One Program Is….One Program

Supercompensation Curve

I was having a discussion with two IFAST interns the other day, and the topic of programming was broached.

As the discussion developed, it became clear what the issue was.  These guys haven’t written a ton of programs yet, and I could tell they were about to fall victim to a huge mistake that many entry-level coaches and trainers make.

I know, because I made this mistake as well.

The mistake is a simple one:  Trying to fit everything (or fix everything) in one program.

You want to clean up their posture, get better glute activation/strength, stiffen their anterior core, improve their t-spine mobility into extension and rotation, and a host of other things.

Oh yeah, and you also want to focus on speed/power development, conditioning, and max strength.

Do you see where I’m going with this?

When in doubt, remember this simple mantra: One program is one program.

Can you make a positive impact on posture and alignment? Yes.

Can you improve some of their basic physical qualities?  Yes.*

But, one program is just one program.

You’re not going to unwind every postural or alignment issue they have in a month or two.

You’re not going to be able to fit all of your pet exercises into one training program.

Quite simply, the day you realize that one program is only one program, you’re going to be leap years ahead of most of your competition.

Don’t try to fix everything, or improve everything, in one training program.

Program in the short-term to address their immediate limitations, while always focusing on the long-term goals.

Besides me, how many of you how made this mistake?  Did it teach you any lessons?

I’ll be looking forward to your thoughts below!

All the best

Mike

*Side Note for Clarity: Beginners and some intermediates can see positive changes in almost all physical qualities (speed, strength, power, endurance, etc.) initially.  As someone becomes more advanced, this is where specificity of programming comes into play, and you’ll need more intensive/focused blocks of training to achieve an adaptive response.


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