A growing number of people in their 50s, 60s, and beyond are rejecting traditional retirement and launching successful businesses — often achieving better outcomes than founders in their 30s.
When an eye injury during a pickleball tournament left Brad Robins with a black eye, he and a friend turned the mishap into an opportunity. Before they even returned home to Toronto from Ohio, they had already tapped decades of professional networks to start prototyping protective eyewear for the sport.
“One of your most valuable commodities as you age is your network,” said Robins, now 66. “None of this could have happened in my 20s or 30s. It could not have happened without the perspective and experiences that I’ve had.”
That quick action led to **Kitchen Blockers**, lens-free protective eyewear named for the “kitchen” area beside the pickleball net. Launched in 2025, the product is now sold in 52 countries. Robins, a serial entrepreneur with a background in advertising, sports marketing, and junior hockey team ownership, sees no room for retirement in his future.
“Retirement is not for me,” he said. “As an entrepreneur, how do you just chill? You can never shut off.”
The Data Backs Experience Over Youth
Robins’ success aligns with broader research. A 2020 study by researchers from MIT, Northwestern University, and the University of Pennsylvania found that the average age of successful startup founders is 45. More strikingly, a founder at age 50 is nearly **twice as likely** to achieve a successful exit — such as an acquisition or IPO — compared to one in their 30s.
“The highest success rates in entrepreneurship come from founders in middle age and beyond,” the researchers concluded.
This challenges common stereotypes. When Janine Vanderburg, co-founder of Changing the Narrative, asked multiple AI image generators to depict an entrepreneur, every result showed a young man in a hoodie — evoking a young Mark Zuckerberg. The images not only reinforced ageism but also ignored the data: older founders tend to outperform younger ones thanks to accumulated experience, problem-solving insight, and deep professional networks.
Why Older Adults Are Launching Businesses
Longer lifespans, rising costs for housing, healthcare, and daily expenses, and limited traditional job opportunities due to ageism are pushing many older adults toward entrepreneurship. Others seek purpose, flexibility, and the chance to leverage hard-earned skills.
“When workforce-participation rates are taken into account, more than one-fifth of those in the workforce aged 65 to 74 are starting and running new businesses,” said Donna Kelley, professor of entrepreneurship at Babson College.
Older entrepreneurs often benefit from paid-off mortgages, grown children, and decades of contacts. They also bring resilience forged through past successes and failures.
Real Stories of Reinvention
**Susan Lee Colby**, now 69, founded Grace Creative LA, an advertising agency targeting the 50-and-older market, at age 58 after feeling she had “aged out” of traditional agencies.
“There’s this whole treasure of older talent not being utilized,” she said. “You’re at the height of your abilities, and the world is telling you that you can go off and disappear.”
Colby points out that people over 50 control about 70% of U.S. consumer spending but receive only around 5% of major advertising budgets. Her agency thrives by making older consumers feel truly seen. Her advice is straightforward: just start.
“You bring mastery because of all your experience,” she said. “The idea of retirement really needs to be retired.”
**Liddy Romero**, 45, launched Romero Cookies in 2024 after a divorce prompted her to pursue a long-held dream. Drawing on her parents’ Mexican-American recipes and her background leading a national nonprofit and raising millions in funding, she secured an SBA loan and reached $250,000 in sales in her first year.
“The challenges aren’t the business experience — I have that,” Romero said. “The challenge is, can I keep standing long enough for someone to see me?”
**Angelle Fouther**, 61, co-founded Kindred Communications with her daughter in late 2019, right before the COVID-19 pandemic. The firm supports organizations focused on equity and social change. Fouther encourages others not to wait for perfect conditions.
“Reliance on security is a misnomer,” she said. “You need to live according to your vision.” Age has given her clarity and the confidence that comes from decades of real-world lessons.
A Shift in Mindset
Across these stories, a common theme emerges: experience compounds. Networks deepen. Judgment improves. And the desire for purpose often grows stronger with age.
In a world quick to sideline older talent, these entrepreneurs are proving that starting later can mean starting stronger. Retirement, as many are discovering, is an outdated concept — one that’s being quietly retired by those who choose to keep building.
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