Guidelines to Designing Your Own Routine
By Mark Prater
For www.EliteFTS.com
This is a guide for those who are just getting started and need a push in
the right direction as far as workout program design. Program design is a
very complex issue, and much research has been done on the subject. There’s
much more to it than throwing a bunch of random exercises together and hoping
to gain muscle. If you’re going to design your own routine, make sure you’re
doing it properly so that you yield maximal results. Be honest with yourself here. In order to optimize your program, you need
to determine what training level you’re truly at. Beginners make faster gains
than intermediates, and intermediates make faster gains than advanced
trainees. You want the exercises that give the best bang for your buck. If you’re a
beginner, almost everyone’s exercise selection should be very similar—squats,
deadlifts, an Olympic lift variation, barbell rows or chin-ups/pull-ups,
bench press, and overhead press. If you wish, you may also add some accessory
work. However, whether you plan to be a bodybuilder, powerlifter, football
player, or ballet dancer, those exercises will give you some solid overall
strength. If you eat more than you burn, you’ll also put on some solid
poundage. Your plan is progression. I don’t care if you’re a bodybuilder,
powerlifter, or whatnot. You should be progressing on the main lifts that
you’ve specified regardless of your training stage. So how do you set it up?
Well, there are several ways. Bill Starr’s 5 X 5 is a great example of this: Monday: You’re only performing three exercises, and you’re maxing out on each
exercise once a week. Then, you’re working with submaximal weights on the
other three days for that exercise in the hopes that this will be enough of a
stimulus for you to increase by the next week’s max effort day. At this point, hopefully you know how to set up your program. But how do
you determine the frequency and intensity? In my opinion, the best two ways
to set it up for beginners and intermediates is a three day, full body
routine and an upper/lower split. This allows you to hit the entire body
often. Set it up so that you can increase on everything as frequently as you
can. And don’t think in terms of body parts. Think in terms of movements. Think about it like this (I got this idea from the book, Practical Programming):
You want to find the correct stimulus to make your body get stronger
(which will in turn make you bigger when you eat enough). Then, by the next
workout, your body will have to adapt again to get even stronger. This is
called linear progression. I don’t want to get too far off on this, but this
will determine how often you should hit each movement and how hard/how many
sets you should perform. Different amounts of reps will accomplish different things. So how many
reps should you have in your training? This is highly individual, despite
what some may say. Everyone has different genetic make-ups and different
muscle fibers. Therefore, what is optimal for one person may not be for
another. In my opinion, five reps are optimal for most beginners on the main
compound movements regardless of why you’re training. Why? Well, because five
is a nice “in between” number. Getting strong on a five rep max will
translate to almost anything else. If you decide to focus on powerlifting
after the beginning stage, having a strong five rep max on the main lifts
will translate perfectly to the one rep max, which powerlifters consider
optimal. If bodybuilding is your thing, then having a strong five rep max
will translate to a strong 6–12 rep max, which many consider optimal for
bodybuilders. Don’t worry about it. Basically, 1–5 reps are best for pure strength (I
wouldn’t recommend anything lower than three reps for anything lower than the
intermediate level because of neurological demands). Anywhere from 6–15 reps
are best for hypertrophy (highly individual), and really any rep range works
for endurance depending on how much endurance is required. Anything over 20
reps is probably a little much. However, people make the mistake and think
that 12 reps won’t do anything other than hypertrophy. Wrong! Twelve rep
maxes will make you good at things that require the endurance of something
that replicates a twelve rep max. Don’t do too many exercises. For a beginner, 5–6 compound exercises with a
few accessory lifts are optimal. Hit the lifts hard enough to progress for
the next workout, but don’t hit them so hard that your body can’t adapt to
it. I know this contradicts what you’ve read in Muscle & Fitness magazine,
but please throw that away. Don’t let it sway your thinking! The advice they
give may be good for accomplished bodybuilders, but it’s useless information
that will make no difference in beginner or intermediate athletes who
shouldn’t even consider entering a bodybuilding competition yet. Elite Fitness Systems strives to be a recognized leader in the strength
training industry by providing the highest quality strength training products
and services while providing the highest level of customer service in the
industry. For the best training equipment, information, and accessories,
visit us at www.EliteFTS.com. |
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