Program design is one of the most butchered aspects of strength training. Here's how to create simple, effective plans that can be easily adjusted and replicated.
The overall objective of good workout design starts with setting realistic primary and secondary goals. First determine the primary goal of why you're training: either increase strength, gain size, or lose fat. Next, determine your secondary goal, which needs to enhance the primary goal.
For example, getting bigger is an excellent secondary goal to support a primary goal of getting stronger (or vice versa). If fat loss is your primary goal, your secondary goal could be increase work capacity, or look more muscular, or increase athleticism.
The important thing to remember is, determining your goals helps you choose appropriate sets, reps, and exercise pairing schemes.
Think in terms of a one-hour session. Start with a 5-minute warm-up, do a 40-minute workout, and end with a 15-minute period of specialized training that's highly sport or goal-specific.
Adjust the length of any of these portions to fit your schedule as needed.
The specialty portion can also serve as a metabolic finisher, cooldown, or even used first as an extended warm-up. Specialty exercises might include:
Break down exercises into categories. You can train movements and body parts many different ways, so your list could certainly look different than this. You need categories to have a reproducible system.
The following four movements need to be in every program. If you're doing full-body workouts instead of body part splits or movement-based training programs, then they should be in every workout.
Some of these should be in every workout, and ought to be in every week.
Most programs will contain 3 or 4 of the following intensities or rep ranges, all of which will correspond to the three main goals in step one (strength, size, fat loss). An undulating rep scheme produces consistently strong results, so this undulation should be found within a workout and/or week.
Primarily builds strength. This range is appropriate for more advanced lifters who have a solid base of training and who want to get really strong on their big lifts.
Builds a mix of strength and size. This rep range should be included for all core lifts as a main builder of both size and strength, and as the primary strength builder for those just starting to train.
Primarily builds muscle size, and may build strength in the higher rep ranges. Include this to create more time under tension which will build a foundation of muscle size and stamina. This is the range in which most bodybuilding exercises will fall.
Builds strength and facilitates fat loss. It's important to include exercises that force a person to move fast in each workout.
Regular life doesn't force us to move quickly, unless perhaps we disturb a beehive while strolling to work. Examples include sprints, jumps, Olympic lifts, and medicine ball throws.
Burns fat and increases work capacity. Conditioning exercises are your means of facilitating fat loss – effective coupled together or even on their own.
Choose exercises that are safely performed at a high-intensity for 20-60 seconds. Examples of this type of work include mountain climbers, burpees, battling ropes, sprints, and sled pushes.
Pair exercises that push you toward the goal. Use active rest principles to maximize both time and training effects. Do super sets or triple sets while one exercise acts as "rest" for another.
It'll take some time to find which ones pair up best, and good pairings will change based on your goals.
This takes some experience, but it's about monitoring appropriate workloads, interactions between exercises, and maintaining safe technique.
High-technique lifts and heavy weights are best suited for the advanced. Stay away from these pairings altogether, or pair with different muscle groups at low intensities so the heavy exercise gets rest and can be performed safely.
With accessory lifts, pairings are more lax and there's less risk with overlapping muscle groups.
The chin-ups primarily work the arms and back, which provides a respite for the legs, lower back, and core after a set of front squats.
The barbell row works the arms and back just like the chin-up, but the lower back is forced to work hard in both exercises. This pairing is likely to cause low back pain before starting the third set.
Now assemble the workout. This is a 7-exercise format, containing two pairs, one triple-set (if size is the main goal), and two specialty exercises at the end in all the examples – except the one with strength as the main goal.
Category - Rep Range | Exercise | Set / Rep | |
---|---|---|---|
A1 | Upper Body Push - Heavy | Bench Press | 4 x 5 |
A2 | Upper Body Pull - Hypertrophy | 1-Arm Cable Row | 3 x 12/arm |
B1 | Hip-Dominant Leg - Heavy | Deadlift | 4 x 5 |
B2 | Explosive Leg - Explosive | Broad Jump | 4 x 12 |
C1 | Quad-Dominant Leg - Midrange | Front Squat | 3 x 8 |
C2 | Core - Hypertrophy | Hanging Leg Raise | 3 x 12 |
Specialty | |||
D | Lateral Hip - Hypertrophy | Clamshells | 2-3 x 15 |
E | Grip - Hypertrophy | Farmers Walk | 2-3 x 90 sec. |
Category - Rep Range | Exercise | Set / Rep | |
---|---|---|---|
A1 | Upper Body Pull - Midrange | Chin-Up | 3 x 12 |
A2 | Upper Body Push - Hypertrophy | Bench Press | 3 x 12 |
B1 | Quad-Dominant Leg - Midrange | Front Squat | 4 x 6-8 |
B2 | Upper Body Push - Hypertrophy | Overhead Press | 3 x 12 |
C1 | Hip-Dominant Leg - Hypertrophy | Barbell Hip Thrust | 3 x 12 |
C2 | Upper Body Pull - Hypertrophy | Chest Supported Row | 3 x 12 |
C3 | Rotator Cuff - Hypertrophy | Pull-Apart | 3 x 12 |
Specialty | |||
D | Core - Hypertrophy | Reverse Crunch | 3 x 60 sec. |
E | Grip - Hypertrophy | Wrist Curls | 3 x 60 sec. |
Category - Rep Range | Exercise | Set / Rep | |
---|---|---|---|
Extended Warm up | Sprint Suicides | 15 min. | |
A1 | Upper Body Push - Hypertrophy | Push Ups | 3 x 12 |
A2 | Conditioning | Sled Push | 3 x 60 sec. |
B1 | Hip-Dominant Leg - Hypertrophy | Hip Thrust | 3 x 12 |
B2 | Conditioning | Battling Ropes | 3 x 30 sec. |
C1 | Quad-Dominant Leg - Hypertrophy | Goblet Squat | 3 x 12 |
C2 | Upper Body Pull - Hypertrophy | Chin-Up | 3 x 12 |
Specialty | |||
D | Rotator Cuff - Hypertrophy | Prone L Raise | 3 x 15 |
E | Mobility | Foam Rolling | 3 min. |
Shorter, more intense workouts are better than longer workouts. After 40 minutes of hard work, the quality of the session rapidly degrades. Everybody's different, but 90-minute workouts are almost always too long.
This is often overlooked. For relative balance and symmetry among the muscle groups, shoot for:
At least 1:1, preferably 2:1, ratio of hip-dominant to quad-dominant exercises
At least 1:1, preferably 2:1, ratio of pulling to pushing exercises
In each workout, include at least one of the following movements:
If you use isolation exercises, make sure to hit antagonist muscles as well. Get those biceps and triceps.
Doing more sets of fewer exercises will improve technique and strength faster than choosing a little of everything. Err on the side of fewer exercises. There isn't enough energy to go around when it's spread over so many exercises.
Percentages help mostly in defining goal weights or starting weights. For instance, you often hear this question:
"I've been squatting 285 for 5 reps. How much should I be able to do for 10 reps?"
Percentages help you find an answer, but day-to-day strength and intensity will vary. Specifying weights or percentages ahead of time prevents the lifter from finding the correct weight for a given day – he may be stronger or weaker than the listed percentage.
Instead, use percentages to ballpark starting weights or to map out a workout, but realize it's okay to stray from them.
Complicated tempos (like 3031) often leads to confusion. And that's the last thing you need when there's a bar on your back. Try this instead:
Below 8 reps, you're building strength and power, so move quickly but under control. Above 8 reps, you're building muscle size, so lengthen the time under tension.
Program-writing improves with practice and self-knowledge. The sooner you start, the sooner you'll master it, and eventually master your goals.
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