Structure your fitness plan to achieve more progress with less effort or faster results for the same effort, as research shows planned training is more effective than unplanned.
Implement a specific training plan to overcome the two main reasons people fail to get results: lack of adherence and insufficient progressive overload.
Create a specific workout plan before entering the gym to reduce time spent, increase productivity, and avoid wasted effort, similar to using a grocery list.
Maintain a simple tracking system, like a notebook, to record previous workouts and ensure progressive overload by doing “a little bit more the next time,” which almost guarantees success.
Clearly identify your training goal by either arbitrarily picking one (e.g., run a 5K, lose 10 pounds) or by using a fitness testing protocol to identify your weakest area and making that your priority.
Apply the SMART framework (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic/Relevant, Timely) to set effective training goals, ensuring they are clear, quantifiable, achievable, and time-bound.
When setting realistic goals, consider your age, experience, and available time, then reduce the target by 10% to make it slightly less lofty and prevent early quitting due to perceived unattainability.
For long-term goals (e.g., 2% body fat loss in a year), break them down into smaller, timely intermediate goals (e.g., 0.5% per quarter) to maintain motivation and ensure you’re on track.
Reflect on your personal history and current life circumstances to identify “defenders” (e.g., past injuries, work stress, travel, frequent illness) that could prevent you from reaching your training goals.
Create your training program by addressing your specific past points of failure (e.g., lack of interest, inconvenient gym location) rather than adopting a generic plan, to achieve results faster.
Integrate your fitness program around life’s non-negotiable commitments (e.g., children, job) rather than against them, accepting that life will always take precedence.
Distribute 10 total points across four life quadrants (Business, Relationships, Fitness, Recovery) to visualize and prioritize where your energy, time, and focus are currently going.
Ensure your recovery allocation in the Quadrant System is at least half of your fitness allocation, or a minimum of 20% of your total points, encompassing personal time, meditation, and sleep.
If your current Quadrant System allocation is insufficient for your training goals, either modify the goal or its timeline to be more realistic, or reallocate points in your quadrant.
When altering your quadrant allocation, identify very specific, measurable life actions (e.g., “I promise to not work after 7 p.m. Thursday through Sunday”) that will enable the new distribution of energy.
Create one or two “Drop Everything and [Action]” non-negotiable rules (e.g., “Drop everything and train,” “Drop everything and read”) to ensure consistent dedication to chosen priorities.
Physically display your Quadrant System (e.g., phone background, near workstation) and share it with an accountability partner (e.g., spouse, training partner) to serve as a constant reminder and maintain commitment.
Ensure your fitness program enhances your life and brings joy, rather than becoming so rigid that it detracts from other valuable experiences and social connections.
Before starting a new program, critically review it to identify potential points of failure (e.g., disliking an exercise, aggressive schedule) and proactively develop solutions to address them.
After designing your program, take a 12-hour break and then review it with fresh eyes to catch potential issues or areas for improvement before committing.
Create a physical calendar and mark all non-negotiable life events (deadlines, holidays, travel, family commitments) to realistically plan your training schedule around them.
Conservatively estimate the number of days per week and total minutes per workout you can realistically commit, including travel and transition time, to avoid setting an unsustainable schedule.
Choose exercises that provide a reasonable balance across movement patterns, muscle groups, and body sides throughout the entire week, rather than trying to achieve balance within every single workout.
Select exercises you enjoy and have easy access to (e.g., home equipment if a gym is inconvenient) to create freedom and increase adherence within your training program.
Ensure your exercise selection includes movements that specifically target any muscle group or movement pattern you wish to improve, checking this box at least once a week.
Develop a clear strategy for progressing your chosen exercises (e.g., increasing complexity, repetitions, or time under tension for bodyweight movements) to ensure continuous improvement.
Before progressing, ensure you can execute an exercise perfectly with assistance (e.g., holding onto a bench for a squat) to establish proper form and reduce injury risk.
After mastering an exercise with assistance, progress to performing it well using only your body weight before adding external load.
Ensure you can perform an exercise with an added eccentric load, lowering the weight under control and maintaining perfect position, before moving to the next progression.
Demonstrate control by holding the bottom position of a movement isometrically before adding the concentric portion, especially to avoid injury in vulnerable positions.
Only introduce speed and training to fatigue (especially with moderate to high loads) after mastering the previous steps of controlled movement with assistance, bodyweight, eccentric load, and isometric holds.
Structure your workouts by performing the most important exercises or training types first, as this ensures they receive adequate focus and energy.
Schedule your most important workouts on the days of the week when you typically have the most consistent schedule and highest energy levels.
Place your most demanding or important workouts on days when you anticipate the least friction (best schedule, highest energy), and easier, more enjoyable sessions on days with higher potential friction.
Don’t feel restricted to a seven-day week for your training schedule; consider a seven or nine-day cycle if it better accommodates your life and energy patterns.
Choose appropriate repetition ranges, total sets, and intensity levels that align with the specific physiological adaptation (e.g., strength, hypertrophy, endurance) you are targeting.
Increase training intensity by approximately 3% per week, and volume by 5-7% per week (never exceeding 10% weekly) to ensure continuous, sustainable progressive overload.
For lifting, calculate total weekly repetitions (reps per set * sets * exercises) and aim to increase this number by 5-7% each week, for example, by adding one repetition per set.
Adjust rest intervals between sets to align with your training goal: 2-5 minutes for speed, power, and strength; potentially lower or higher for hypertrophy; and specific to the type of endurance training.
When pursuing multiple fitness goals, prioritize combining adaptations that are physiologically closer and more complementary (e.g., speed, power, strength) to avoid interference and maximize simultaneous progress.
Be aware that certain combinations, like high-volume endurance training with strength training, can have detrimental or neutral interference effects on strength gains, unless you are very unfit.
To minimize interference effects, especially when combining different training types, select lower-impact exercise choices (e.g., cycling or swimming over running) to reduce stress on the body.
Incorporating low-intensity and low-volume activities, such as a 30-minute jog, as parallel goals is effective since they typically do not impede recovery for other training adaptations.
Instead of reducing your training volume or intensity, focus on significantly increasing your recovery efforts to sustain high training loads and avoid burnout.
Understand the distinction between general physical activity (e.g., walking, taking stairs) and structured exercise; both are crucial for optimal health, as hard exercise alone without daily movement is insufficient.
Adopt a year-long training system divided into quarterly phases, each with a different primary focus (e.g., hypertrophy, fat loss, conditioning, endurance) to achieve aesthetic, performance, and longevity goals while preventing plateaus and overuse injuries.
From January to March, prioritize adding muscle mass by increasing calories slightly (10-15% above baseline), emphasizing more sleep for recovery, and incorporating 3-4 weight training sessions, one indoor sport, and two long walks per week.
From April to June, aim for fat loss by reducing calories slightly, shifting to outdoor sports (e.g., paddleboarding) for proprioception and sun exposure, attending a fitness class for social interaction, and lifting weights twice a week.
From July to September, improve cardiovascular fitness with high-intensity interval training, maintaining calories, engaging in two different outdoor sports or track workouts (including sprints) twice a week, and lifting weights twice a week.
From October to December, emphasize pure cardiovascular fitness by increasing calories, potentially doing two workouts a day, transitioning to indoor sports (e.g., kickboxing, jiu-jitsu), using cardio machines, lifting weights once a week, and walking outdoors twice a week.
Take a full week off or a slight deload week at the end of each 12-week quarter, and perform a comprehensive fitness assessment at least once a year (e.g., third week of December) to set new goals.
Within each 12-week quarter, after five weeks of hard progression, take a deload week (week six) by reducing volume and intensity to 70%, then resume hard training for five more weeks before the full quarter-end off-week.
For a three-day-a-week schedule, dedicate Day 1 to speed/power followed by hypertrophy, Day 2 to pure strength followed by high heart rate/anaerobic capacity work, and Day 3 to steady-state long-duration endurance, with workouts lasting about 45 minutes.
For a four-day-a-week schedule, Day 1: Strength/hypertrophy (5-10 reps, whole body); Day 2: Long-duration restorative cardio; Day 3: Muscular endurance (11-30 reps, bodyweight/light load); Day 4: Medium-intensity intervals with 5-6 minutes of max heart rate work.
For a six-day-a-week program, repeat the three-day full-body split (Day 1: Speed/Power/Hypertrophy; Day 2: Strength/High Heart Rate; Day 3: Endurance) twice within the week, taking one day off.
Do not rigidly attach specific workouts to specific days of the week; instead, allow flexibility to slide workouts forward or back by a day based on recovery or life events to maintain consistency.
Once a program is set, adhere to it; if changes are needed, make them intentionally as modifications to the overall plan, rather than making daily, haphazard decisions that undermine consistency.
Allow for occasional, unstructured “fun” workouts (e.g., trying every machine in a hotel gym) especially when traveling or when the opportunity arises, as long as it doesn’t disrupt your main program for more than three days.
Engage in spontaneous, enjoyable physical activities with others, but ensure they do not disrupt your primary training program for more than three days, prioritizing valuable social experiences over strict adherence for short periods.
Refrain from ingesting caffeine at least 8-10 hours before bedtime, as it can disrupt sleep architecture even if you can fall asleep.
If you must train closer to your sleep time, conclude your workout with downregulation breathing to help lower your heart rate and promote relaxation, aiding sleep.
If acutely sleep-deprived but in an adaptation phase, train through it with “hacks”; if it’s chronic sleep deprivation or near a deload, consider backing off to restorative training or taking a rest day.
If you feel a sickness coming on, engage in restorative training (e.g., moderate weights, light cardio up to 70% heart rate) to avoid inducing immunosuppression from excessive exertion.
If you have a mild cold (no fever or productive cough) and feel unproductive, it’s often better to rest, sleep, or catch up on other tasks to allow for full recovery and a solid training effort later.
When feeling ill, consider using hot water immersion (e.g., bath, jacuzzi) as a recovery aid, as it can be beneficial.