
Training for Success
2025.09.08.
I started training seriously in 2011. I lost weight, dropping from nearly 100 kilos to 75, and the workouts completely transformed my slightly pudgy physique.
Alongside strength training, I began looking for endurance challenges: a 100 km walk, a 70.3 Ironman, running a marathon, swimming, cycling, walking around Lake Balaton. These challenges didn’t just shape me physically—they taught me to think long-term, to manage my energy, to keep focus. On the GR20 trail in Corsica, the mountains taught me humility, and I experienced the motivating power of teammates.
As I kept pushing past my limits and breaking through walls in sports, I noticed I also started seeing the “seemingly impossible” goals in business differently. Regular training didn’t just make me stronger, it made me more resilient to stress. Better looks and greater confidence clearly helped with sales and building relationships.
I both read about it and lived it: physical exercise builds confidence, triggers physiological processes, and activates hormone production that eases anxiety and improves concentration.
I realized that business success isn’t only about company-building techniques—it also requires dissolving internal barriers, managing fears, and shaping our self-image. That’s exactly what happens in sports: you experience that you are capable of more—much more—than you first think.
And sport is far clearer, far more tangible than entrepreneurial life. You have to show up, you have to do it. There’s no half-tax, no shady deals, no matter who your father is or which party you support.
You either do it, or you don’t.
After finishing my corporate struggles, somehow my training also became much looser. I became a retiree at it. I kept working out, doing things—just like in my businesses. But there were no goals, nothing to fight for… and meanwhile, the sense of emptiness kept growing.
In recent months I’ve felt more and more strongly that I need to reignite my entrepreneurial life—and in parallel, I’ve been pushing harder and harder in training. For almost two months now, I’ve been training nearly every day. My friend Norbi Baumann (Mecsek Fitness and Wellness) keeps adding tasks: increasingly complex exercises and heavier weights.
And as I wrestle with these workouts day after day, I can feel myself seeking bigger challenges in my business life as well.
The two—sport and business—have become intertwined. Over the past nearly 15 years, one has continuously supported the other. People told me this so many times before, but experiencing it, living it, gives an incredible amount: physically, mentally, spiritually.
Both fields—sport and entrepreneurship—are ones you can think a lot about, plan for, and talk smartly about. But if you don’t do it, there will be no results.
So—I’ve stepped in. I’m training for success. :)