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Old 01-31-2009, 03:48 AM   #2 (permalink)
papajojo
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Join Date: Dec 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jamezgt View Post
Hey guys,

I deal with a number of clients that typically just want general fitness (lose fat, gain lean muscle mass). I usually put them on a full body routine at first depending on their fitness level to get them familiar with the joint movements and proper form. After two weeks of that, depending on how much time they dedicate to physical activity, I either split it into a four day split with two upper body, and two lower body or a three day split with upper body, core, and lower body.

I change the program up every two weeks, but keep the same joint action. For example, I would have a squat in week one, and a deadlift in week three. (Don't flame me because I used compound exercises as an example, it was the only one I can think of with the same joint action)

So what are your strategies on these type of clients?
That sounds like a pretty good strategy for most cases. I would suggest basing that initial progression (from full body) on mastery of the exercises rather than weeks passed. Once they're proficient in all the basic moves, you probably want to move to 4 week cycles, but that really depends on specific goals/needs, etc. For strength and hypertrophy, I really like to stick with 4 weeks (or slightly more when using unfamiliar exercises). For balance training, you can potentially modify the exercises more often, again, basing progression more on mastery than anything else. Obese clients can benefit from full body and/or circuit training right off the bat and may not need to move to a split whereas clients wanting to focus more on increasing LBM could do very well with a 3 or 4 day split. If I know I'm going to move a beginner level client to split training, I generally don't do so until the're sort of 'maxed out' with doing full body 2-3x/week. During that period, I keep the format relatively consistant and plug in new exercises here and there so that when we make the move to split training (where more exercises per bodypart will be used), they will already have experienced many of the exercises. That way I can work the piss out of them so they stop asking me 'how is working my chest once a week better than twice a week again?'.
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