 and 170 pounds. "When I'm on the road and I have a meeting a few blocks away, I'll walk there instead of taking a cab. In the past, I would sometimes bring shorts and sneakers sneakers
Noun, pl

US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles

sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl 
 when I traveled. Now, I always have them with me. Even if it's just an overnight trip, I can squeeze in 45 minutes of exercise before breakfast."

For serious athletes of any kind, corporate executives or not, once your body gets accustomed to daily workouts, it can be difficult physically as well as mentally to taper off Verb 1. taper off - end weakly; "The music just petered out--there was no proper ending"
fizzle, fizzle out, peter out

discontinue - come to or be at an end; "the support from our sponsoring agency will discontinue after March 31"

2.
. "Being an athlete in school, keeping fit was something I had to do," says Dorton, 42, a competitive water skier in college. As an adult, he says, "I realized that I was susceptible to colds and the like when I stopped working out."

So Dorton, who used to be the CEO of a company that sold equipment to gyms, went back to working out on a daily basis. His regimen includes a 30-minute aerobic workout, such as treadmill running or recumbent recumbent /re·cum·bent/ (re-kum´bent) lying down.

re·cum·bent
adj.
Lying down, especially in a position of comfort; reclining.
 cycling, five days a week. He also does periodic anaerobic anaerobic /an·aer·o·bic/ (an?ah-ro´bik)
1. lacking molecular oxygen.

2. growing, living, or occurring in the absence of molecular oxygen; pertaining to an anaerobe.
 training, like wind sprints, to get in shape for ski races and other competitions. On top of that, he lifts weights twice a week.

Another theory as to why CEOs can be such fitness fanatics is that, almost without fail, they're intense, highly motivated individuals who seldom shy away from Verb 1. shy away from - avoid having to deal with some unpleasant task; "I shy away from this task"
avoid - stay clear from; keep away from; keep out of the way of someone or something; "Her former friends now avoid her"
 a challenge. As coordinator of the adult fitness/cardiac rehabilitation program Noun 1. rehabilitation program - a program for restoring someone to good health
program, programme - a system of projects or services intended to meet a public need; "he proposed an elaborate program of public works"; "working mothers rely on the day care
 at Ball State University, that's what Leonard Kaminsky has found. "I would say that if someone has achieved a high level of success in the business world, that person would be driven to achieve at the highest level," says Kaminsky. "It wouldn't matter what the endeavor was."

For Gossman, of Revenue Science, "The Impossible Dream" could be his theme song--in particular, the line about climbing every mountain. After his weight ballooned from 230 to 300 pounds, Gossman, now 42, set out on an intense fitness campaign. He lost 90 pounds in seven months and planned to climb the 14,411-foot peak of Washington's Mount Rainier earlier this year, where, he notes, six hikers had already been killed since the start of the year.

"The weekend I was scheduled to go up is when the second pair who were killed were being brought down," he says. "I had to cancel my trip due to a business meeting I had in California. My wife was relieved I didn't go up. I was disappointed." Not every CEO has to climb a mountain, but it's the rare one who chooses--or can afford not--to keep fit.

RELATED ARTICLE: Staying Fit On the Road

To find a hotel offering top-notch fitness facilities, try Fit For Business. The company's Web site offers reviews of hotels in cities around the world, covering details such as the quantity of cardio equipment, the best times for pick-up basketball and the length of the lap pool.

Unlike with other travel databases, hotels cannot pay to be endorsed by Fit For Business. Use of the online database is free. For a $60 membership fee, you receive various benefits, like discounts on spa treatments and complimentary use of athletic clubs that would otherwise charge a separate fee.

Below is a sampling of recommended hotels from www.fitforbusiness.com:

New York

Le Parker Meridien Hotel

118 West 57th Street

www.parkermeridien.com

Newly renovated 17,000-square-foot facility; strength-training center, racquetball racquetball, sport played indoors by two or four players, combining elements of court handball and such racket games as squash racquets. It is played on a standard handball court 40 ft (12.2 m) long, 20 ft (6. , enclosed rooftop pool.

Los Angeles

Los Angeles Athletic Club Los Angeles Athletic Club (LAAC) is an athletic club in Los Angeles, California, USA. It awards the John R. Wooden Award to the outstanding men's and women's college basketball player of each year.  Hotel

431 West 7th Street

www.laac.com

Full-service 80,000-square-foot private athletic club; swimming, basketball, squash, racquetball, handball handball

Any of a variety games in which a small rubber ball is struck against a wall with the hand or fist. It can be played in a three- or four-walled court or against a single wall by two or four players (in singles or doubles games, respectively).
, yoga.

Shanghai

Portman Ritz-Carlton

1376 Nanjing Xi Lu

www.ritzcarlton.com/hotels/shanghai/

One of the largest health clubs in Shanghai, featuring a pool, complete gym, tennis, squash and racquetball courts.

Source: Fit For Business

RELATED ARTICLE: Corporate Muscle

At home or on the road, Bill Gossman, CEO of Revenue Science, sticks to the following workout schedule:

Monday

Strength training (upper body, abs); light cardio

Tuesday

Full cardio--1 hour (running, rowing, Versa Versa Versatile System Architecture (Genrad)  Climber, etc.)

Wednesday

Strength training (lower body, abs); light cardio

Thursday

Full cardio--1 hour

Friday

Strength training (upper body--different muscle groups from Monday's workout)

Saturday and Sunday

Off

If training for marathon, Thursday, off; Sunday, long run (1.5 to '3 hours)
COPYRIGHT 2004 Chief Executive Publishing
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Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:EXECUTIVE LIFE
Author:Viuker, Steve
Publication:Chief Executive (U.S.)
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:1411
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