By Rachel
Hartman Published: Dec 4, 2019 4:59 a.m. ET
They have very different reasons for remaining
in the workforce
This article is reprinted
by permission from NextAvenue.org.
More Americans age 65 and
older are shunning traditional retirement and continuing to work, part time or
full time. And 37% of employees say they expect to work past 70, according
to a 2018 Willis Towers Watson survey.
While more employees
are pushing back retirement age, their reasons for staying in the
workforce vary. Here’s a look at five people who are working in their late 60s
or beyond and their varying motivations:
David
and Carol Porter: Recovering from a financial loss
In 2006, David and Carol
Porter sold their mortgage business in Lansing, Mich. and moved to Scottsdale,
Ariz. to begin early retirement. At the time, David had just turned 50, the age
he wanted to be when he retired, and Carol was 55. They planned to live off
their nest egg and travel. But when the stock market plunged in 2008, their
plans fizzled, along with their retirement savings.
“We lost half of our
money,” David says. “If we were to live to be a hundred years old, we didn’t
have enough to fund it.”
To recover their
financial loss, the couple started a travel blog that grew into a business.
Today, at 63 and 68, David and Carol operate Roaming Boomer
Travel Services from their home and have two employees who
work remotely. The setup has enabled them to continue their passion for
traveling while pumping up their retirement savings.
While they’re not fully
retired as planned, the couple’s endeavor has been more successful than either
could have imagined. “We pinch ourselves every day,” David says.
Bill
O’Shea: Taking in new experiences
Tired of the politics
intertwined in the companies where he previously worked, Bill O’Shea, a Cape
Cod, Mass.-based CPA and financial management professional, decided to branch
out on his own. Now 69, he’s a consultant for Patina Solutions, a management
consulting firm.
“As a consultant, I
do not have to get involved in politics,” he says. “I do my job, make
recommendations to my clients and then it is up to them whether they follow my
recommendations or not.”
Through his latest work,
O’Shea has enjoyed being able to interact with clients in assorted cultures and
environments, including Dubai. “I travel all over the world and get to meet
very interesting people,” he says.
A flexible schedule
allows him to set his own pace. “After I finish an assignment, I can usually
take time off to recharge before beginning a new assignment,” says O’Shea.
Lynell
Ross: Living for a purpose
As a certified health and
wellness coach in Auburn, Calif., Lynell Ross, 66, has spent close to 20 years
helping clients improve their lives. She also founded and
manages Zivadream, a website that provides advice from professionals in
the areas of sleep, wellness, relationships and education.
Rather than retiring at
65, Ross decided to continue to operate and run the wellness-based businesses
she worked hard to build up. She plans to keep growing the companies for the
foreseeable future.
“I split my time between
my two businesses,” she says. “It keeps me incredibly busy.”
In her coaching business,
Ross has more than 50 clients and a full-time employee. Her new venture, Zivadream, has two
part-time employees.
“I believe the businesses
give me a purpose in life,” she says. “I have employees who rely on me, and it
gives me something productive to occupy my time.”
What’s more, Ross says,
staying employed is good for her health.
“Working this late in
life keeps me both mentally and physically sharp, since every day I have to
critically think through decisions,” she says.
Robert
Morlot: Working to stay engaged
After a distinguished
career as a management consultant, Robert Morlot stepped away from his
corporate job in New York a few years ago. “I still had the energy and
intellectual capacity to continue in my profession as a management consultant,”
says Morlot, now 70. “I needed the challenge, and I considered my years of
professional experience as an asset that could be leveraged.”
In 2016, he moved to
Tampa, Fla. and created a company with two other seasoned partners: Clearwater
Business Advisers. He’s managing partner there. “Starting a small firm with
other senior workers has been more professionally rewarding than most of the
time I spent in corporate life,” Morlot says.
The chance to remain
engaged is one of the largest benefits, he notes.
“Being engaged in what you love to do keeps
you current,” Morlot says. “I get to use my brain and learn new things, and
work with other people who are very different.”
He finds that extremely
satisfying.
“Age doesn’t matter,” he
says. “I’m immersed in a group of people who get a chance to do what we enjoy.”
Rachel Hartman is a
freelance writer specializing in finance, business, lifestyle and travel
topics. She has written for Parenting, Yahoo Finance and MSN Money, among other
outlets.
This article is reprinted
by permission from NextAvenue.org,
© 2019 Twin Cities Public Television, Inc. All rights reserved.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/5-people-on-why-they-keep-working-past-age-65-2019-12-04
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