Flex Your Workout Schedule For Better Results

There’s one question I see asked often that needs rephrasing.  

“How many days per week should I be working out?” 

As someone who helps clients fit workouts in their busy lives, I answer this question a lot.

One thing we always remind them is how they can MAXIMIZE their return on time invested working out.

Not sugar coating the answer, either.

How can we help rephrase the question?  Let’s focus on a few ways.   

Establish short term goals: if you’re looking at your week ahead, perhaps consider something like a peak week (5-6 days of working out), a mini-cut (caloric deficit and strict eating).  These can be timed up perfectly for any challenging travel or the opposite, with extra free time.

If you have significant goals but also flexibility and time freedom to workout at home, small workouts spread out over more days may be a better workout prescription.

Gym and coaching availability: if you’re someone who already works out twice per week, with potential and want for more workouts, perhaps a supplemental routine that balances out your current workout is more appropriate.  Examples include steady state cardio, intervals, core work, stretching and mobility or even extra arms or shoulder work.

Level of the client: someone who has less experience working out (known as training age) would probably have to curate their own recovery strategies as they consider increasing or changing workout frequency.  Sleep, nutrition, hydration and mobility needs would be factors here.  Someone also coming off an injury may want to consider these when modifying routines as well.

Client life phase: parents, entrepreneurs, travelling clients and recent college grads entering the workforce may all face challenges when it comes to time management and lifestyle optimization.  Shorter workouts with less fluff may substitute longer workouts and help keep the stimulus and adaptation up.

Equipment at home: since 2020, the majority of folks are used to working out at home in one respect or another.   Keys to implementing their home workouts as well as their gym workouts is a challenge yet can be welcome options for travel or unstructured clientele.  Here’s 3 examples of home gym metcons:

Walkability of community: some communities just don’t have a level of walk ability that others do.  If this is the case, supplementing for 10k steps may be needed with a bike, elliptical or simply a gym membership so you can get your steps in at the gym.

EXPECTED RESULTS FROM TRAINING FREQUENCIES:

2 times per week: strength gains will be noticeable for newbies but maybe harder to come by for those with a higher training age.  That said, could be considered maintenance for some veteran clients and workout populations.

3 times per week: strength, muscle definition, endurance and possibly body composition changes are noticed weekly versus monthly. More flexilibilty with training programs and routines than 2x per week.

This is usually where we program clients – for 3 times per week with the 3×3 approach (4 separate videos on the explanation then the breakdown into the 3 parts):

4, 5 and 6 times per week: changes happen at almost all levels, and weekly. Most flexibility and fun a trainer and client can have together. Body composition changes are much more rapid and likely.

These workouts can also be broken down differently like the following examples:

The longer term planning and understanding, of both client and trainer, keeps in mind that holidays, heavy travel and life stressors can all veer training plans off course. This is where the above recommendations come in.

Progress at times will shift from a regular training phase (3-6 times per week) to a deload, NEAT or maintenance phase. 

Good client management starts with flipping the question back to the client, “What is your schedule like this month?” and building off that. 

Specialty programs can be killer solutions for those with travel plans and less time but perhaps more frequency. These can include:

    1. Gironda or GVT
    2. Hybrid programming
    3. Powerlifting focus (not competition)
    4. Running or racquet sports

Another reason this question needs rephrasing is because it assumes a level of the person asking it; when in fact there are 3 different levels of people that ask this question.  

In addition, these 3 levels tend to be on a continuum depending on where the person asking is on their own fitness and wellness journey:

Dependent (usually 6 weeks to 6 months): you need to be told or reminded what to do for meals, macros, workouts and cardio. The habits you’re forming are new and infantile yet you’re excited and in a puppy phase of learning, making mistakes and reading almost anything you can get your hands on from your coach or training sources.

This type of client needs to keep things simple, easy, attainable and to leave the complex topics for later on in their training and wellness journey.  

2-3 times per week is good so as not to overwhelm and ensure adherence.

Interdependent (usually 6 months to 6 years): you’re very capable of making up something from your coach or training program yet open to feedback. 

You can make a shopping list on your own and build healthy meals, meal prep, consider cardio or zone 2 options without prompting.  

3-6 times per week are all options but more importantly, steering around obstacles and not making mistakes are very helpful in steady progress and constant growth.

Independent (usually 1 year plus): you’re invested and involved in training at the highest level, potentially with means to meal prep or get delivery, get a coach or trainer and pay or make your own programs.  

While this client may seem like they don’t need a trainer or coach, they actually consume a ton of fitness content and may be likely to purchase specialty programs or workout plans.  

DOES THIS CHANGE YOUR NUTRITION?

Glad you asked. Let’s look at it based on 2-3 days a week of workouts:

 

 

So, you’re looking ahead at your schedule for the week, and you have 4 days you can workout.

Next week, only 2.

And the following week, 5.

Hopefully you can save this article and use it for future reference.

Want someone to make your own personalized workouts?  We do that!

How, Why & When to Switch Up Your Workouts (Deep Dive!)

Should you switch up your training split? If yes, how often?

I LOVE THIS QUESTION (so buckle up – long post here).

First, WHAT IS A TRAINING SPLIT?

A training split is a popular reference for the way you split up your workout plan.  Bodybuilders usually do it by muscle groups (chest on mondays, back on Tuesdays, etc).  Athletes separate upper and lower body, powerlifters separate by movement practice (squat, bench or deadlift days) etc.

Second, WHO THIS QUESTION (and answer) APPLIES TO?

The aforementioned groups, training for a sport of some sort, is not who this answer applies to (although it could).

The answer here is for a very specific group of people:

If you’re working out 3-5 hours per week with a combination of strength and cardio, then I am answering this question for you.

Third, YOU MUST QUALIFY TO SWITCH UP WORKOUT PROGRAMS

But how do I qualify?  If you have been doing a workout plan a minimum of 2x per week and have done it 4 weeks consecutively.  This ensures you’re progressing and constantly inducing adaptation at the cellular level.

FINALLY: you qualify, and you get your most excellent question answered.  

YES.  You should switch up your training split.  Here’s more than a few ways you can do it. 

Increased Frequency method:

If you’ve been training 2-3x per week, and doing total body workouts each time, try this (might be helpful if your workout windows are brief, IE in a holiday or busy travel month):

Monday: 30 minutes strength

Tues: 30 minutes cardio zone 2

Weds: 30 minutes strength

Thurs: 30 minutes intervals (30 on / 30 off)

Friday: 30 minutes strength

Saturday: 30 minutes tempo training (3 rounds of 6 minutes of work at 80% effort, 3 minutes rest)

Sunday: rest

Total / Upper / Lower

Best for: getting stronger and building muscle.

Monday: total body 1

Tues: rest

Weds: lower body 1

Thurs: upper body 1

Friday: rest

Saturday: total body 2

Sunday: rest

UPPER BODY BUILD:

Best for someone looking to add shape and size to their upper body while still progressing with lower. This is a 5 day split (takes 5 days to complete).

Monday: Upper Push

Tues: Lower Body

Weds: rest

Thurs: Upper pull

Friday: rest

Saturday: Upper Push

Sunday: lower body

PEAK WEEK 

Best for: someone on vacation, holiday or summer break, (someone who has extra time to spend in the gym.)

Monday: chest and abs

Tues: back

Weds: leg day (quad dominant like squats, lunges and step ups)

Thurs: shoulders and abs

Friday: Biceps, triceps

Saturday: Leg day (glutes and hamstrings like deadlifts, curls, back extensions)

Sunday: rest

VOLUME METHODS: 

Best for: someone who is enjoying their workouts but wants to extract a bit more out of them.

Simply put, some of our clients, due to injury, enjoy this: add sets of exercises instead of reps.

For instance:

Week 1: dumbbell bench press 3 sets

Week 2: dumbbell bench press 4 sets

Week 3: dumbbell bench press 5 sets

Week 4: dumbbell bench press 6 sets

Week 5: dumbbell bench press, 3 sets but now add weight!

German Volume Training: 

10 sets of 10 reps (straight sets! No alternating!). Extreme / super high volume method of building muscle.  Not recommended often. 60-120s rest between sets. Tempo controlled.

Gironda Method: 

8 sets of 8 reps, 30s rest (more enjoyable as the weights are lighter but the burn is still gorgeous).  Love this for single joint movements.  Still control the tempo!

Coach Kev Volume Method: 

Adapted from my own experiences over 20 years of working out.

Method 1: GVT but alternate. 10 sets each (20 total). 

Upper Example: Chinups minute 1, Overhead press minute 2

Lower / core example: RDL’s minute 1, ab wheel minute 2

Upper / Lower: chest supported row / Front squat

Method 2: Hybrids– cardio and strength

Upper example:

10 rounds

Minute 1: 30s ski

Minute 2: 10 reps floor press

Lower example:

10 rounds

Minute 1: 30s bike

Minute 2: 5 reps squat (back or front)

Method 3: 30 minutes, EMOM

Perform 3 exercises in EMOM fashion (every minute on the minute).

Ideally Upper / lower / core but also, 

Upper push, upper pull, lower.

Upper push, upper pull, core

Total body (U/L/C) workout:

Band resisted pushups x 10 reps

Goblet squat 5-8 reps

Hollow rock x 10-15 reps

Upper body workout (great for playground): 

Chinups

Dips

Kneeling ab wheel

Total Body workout (U/U/L)

Trap Bar deadlift x 5 reps

Overhead Press x 5 reps

Chest supported row x 8 reps

MODALITY METHOD: 

My friend Clifton Harski is great at this.  One day he practices kettlebells, another the landmine, another dancing and jumping, etc.  His split is:

Day 1: Kettlebells

Day 2: landmine

Day 3: Salsa and jumping

Day 4: zone 2 cardio while doing social media posts (really)

Can also be used for hotel gym with machines or cables.

Sample Monthly Progression: okay, so now that you have a lot of options, NOW WHAT?

First a DO NOT: program hop.  Jumping from one workout plan to another, weekly, is a recipe for stagnation or worse – injury.  Qualify for the next program by completing 4-6 weeks of your current one.

Month 1: Total body 3x per week

Month 2: Total body / Upper / Lower

Month 3: Modality method

Month 4: Hybrid method from Coach Kev

Month 5: Peak week

As you can see, there are a LOT of options.  Navigating the options can be overwhelming but that’s where we, as coaches, come in.

Want help on your own program? Let us know!

Low Impact Maximum Muscle Glute Workout

Two of the most common by-products of an intense workout, soreness and nervous system fatigue, can be avoided with this intuitive workout for the lower body.

Instead of deadlifts, squats and lunges, think, “glute focused exercises with maximum burn.”

Here’s the workout, exercises and the details of each one

1️⃣ Reverse hypers: do these with intent on squeezing hard. High reps and high squeeze. Can add a band on ankles for hip extension AND abduction. 3 sets of 15-20 reps.  Rest 60s.

2️⃣ Side lying hip thrust: add the sandbag or band, and really focus on squeezing forward and up at the same time. Great for outer 🍑. 3 sets of 10-15 reps (depends on bodyweight or band).

3️⃣ Back extensions on GHD or 45 degree: These can request lower back as the glutes get tired, so focus on ONLY hip extension and not going too high with your upper back (rounding from the shoulders helps). 3 sets of 8-15 reps.

4️⃣ Feet elevated kettlebell sumo deadlifts: so this is a drop set, but instead of changing the weight, you’ll change the height as the set continues.  Do 6 reps at 12” box, then 6 at 6” then 6 at floor height. That’s one round – do 3! Box height will vary (can start with 1 blue, then 1 green, then floor).  Back still stays flat! Push the knees out. 3 sets of the drop set, and 60-90s rest after each round.

4️⃣ Forward high step with @trxtraining assist: super important to lean forward to keep hip as primary worker (quad and knee want to help but don’t let them).  Make sure you’re using your hands to hold and balance laterally, but only that. Don’t let the TRX help pull you up! Very little time spent on the ground. 3 sets of 10-15 reps.  60-90s rest.

5️⃣NEW: wall rear foot elevated split deadlift: push into the wall, rotate from the torso and reach back and down with the hip and hand. Go slow!  These are effective at medium reps and a challenging weight.  Try 3 sets of 8-10 reps with 3-4 seconds on the down and 1 second back up.

6️⃣ dumbbell glute bridge: as a finisher of an exercise this works such a great part of the 🍑 – right below the belt.  Roll into the position to safely get the dumbbell on your lap.  Try 3 sets of 15, 20, 25 or even more reps. Have a band? Add that just below the knees.