Archive for December, 2010

The New Rules of Lifting for Abs

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

The other day I shared an interview that I recently did with top fitness pro Alwyn Cosgrove and it appears many of you really enjoyed it!

The latest project that Alwyn has just launched along with co-author Lou Schuler is a new book called:

The New Rules of Lifting for Abs: A Myth-Busting Fitness Plan for Men and Women Who Want a Strong Core and a Pain-Free Back

It’s the third book in the “The New Rule of Lifting” series preceded by the 2 best-sellers The New Rules of Lifting and The New Rules of Lifting for Women, both of which are must-reads and highly recommended weekly reference guides for fitness pros and enthusiasts alike.
I was honored to receive an advanced copy from Alwyn about a month ago and immediately dug into this new book and absolutely loved it.
I firmly believe it will be one of the definitive resources for cutting-edge, 21st century core training in the months and years to come.
You’ve heard me say this before and I’ll say it again: crunches and sit-ups aren’t required to develop strong, flat abs- in fact, the latest research suggests that they are more likely to contribute to acute and chronic back pain more than anything else and the risk truly isn’t worth the reward.
Rather, the true focus of a sound, modern core training program is one that focuses on stabilization in all 3 planes of motion.
More specifically, a truly solid ab workout is one that teaches your body how to PREVENT motion- to prevent excessive spinal flexion, extension, and rotation.
Yep, your abs are mainly meant to keep your spine in a neutral position during daily activity and intensive exercise and that’s what this great new book is all about.
As you probably already know, I’m a big believer in exercise progressions to accommodate people of all fitness levels due to my background as a bootcamp instructor and what I love most about this book is it’s core training progression system.
More specifically, Alwyn programs a seamless 3-phase core training system that has you progressing from static stabilization to dynamic stabilization and then to integrated stabilization.

Plus, there are a bunch of cool new core exercises you’ve probably never seen that I know you and your campers/clients will love to struggle with!
My favorite new ab moves from the book are:

- Alligator Walks
- Anti-Rotation Holds and Chop and Lift Variations
- 1-Arm Suitcase Deadlift + Lateral Step-up
- And many more!
Alwyn also threw in some killer metabolic finishers to accelerate the belly fat-burning including 20-40/30-30 intervals and ladder drills that the advanced exerciser will surely appreciate.
Bottom line- this book is as good as it gets when it comes to content and I can only hope that the masses will eat this up because it debunks all the stupid myths about what it takes to get flat, tight, and toned abs once and for all.
Do yourself a favor and get a new copy of this book today to take your abs to the next level before it sells out:

Crank it!
BJ

Mike Robertson Interview

Monday, December 27th, 2010

 

icon for podpress  BJ Interviews Mike Robertson: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Hey everybody!  This is BJ Gaddour, Co-Creator and Fitness Director of Workout Muse.  I’m very excited today!  I’ve got a special guest, Mike Robertson of iFast.  Well known across the country as a very accomplished Power Lifter, Strength Coach and well known Corrective Exercise Guru.  So Mike welcome to the call today.

Hey BJ!  Thanks for having me!  I appreciate it man!

It’s an honor man!  I think a lot of people are excited to have you provide a lot of cool information to our Workout Muse audience.  The angle we’re going to take today is bringing more of what is Mike’s specialty.  He tends to get pigeon holed in this industry as kind of being the guy.  Mike is being positioned as the corrective exercise guy so we are going to try to bring a lot of that to the bootcamp environment which frankly needs a lot of it.  Mike and I were presenters at Bootcamp Bootcamp in Louisville, Kentucky.  His emphasis was bringing correctiveness within the bootcamp and to try to change the kind of beat-you-into the-ground, make-you-tired-format of most bootcamp programs.  That really needs to be addressed because people are being hurt and they are not being serviced correctly.  That’s our job to take a lead on that as fellow bootcamp owners.  So before we get into it, Mike can you kind of introduce your self and kind of describe your fitness background and everything else.

Sure!  Thanks, BJ!  It’s kind of been a little bit of everywhere and seen a little bit of everything.  Coming up, I spent two and a half years working at the Division I level camp working at Boston University our athletes there.  I spent three years in a chiropractic rehab based facility.  Another three years doing one-on-one in-home training.  Now I’m the Co-Owner of Indianapolis Fitness and Sports Training in Indianapolis.  So again, I’ve seen a little bit of everything and I have a pretty good idea of what works and what doesn’t.  I think the thing that I bring to the table in a lot of situations is trying to develop good, clean movement patterns regardless of whether you’re working in a one-on-one situation – such as rehab or personal training – all the way up to working in a really big group setting.  At Bos State we’d have 26 girls at specific points in time with just me as a coach.  I know as bootcamp instructor you guys may have as many as 30, 50, upwards of 100 people per class.  I think that’s one of the biggest things that I can help people out with here today is giving them a better idea of how they can simplify their bootcamp, give people better results and get their people moving and feeling better.

Very cool!  Just to add to that as well, I’m a proud owner of several of Mike’s products from Bulletproof Knees to Magnificent Mobility to Assess and Correct.  They’ve really helped mold my approach to bootcamp design.  Just to have you on the call is phenomenal.  We’re going to talk more towards the end of the call and you’re going to learn more about Mike.  You definitely want to get on his newsletter.  Lots of information and content on a regular basis and killer products that you can immediately apply to your business.  Whether it be bootcamp or semi-private training athletes – whatever!  It all applies and it’s the most important stuff.  It keeps people safe, pain-free, injury-free – then we’re talking about clients for life!  So, let’s start Mike.  I know you had a very humorous take on why most bootcamps scare you or make you cringe.  Let’s tell that to the listener and hopefully, if anybody feels like you’re talking about them directly, they can make some changes by the end of this call.

It’s weird.  I always confess that I am not a bootcamp instructor at this point in time.  It’s something I want to add to the facility but we don’t at this time have the space for it in the facility.  When I hear the word “bootcamp” and I see how people run their bootcamps, the biggest issue I have is the preparedness level of the person you are training.  We start thinking about it when we look at the average American these days.  We know they’re overweight, they’re out of shape, they don’t move very well, they’re very stiff and out of shape.  Lots of times we’ll see these really aggressive means of trying to get somebody in shape.  We hear bootcamp and we associate that with a killer, really intense workout.  So we’ll see people incorporate a lot of distance running or plyometrics, which we know is a fantastic movement for the right people, specifically if you are training athletes.  Then finally, just really advanced exercises.  They are exercises that I wouldn’t be comfortable coaching in a one-on-one setting for a lot of my clients.  Yet people are more than willing to have 50 or more people doing it at a time.  So I think what we need to do is find a way to simplify what we do as coaches and as trainers.  Instead of going to the most exotica and sexy exercise progression we can find on youtube, we need to find safe and effective exercises so we can build a solid foundation for our clients.  That’s the thing that I always come back to:  Safe and Effective Workouts.  If we can start balancing that mix of safe and effective, I think we’re going to get the best long-term results for the clients and athletes that we’re working with.

Very cool!  To share a story that sums up what Mike just said.  I’ve had the pleasure and also regret – depends on the situation.  I’ve seen a lot of bootcamps in action over the last several years both coaching bootcamp owners and through Workout Muse being distributed all over the world into bootcamp environments.  I’ll never forget one session that I saw and basically, this is it:  The session began with a 10 minute run.  “Go run there and come back.”  That was going to be the “warm-up”.  I saw a mix of people that were in good shape and people who looked like that didn’t move in the last 10 years.  And they ran!  They ran there and back. First of all the running mechanics was really hard to watch.  Kind of cover-your-face type of situation.  What freaked me out the most was how ridiculously ostracized those overweight people were upon coming back several minutes later than the other people.  The person actually started the workout before the people came back from the running warm up!  Then this person progressed into random circuits like there were a couple of circuits done that were literally doing 4 or 5 consecutive burpees or pushup variations with minimal rest.  Long work periods and minimal rest.  The movements were competitive.  The form was ridiculous and sloppy.  Then they went right into doing sprints.  So the people who couldn’t do basic jogging correctly were now sprinting after this random strength circuit.  Then cruches, sit-ups all that flexion that you don’t want on that spine.  Then the workout ended with a conglomeration of exercises with no progression.  Obviously this is an extreme example, but I’ve seen it.  This is in a very large park in a very popular city and there were other camps going on at the same time not too far away.  We don’t want your camp to look like that!  So Mike let’s talk about the 2 ways that you feel any bootcamp owner can make their bootcamp better.

Sure!  This is something that I alluded to at the Bootcamp Bootcamp presentation.  One thing that you can do is just make everything easier.  Simplify the way you are doing things.  Remember if you’re in a bootcamp setting, your campers aren’t going to get as much coaching as they would get in a small group setting or one-on-one setting.  That’s okay because obviously either they can’t afford that or they don’t want that – They are comfortable in the group setting.  So we start by putting them in these big groups and the best thing we can do is start by simplifying the workout.  What I mean by that is for example, if we watch somebody squat chances are we know that they’re knees are going to drift way forward, their knees are going to cave in and it is just kind of how we move these days.  We don’t have very strong butts or hamstrings.  We are very strong in the front of our thighs.  If we know that’s going to be the case, one of the simplest things we can do is to have them put a small band around their knees or have their partner push their knees inward so they have to work harder to push their knees outward.  Another thing we can do is if we know they are going to sit forward on their toes or they are not going to sit back, have them squat to a box.  Try and figure out simple things like that we can utilize to get our clients or campers moving better.  I mean that’s one of the easiest things we can do:  Try and make our job easier as a trainer or a coach and also make their job easier so they have a better understanding of how the exercise should feel.  The other option we have is what I call the Ground Zero Bootcamp.  This would be a fantastic way to set things up and it is kind of how I would do it if I were going to start my own set of bootcamps.  We know there are just basic things about our clients that aren’t going to move well.  We know they are probably going to be weak through their core and weak through their trunk.  We know that their butt and their ham strings are going to be weak.  We know their ankles are going to be stiff.  So we take all these pieces of the puzzle and start to build a program based off of that.  So this is where we can incorporate foam rolling and all of the different pieces of puzzle that we use and start to build it into a program.  The basic exercises.  Instead of having somebody doing walking lunges, you’re going to have them do split squats in place.  Instead of having them do some sort of pushup variation, just have them do basic pushups.   Start off with very simple, basic movement patterns and over the course of the 4-8-12 weeks, however long your bootcamp is – you start to build a progression into it.  That’s one of the big words that I talk about a lot and BJ, I know you use it a lot.  Building a progression into it.  So we start out at Ground Zero, the basics.  We start to teach them proper movement patterns.  Then over the course of time, we flush it out until it becomes something a lot bigger and a lot more intensive.  What we need to start doing is preparing our clients and our athletes at high levels.  Far too often I think we assume that they are ready to do that and guys like you and I know that that is simply not the case.

Exactly!  One thing that I hope everybody gets on the call today is that you should be at least 3-deep in terms of level of exercise progression with every exercise that you are programming for in your bootcamps.  A simple level 1, 2 and 3.  If you can, you can go 5-deep.  Sometimes, one level has a level 1a and a level 1b.  But you want to be at least 3-deep.  5-deep is ideal.  Once you are able to do that effectively for all the basic  foundational body movements and you can teach your staff to do that, if you do have staff.  That alone will make a night and day different within your camp.  You have to really work at it and program for it. You have to be good enough so that you’re at a bootcamp workout and no matter what comes up, for example, someone flags you over and says, “this is bothering my knee” , you will know what modification to make.  You know how to regress the exercise or swap in maybe a hip-dominant movement to take pressure off that knee.  This is the stuff that I know Mike is all about and we’re trying to get across to as many bootcamp owners as possible so just be an expert of progression.  That alone will make you’re bootcamp so much better than anybody else around you.  So I hope that everybody on the call today takes that away.  When I was watching Mike’s presentation, about this concept, I’ve been developing something called MISSION: UNBREAKABLE with a Physical Therapist named Dr. K, which is pretty much… Y’know at Workout Muse we made a ton of high-intensity interval format circuits.  So we cater to the bootcamp workout.

What we haven’t done enough is filling in the gaps of the corrective stretch, the self massage, the mobility activation stuff, so that’s what that product is.  I was waiting, waiting, waiting to roll out this beginner bootcamp and then when I saw Mike’s presentation, I got so jacked up and I’m like, you know what, I’m not going to wait, let’s just get it started right away.  I called my wife and we literally set it up for that Monday.  It was a Saturday that he presented and we got it on that Monday.  So, Mike, thanks for that push and it’s been phenomenal since making that shift.  I think what you’ll find is that, as a bootcamp owner in particular, this will be much easier to convert people into your regular program.  There’s kind of a graduation process and you can really target the coaching and the effort and the front load so that once they learn the basic movements, they can pretty much learn and handle everything in a safe way.  Mike can you kind of take us through what you would program as your Beginner Bootcamp?

Sure.  Everything I do is… there’s nothing isolationist in my workouts.  Even if I work with Joe Blow who works on a computer all day, I still want him to move well and I still want him to know those basic movement patterns we always talk about.  So anytime I developing a workout and especially if I’m doing something in a bootcamp type setting, I’m trying to engrain those basic movement patterns so I’m thinking very large or very broad scope.  A basic squat pattern, basic pulling or what people would call a dead-lift type pattern,  with the hips being the dominant mover.  We work towards a press – a bench press is probably not the best option in a bootcamp – probably something more along the lines of a pushup with not just an upper body press but with a total stabilization exercise.  We work on pulling variations, whether that’s horizontal or vertical again in a large group setting it’s a little bit more challenging so you have to be a little more creative.  Two of the big ones that people are as focused on are pure or clean single leg training, especially some sort of lunging or split squat type of pattern and then good core stability  base training.  I put the emphasis on stability versus core movement or core strength because if you guys have read any of the work of Stuart McGill or any of these spinal bio-mechanists that are coming to the forefront now, you’ll see that mini-crunching and those kinds of variations aren’t the best kinds of options for any of our clients, let alone anybody who sits at a desk for a long period of time.  So instead of focusing on crunching were we’re focused solely on the rectus abdomens, focus more on pillar holds, front planks, side planks, bird dogs and the many other variations  in regard to core stability.   Those are kind of the the six patterns that I talked about in the presentation or six basic movement patterns that I try to develop within a large group setting then if you’re taking people from a bootcamp setting to a smaller group setting you can get into some of the fancier stuff whether it’s a vertical press or a vertical pull down or a chin up or pull up.  Some of those options are a little more challenging in a large group setting.  Hopefully that gives you an idea of how I’d set it up.

One thing that was really cool about your presentation too, is that you acknowledged that there are some motor-morons out there.  There are people that you can show them…  like I always joke about the people that it takes them the whole workout to show them how to do it and they come back and they have totally forgotten what they just learned.  So there are going to be people like that.  One thing that Mike that Mike pointed out that is cool is that there are several cheat techniques that you can incorporate that force people to get into a better position automatically.  Can we talk about a couple of those?  Like the wall for the side pillar or the split squat.  Let’s give a couple of those instant fixes in a camp to help fix with technique.

Absolutely.  The two that you mentioned:  the side pillar and the split squat are things that regardless of how much coaching we give a lot of people,  until they can see and feel the difference between their way, which as we all know is generally not the right way, and the way we want them to do it, it just helps them feel what good positioning is.  So let’s say for a side plank, what I’ll have a lot of my clients do is actually set up so their back side is against a wall and then when they press up they need to basically keep in mind that we want the back of their head, their upper back and their buttocks against the wall  the whole time.  That  does not allow us to do some of the things we see our clients do like arching their back, rolling their head forward.  We see all these different compensations.  When we put them in an easy set up like that they get an idea of where their body should be in place and how it should feel when they execute the exercise correctly.   That’s number 1.  If you are doing side planks or side pillars simply put them up agains the wall so they have some sort of an idea of what a truly straight line feels like.  As far as split squats go you see people who are really strong in their quads or their thigh are generally very week in their butts and their ham strings.  When they perform a split squat or lunge you see the knee really drift out.  We car argue all day whether that’s injurious or not but that’s not really the point .  Instead what I want you guys to focus on is that we want our clients starting to learn how to load their butts and their ham strings.  So what I’ll have them do is set up just like you would for a normal split squat, so feet split front to back and now take their front foot and put it right in front of a wall.  And at that point in time, they are going to learn really quickly what it means to drop straight down.  They can’t shoot their knew forward like they would in a more open setting.  And if they are still cheating like that you can do something more. You can do it yourself or with a fellow bootcamper that’s maybe on a rest break.  Actually have them place their hand in front of their front knee so they have some sort of kinetic awareness that my knee is coming forward and I need to drop straight down.  Chances are when you have people do this they are going to freak out.  They’re going to be like, “Oh my gosh!  This is so much harder.  I’ve never used these muscles before.”  But it’s one of those really subtle techniques we can use to make our campers and our clients move better or at the very least move more in a fashion that we are more comfortable with.

Very cool.  Part of what is really neat about this stuff is that people who don’t really have access to walls at outdoor bootcamps and maybe it’s hard to convince your campers to get up against a tree or a brick wall, just giving that verbal cue – and since watching your presentation, I have found that just saying “imagine that a wall is behind you and try to make contact with that wall the entire time.”  That alone is resulting in prouder chests, more glut activation and more scapular retraction depression – so just the cues.  If you can learn to start using the cues and speak in a bullet-pointed, quick nomenclature.  Use really powerful words that give people the cue so they know right away what’s going on.  When you’re working hard, oxygen is not going to the brain the way it should when they are pushing.  Keep it short.  Pop the chest out.  One thing about Mike’s products you will see is that they really outline the cues.  You want to try to incorporate those cues into your camps and start coaching stations instead of campers.

Right.

So one of the biggest mistakes I’ve seen is that there will be more than one complex movement to teach in each workout is really too much.  If you’re really good at what you do and you just have this down so you can spend more time at that more difficult station but once you get that squat or pushup you won’t need as much correction there.  When you’re coaching your groups you can get more accomplished and instead of having to get to everybody you can say to that entire squat group “stay on the heals, keep your eyes on the horizon and push the knees down.”  That’s the benefit of getting products like Mike’s is that you’ll learn the exact cues that he uses in his sessions and taking those into your bootcamps is going to bring everything up a notch.   Anything else to add to those cues or keys Mike?

You know, I kid around with some of my interns and some of the people that come to my gym.  I just tell them that whenever I decide to retire, I’m just going to make sound bytes of myself because it’s the same cues over and over.  Whether it’s chest out, back flat, knees out, eyes up – the same cues work over and over again.  Like you said BJ, if you guys are listening in and you really want to take advantage of taking your bootcamps to the next level.  The best thing you can do is purchase products, go to seminars and hang out with guys like BJ or Todd Dirkin or these guys who are running amazing bootcamps.  REally work hard to find your own game and find those easy to use cues because a lot of times very simple cues work the best.  if you’re sitting there and your’e trying to explain the biomechanics of the external oblique in between sets you are not going to get the desired result.  So for example one of the best cues you can use and I use this with people whether they are squatting, lunging or doing a dead lift type pattern, just tell them to stay tall.  And if you automatically ask somebody to think about lengthening and staying tall, immediately their abs turn on, their back has a much better contour to it.  It’s just one of those very encompassing cues that works really, really well.  Do your best to find really good cues that work for a lot of people and just give you a lot of bang for your buck.  You guys are working for big groups of people and you want to maximize your coaching.  So use your big cues and help your campers to emphasize on their technique and performance.

Absolutely man!  Let’s kind of finish here with more applicable information.  So the one thing that is tough in a bootcamp setting is that we popularize the 30 minute express workout.  Usually at camps you’re stuck with that hour commitment and personal training is traditionally an hour and we got stuck with that format.  What’s becoming more and more popular is that 30 minute workout where you can get busy professionals in and out to their jobs.  But one thing we can look at adding in both before and after that workout for those who have time to do it is corrective stretching and self-massage.  It makes for a better workout and encourages recovery and prevent injury especially patella femoral issues or lower back or sciatica an that’s lower back pain.  Mike let’s talk about your top 3 to 5 corrective interventions that they can immediately implement into camp.  Obviously that’s tough because on most humans you can start from head to toe and everybody has different issues, but which are the ones that have the most profound impact that the bootcamp owner can implement today to make people improve performance and  bolster injury prevention?

Sure.  Let’s start with working from the top down.  Most people sit at a desk or sit in a car during their commute and they sit too much.  Their shoulders are kind of rounded for ward or slouched over and their thoracic spine or upper back doesn’t move very well.  One of the best things you can do is either have them stretch their chests pre workout, have them do some foam rolling or on their upper back or in between their shoulder blades and just try to loosen up that upper back.  That’s a huge area. If you loosen up their upper back and that starts moving and shaking better, chafes are their lower back feels better, their neck feels better, their shoulders feel better.  It’s an all-encompassing modality.  Do something to loosen up the thoracic spine is number 1.   Number 2 is  to stretch the hip flexors.  Again, we know that people are going to sit for extended periods of time and we have what’s called an active shortening.  Your tissues lose length.  Hip flexors are a huge issue and it’s something that regardless of the client that I work with being 10 or 60 they will perform some sort of stretching for their hips.  That’s going to loosen up the back of their hips, turn their gluts on and it’s going to loosen up their back.  So again, it’s an all encompassing, big bang modality.  Number 3 is some sort of glut activation work.  It can be something as simple as glut bridges or hopefully within the workout loading the hips, the butt and the ham strings somehow.  Whether it’s a Romanian dead lift, a pull through, some sort of bedding or pulling or dead lifting pattern will make a huge difference just in moving better, feeling better and if they are athletes really unlocking some of their power.  Another big one that I always reinforce is some sort of ankle mobility or calf stretching.  This is one of those areas where people don’t really realize how stiff their calves and their ankles are until they try to do some sort of mobility exercise or calf stretching.  Especially if you ladies are listening in and wearing high heals, that adaptive shortening can work there as well.  Interestingly enough, there is actually research out there now that actually proves that if you wear heals for X amount of hours throughout the week, you see adaptive shortening in your calves and in your achilles tendon.  I always try to incorporate some kind of either soft tissue work with a lacrosse ball or foam roller to work the calves preworkout as well as some sort of ankle mobility drills.  Those 4 things, regardless of who I work with, are going to show up in their program in some form or fashion.  It’s really to help counter act what we do all day.  We aren’t in the 1800’s any more where we work on the farm all day to put money on the table.  Now we sit at desks, we sit in chairs, we drive cars or trucks or whatever, but a lot of what we do now is focused on sitting.  So a huge component of corrective exercise as a whole is simply counter acting those basic movement patterns that creep up on us throughout the day so when we start lifting weights and we start going into our actual exercise routine, we’re feeling better and we’re in a better alignment and as a whole we’re getting more out of our exercise program.

Very cool.  Just to recap and summarize this information:  T-spine mobility, possibly a chest stretch in combination with that.  Hip mobility with some sort of glut activation and ankle.  Awesome information.  So just select one of each exercise and add those 3 components into your preworkout routine.  Those 10-15 minutes before you start that workout and they will have a better warmup and a better workout.  If you keep theme safe and injury free they will stay with you. The problem with bootcamp retention is so difficult for most because at some point you beat people down to a pulp and they just can’t do it any more.  So everything Mike touched on today can change your program from top to bottom.  I want you guys to get on his newsletter so you can continue on what he built for us today in regards to making those positive changes.  Mike where can people learn more about you and regarding products and resources that they can invest in and take their business to and knowledge to the next level?

The easiest place to find me online is my website:  robertsontrainingsystems.com

Again, like BJ said, I put a blog 2 or 3 times a week.  I’ve recorded my bootcamp seminar and posted it so if you’re on my newsletter list you can have immediate access to it.  You can download it as a webinar and see it as a presentation.  I do a podcast.  I’ve got tons of products for the strength coach and personal trainer that’s listening in.  The blogs got a lot of information in there, essentially the last 10 years of my life.  I’ve tried to put everything in there so if you guys are interested in bootcamps or small group settings, rehab or corrective exercises – there’s a little bit of everything there.  So check it out and hopefully there’s some stuff that can help make you a better coach or trainer in the long run.

And they will!  It is pure content at Mike’s blog and website.  Go there and take advantage of those resources.  Even if you’re not a bootcamp owner, if you own a facility.  Mike owns  one of the top ten gyms in American according to Men’s Health.  He pretty much has his hands in everything that you would need to know about at this point.  Once you have this stuff in place you can launch a bootcamp very simply and successfully.  Mike thanks a million for your time today.  This was great information and we got a lot in in 30 minutes.  I will also be providing links to get back to Mike’s resources in case you trouble catching that on the recording.  There’s also going to be a transcription of this interview as well.  Any closing thoughts Mike?

I just want to say thanks BJ!  Thanks everybody for listening in because it’s always a pleasure to work with people like you and other trainers that are serious about taking our industry to the next level.  Everybody listening in, thanks a ton for your time because I really appreciate it.

Thank you sir!  Awesome stuff!  Again, this is BJ Gaddour with Workout Muse.  Thanks again to Mike Robertson for his time today.  Learn more about Mike at robertsontrainingsystems.com and we hope to have Mike as a guest at some point down the road as well.  Thanks so much and we’ll be in touch!

Interview with Alwyn Cosgrove

Monday, December 27th, 2010

 

icon for podpress  BJ Interviews Alwyn Cosgrove: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

This is BJ Gaddour with workoutmuse.com.  I’ve got a very special guest today, Alwyn Cosgrove, one of the top fitness pros in the business.  I’m a big fan of his personally.  I own a lot of his products.  I remember when I first started getting into the business, I wanted to make sure I got my head focused on the best people in the field and he was definitely one of the people that came up first.  It’s an absolute honor to have him today to talk about one of his many specialties regarding running a very successful fitness facility.  He’s also very well known for designing crazy, effective, semi-private workouts.  Being that we have a lot of bootcamp owners here that are looking for different ways to add multiple revenue streams to their business or maybe have a semi-private profit center to add to their bootcamp style workouts, this is the guy that you want to go through.  Alwyn thank you so much for being here today.  For people that might be living in a cave, can you let us know a little bit about your background  and what you’re best known for in the fitness business?

I’m best known for having a funny accent, I think.  I was born in Scotland, went to college in England and when I was in college, I was working in summer camps and teaching martial arts classes and soccer.  At the end of my  last year in college, and this is way before September 11, I was given an extended work visa for 5 years, so I was allowed to stay in the U. S.   So after I finished a college job, I started working at a gym in New York city.  Shortly after that I met my wife Rachel. From there we opened a gym – a small place in Southern California called Results Fitness which has now become one of the top 10 gyms the United States as voted by Men’s Health magazine for 3 years in a row now which is pretty exciting.  We’ve expanded and as a result of the gym’s success I’ve got a couple of books published, I’m on the Perform Better tour.  What else have I got going on BJ?  I just signed on a deal as a consultant with Nike.  Yeah that’s about it.  Not much else going on.

All well deserved!  I’m thrilled to hear of all the recent successes.  It couldn’t happen to better people.  Some of the top people in the industry call Results Fitness which is the facility that Alwyn and his wife Rachel own.  It’s the most profitable fitness center per square unit in America – potentially the world, if would be researched I wouldn’t be surprised.  So do you want to share – and obviously it doesn’t happen by accident.  There are a lot of great systems in place both business and training wise, behind the scenes.  So let’s just start with the training side of things and again Coach Cosgrove is one of the first people to really propose training people in a semi-private setting.  Sure it’s been done in the past, but no one before Alwyn really modeled it in a way that really made it extremely profitable and something that can be rolled out anywhere, anyhow.  I was blown away by the system.  Everything’s got to have a system in place so that no matter who is there you can deliver 80-90% of what people would experience even if the business owner isn’t there.  I love how you kind of went through your Perform Better presentation this year and went over each component of what that workout needs to look like from the preworkout routines to some core training to strength training to metabolic work and a postworkout section to finish.  I know that people here listening are going to be really interested to hear you break down each section of  an effective semiprivate workout and please give a bullet point or two for the importance of each section if you could.

No problem.  The concept came from in the past.  We used be able to do body part splits because people were active.  They were golfing, they were playing racquetball, they were jogging.  So the people that came to the gym were an active population looking to do something else.  So we modeled body builders and that was a fantastic idea because that type of training is very effective – getting some strength, getting some muscle.  The problem nowadays is that people are doing nothing else and they can’t come to the gym 4, 5 or 6 days a week.   If you’re killing it, you’re getting somebody 3 days a week, right?  So I started realizing that there was gaps in fitness.  In first grade education you get told that you should train in flexibility, endurance, strength, power and speed – these are all factors of fitness that you have to train.  We have sort of ignored everything but the strength and cardio component but we can’t do that any more.  So we realized that people need flexibility and mobility.  I have to address that somehow.  They need direct core training.  The science is showing us that this idea that you can just squat heavy and press heavy and work the core is not correct.  Anybody who is saying that stuff is not current on the research.  You need direct core training.  You definitely need some sort of power and elastic work so people lose power as they age very quickly.   We still need strength training, we still need metabolic training and people are so beat up we need to get them on the foam roller and get them to do some type of soft tissue work and we need to do some type of regeneration.  So your first thoughts are ‘how am I going to get all this done?’  So what we came up with at Results Fitness was a sequencing model where we built on the previous sections.  So someone comes in and we’re thinking, this person arrives and they’re tight so we are starting them on the foam roller and we go after the key areas so once we stir up that tissue we are starting to stir up the physiology.  If you look at core temperature it will start to increase after foam rolling.  So I’m already getting somebody warm.  Boom, I’m moving into my dynamic workout which appears a little elastic work, a little plyometric, a little power with some sort of dynamic range of motion.  So there I’m knocking off my two things.  I’m getting a little bit of my  power and elasticity in there, I’m getting my range of motion in there and also, because I structured it with a fast tempo, there’s not a lot of downtime I’m getting my cardio done too.  So you have all that stuff and somebody’s warm.  Then there’s a lot of stuff on corrective exercise.  With corrective exercise, a lot of guys get freaked out by this.  It is strength training or exercises that are designed for your weak areas or your weak movement patterns.  So right after that, we have a couple of corrective exercises with these people.  The beauty of that is because these are so hard you don’t need a lot of warm up for them because you’re not going to go heavy, but metabolically it is still demanding.  So now, I’ve knocked off foam rolling, a little bit of power lifting, a little bit of mobility, I’m moving in a corrective exercise at that point, bang, I hit the core.   I’m usually hitting it with some plank or Valslide work.  From there you are now half way through the workout.  Then we have what we call the traditional strength portion.  If you’re doing bootcamps, obviously you don’t have a set of dumbbells for everybody but you might have a kettle bell or some body weight.  So what we do then is we pair everything up.  We pair a lower body and an upper body because it takes out my down time.  It takes out my rest and we work that as heavy as we can.  So let’s say I do a set of lunges as heavy or as hard as I can.  Then I take a short rest, maybe 30 or 40 seconds.  Then I do a set of push ups or presses as heavy as I can.  Then a short rest 30 to 40 seconds.  My actual set between lunges might be close to 2 or 3 minutes which means I can go very heavy because that’s a long rest.  Metabolically, I’m only resting 30 seconds so I’m hitting cardio again.  I’m getting a nice fat loss effect, I’m getting a nice thermogenic effect because we care keeping an unrushed, solid tempo.  At the end of that I’ll add a little cardio if I want to do a little extra.  A Valslide, maybe some pushups or do some stuff with the ropes, we do some circuit stuff, purely metabolic.  At this point, if you structured your workout correctly 10 minutes of hard cardio is maxing people out.  At that point we do regeneration and stretch people out, cool them down.  At our facility we recommend that they take a nutrition shake.  If you think about it in your head, I want some type of foam rolling where everybody starts a dynamic warm up, corrective exercise, core training, strength training and metabolic.  But if I was to stop any part of your workout I wouldn’t really be sure what you’re doing because your warm up will be cardiovascular and it will have some lunges and squats in it.  Your core training will be demanding and I’m not sure is it strength or is it core?  Is that corrective?  I don’t know.  So in your head as a trainer you’re got these different stations that you’re moving people through.  The client doesn’t really feel it like that.  They just feel like it’s a whole workout.  The key is that sequencing.  It builds so nicely on top of each other that if I was just to do a sit-down stretch to begin with, sure, I would get the flexibility.  But now before I do weight training, I’d have to warm up more and before I did cardio, I’d have to warm up more.  If I sequence it a little differently, they all build on each other so by the time you get to your metabolic training in an hours workout, you’ve done 50 minutes of elevated heart rate.  At the Perform Better seminar that I did in Long Beach this year, Ekho, the heart rate monitor people were very generous and gave a bunch of people in my group a heart rate monitor and put them up on the screen.  So i was looking at guys having maximum percentages of heart rate during the warm up, during the core training – it wasn’t like we lost the whole cardio effect by not doing pure cardio training the whole time  because the whole thing was cardio.  That’s a fun weekend to finish with something that’s hard core.

That’s world class programming right there!  There’s a lot of gray zone.  You look at doing the tissue quality first which is going to allow you to break up some restriction to get a better training effect of working flexibility and mobility.  If you look at strength, in most cases, it’s high intensity mobility work.  I think one of the biggest questions … obviously metabolic training is one of the hottest things right now.  You touched on this too.  You can work strength and get a huge metabolic effect at the same time though there are clear differences from a pure max training power type perspective and then making that metabolic.  CAn we talk about  strength training versus metabolic training and how they differ and also how they can be integrated?

The question is, does the body actually know?  So if I give you a set of lunges for 8 reps, obviously, that’s strength training because you can’t do any more.  But what if I give you lunges for 15 reps?  It’s still strength training, but it starts to become a little more metabolic.  What if I go to slabtouches?  Same pattern.  That’s purely metabolic, there’s still some strength.  What if I go to hill sprints? So the continuum on one end you’ve just got heavy load, which is more mural.  On the other end, you’ve got purely metabolic which would be running.  But I think for our target market, BJ, there’s a zone in between where we need to be surfing a little bit, where maybe we’re stepping around it.  We are at the 8 rep range with most of our clients and we’re going up around the 15 to 20 range, but we’re clear in this zone and maybe in our program, we’re surfing back and forth. My problem with pure metabolic training traditionally has been running.  So if I run a mile, it’s 1500 reps.  That’s 1500 ploymetrics.  A plyometric in the running fashion just running forward will result in joint forces 2 to 4 times your body weight.  So let’s say you have a 200 lbs. deconditioned guy.  Are you going to give him 1500 ploymetrics with forces of up to 800 lbs going through his joints just to get a little cardio effect?  That’s just stupid.  So let’s look at some of the programming.  What if I took him back and I did some squats in place or I did a kettlebell swing.  I can do 10 reps, then have a short rest and do 10 pushups so the lower body gets a break in terms of the loading.  I don’t get the plyometric.  Let’s just say I go back and forth between those two for the same time it would take him to run a mile.  Look what happens – I do far less reps.  Let’s say he does 20 sets of each, that’s 200 reps at less than body weight in the lower body, no ploymetric,  200 reps for the shoulder girdles.  I’ve split it 400 reps for the whole body.  I’ve burned way more calories, I’ve cranked metabolism way up and it’s probably safer than the deconditioned  person with the cardio.  So my question is maybe metabolic is a response to something we’re doing and not a category of exercises.  I can take anything and make it metabolic and all I’m going to do is adjust the load.  If I have you do your max in a squat, BJ, your body is going to feel like maybe shocked.  If I give you 30 seconds of rest and say, “now we’re going to do 80% of your max” and go again and go again.  At the end of that you will have gotten stronger because metabolically, you’ll be challenged.  I always say that metabolic training is a response to a stimulus and not a category in and of itself.  As you said a good strength training program with a lunge or split squat, we’re getting a nice stretch and mobility there.  We’re doing a lat pull or a chin up and that’s the same as a lat stretch and a contraction.  With smart programming we’re getting a nice gray area.  A lot of guys don’t like it because they don’t have these clear categories.  I love it because it’s big bang for my buck stuff.  Let me get a little more lunging with this person and open up the hip flexion.  Let me do it in the form of a sled push or let me do it in the form of a lunge with an overhead reach and let me do it for time with short rest periods so I can take care of my cardio at the same time.  The idea is that the gray area is a good thing.  A lot of guys want to know where does strength training end and metabolic begin?  You can’t do a single rep heavy without your metabolism being involved.  Metabolic training is a response that we get based on our programming and not a classification in and of itself because we can get the same response through super setting, kettle bell swing, ropes or slide pushes than  we ever did jumping rope.

Absolutely!  A lot of people in the group exercise world operate on time because of the fact that you got to get people in and out at the same time and you gotta perform repetitions at different speeds based at fitness level and a variety of other factors.  To use that example, I think a lot of mistakes can be made in group exercise and there are times when it’s alright to incorporate stuff like this but let’s say just doing pushups for 3 minutes.  Not that it’s necessarily something bad to do, but if we’re talking about really jacking up the metabolism, getting strength work and making it as metabolic as possible you’re better suite to let’s say a 20 to 30 second work period there and then sequencing the movements in a noncompetitive format so, like you said, you’re constantly working and moving with short rest periods.  Bt the time you come back it’s all out intensity.   Let’s say you’re doing a 15-45 power interval circuit.  You’ve got 5 power movements addressing the entire body and the cumulative fatigue of doing that for 20 minutes and in the first 5 minutes, 45 seconds seems like a lot and after a couple of rounds it seems like that 45 becomes 15 and now we found a way to get not only that really high level power output, but also a great endurance component  and an incredible afterburner affect.  Can you touch on the time-based stuff?

All a repetition is is a measure of time and a range of motion.  So if I say “10 reps”, I’m assuming that you go from point A, which maybe the top of the push up, point B, the bottom of the push up and back.  That would be 1 rep.  I’m also assuming that that takes a certain time.  Maybe I’m doing 2 seconds down, 2 seconds up.  So there’s really no difference in terms of what the body experiences.  The body just knows 2 things: time and tension.  If I said, “do 30 seconds of push ups.”  If you got 6 reps or you got 10 reps the body feels 30 seconds of push ups.  A lot of the time based programming is really smart because if you’re feeling good that day, we crank it and get a lot of sets done but if you’re not feeling so good, we still get some quality work done.  When a guy goes from 10 to 12 reps, all he did was move faster and didn’t actually do more work.  Work is time times distance.  With metabolic clients, I want more work so the time based programming is actually superior because I know how much work they are getting done.  Studies came out earlier this year that showed that doing straight sets, either bench press or pushups, rest, repeat burned X amount of calories.  Pairing them in a noncompeting format, which is the way we like to do it, you did the same total work in the same time, but the metabolic cost was higher.  I always knew the metabolic cost was high and it was smart programming but it didn’t occur to me that it was higher than doing the same amount of work in straight sets – but it is.  That’s one of the advantages of this type of training.  As you say, it’s funny that you do 15-45’s, people like the first round but by the last round they’re just like “dear God!”  The idea is it’s not 15 of carefree exercises, it’s 15 of a big bang exercise to crank the metabolism.  We go after that with the time.  The time works really well because you go as hard as you can.  We’re not counting reps, we’re just counting quality movement for that whole time.  It’s like a hybrid between strength training and interval training.  It may be the purest form of training that we have  right now.  The key with the sequencing is with exercise 1.  If I go hard, I cannot negatively effect exercise 2.  For example if I go hard on bodyweight squats for 15 seconds and then the next exercise is lunges, those lunges are going to be negatively effected by the squats.  The loading will have to go down, the movements will have to go down, the reps will have to go down.  But if I do squat, break, pushup, break, something else, that way, the local muscular fatigue isn’t a factor.  We’re getting a long rest between the same muscle group so the quality stays up.  A lot of guys are running bootcamps and semi-private classes have… not a fear, but they are trying to make up in volume what they are losing in quality and that can never be done.  Let’s keep the quality high.  Change the sequencing so people are still getting that quality rep.  I actually prefer time based programming and once you get over a certain number it’s the easiest way to program.  The other way to do it is to do a hybrid system where we’re like “Hey, we’re going to work for 60 seconds, but I want you to alternate between these 2 exercises for sets of 6.”  So that’s the hybrid method.  We’ll do 6 lunges, 6 pushups but meanwhile the work interval – the Workout Muse stuff is going on in our background at the single set.  So that’s a hybrid method if you’re looking to change it up, but we can use both methods.  I think it’s the coolest form of training that we have for our target market right now.

You got it!   I get a lot of questions from bootcamp people about how I would do things differently from a semi-private standpoint.  I’m sure you probably get that from your semi-private people, “How do I bring this to the bootcamp?”  Really all we are talking about here is that fitness pros panic about the details.  In reality, it should be the same programming except for the semi-private people are getting more personal attention, more  progress tracking.  You can take the clip board out and  get 6 people accounted for and that’s a bit tough in a 30 person setting.  Maybe that semi-private workout is a bit longer because you need more time and that’s part of what they are paying more for because you’re paying more for semi-private than you are paying for bootcamp style training because of the personal attention and maybe it’s just a longer workout with more pre and post routines.

I think you’re right on.  Physiology doesn’t change.  The concept doesn’t change.  The sequencing of these exercises doesn’t change.  With a group of 30, I’ll have everyone do lunges, grab a medicine ball and if it gets too hard, put it down.  In a semi-private training I can have Jane grab the 15 lbs. dumb bells I know exactly what you need to do and Mike you’re not ready for dumbbells yet, you’re going to go on the floor.  Karen you’re ready for dumbbells and we can actually make this exercise a little harder, I want you to do a 2 second hold at the bottom of every rep.  Basically, it’s better for the trainer because I can customize the workouts a little better for the client.  The downside is that it’s a little more expensive, right?  We have to think of training as a curve from one on one where I supervise every single rep and can make adjustments all the time to group training where I don’t get to be lazy or idiotic with my programming, but I  can’t see everybody’s every single rep.  Semi-private is sort of a hybrid – the best of both worlds, but also the worst because it’s still expensive for some people, but now I get to individualize it.  Don’t get caught up on the details.  You should be able to take a bootcamp class and take it to one on one and do it and just give them a little more.  You should take that to a semi-private and give them a little more than a bootcamp and a little less than a one on one.  Our problem is that we’re always trying to pick the best.  Just help people!  People don’t care whether its one on one, semi-private or small group or large group training.  My idea is that we want as much attention that we can give them.  As soon as your bootcamp gets too big for you to actually help people.  You’ll be at Perform Better BJ and you’ll walk in the room with 200 buys in it or 180 guys.  As good as I try to be, I can’t see everybody.  When your numbers are getting that high, you need staff or you need to limit your numbers because you’re doing people a disservice.  That’s my only caveat with that stuff is that you want to help a lot of people with that stuff but make sure that you’re helping a lot of people and your’e not just crushing them in and breaking people and breaking their backs in the back row.  So, don’t over think it!  Right smart programming!  At my gym, I have all this equipment and as soon as we go out to the field with somebody we have less stuff.  If I do something at a local volleyball team at a school and I got to train them on the court and often I’ll have no stuff.  I have my Workout Muse track, which is my extra pair of hands as it’s doing the timing for me.  You look at this situation, what do you have?  I have to make adjustments.  At my gym, I can go from half a lb. load to 100 lbs. dumbbells and quarter lb. jumps.  Can’t do that on the field.  It actually makes your programming easier because you have less stuff to look at.  So don’t over think it.  Same philosophy with all these stations and they’re all building on each other.  Same idea as this hybrid of metabolic acceleration training.  It’s a hybrid between strength and cardio.  Same ideas. As you have smaller groups you individualize it even more.  If you have bigger groups you try to individualize it as best you can but just be aware that there’s limitations.  it’s still the same philosophy.  I don’t like to hear people say, “That doesn’t work because I do bootcamps.”  B.S.  You can give people good programming and it doesn’t have to be random.

To add to that, further, endless variety sells to people because at the end of a  long day of work and stress, you don’t like to think about much.   I think in a bootcamp environment we try to push this as much as possible.  When I look to program my bootcamp workouts and I look at the best in the field of doing semi-private personal training.  The Mike Boyles and Alwyn Cosgroves, the Dos’s out there and Todd Derkins.  Most of these guys are doing 2 and 3 rotations on a monthly or per phase basis and that’s the same approach you take for that bootcamp because most of these people…  it’s just a neuro adaptation for the workout and if you’re changing it constantly they never allow themselves to make a true muscular metabolic adaptation because they are just figuring things out with that first work.  So we just go to mention that we have to bring that adaptation.

That’s beautiful!  That’s the biggest  problem I see is that these clients do not want variety.  The trainer is board and wants to do new workouts.  These clients want success.  Let’s bring you into these hot thing, it’s called XMA, Extreme Martial Arts.  The opposite of Mixed Martial Arts.  It’s like all forms and gymnastics and it’s really after the nonfighter element in martial arts and they’re really doing a lot of great stuff with kids .  If I take any of us to that class and we try to do a 360 spinning kick and we learn it in one class  and then next class we’re like forget that, we’re trying something new the next class, all you’re going to feel is frustration that you’re not improving.  Your body is not improving and you’re not getting any better and you’re thinking it’s constantly new stuff so how can I improve?  It’s because the trainer is bored.   So when you’re in your bootcamp, I like using the A, B or A, B, C rotation.  For the workouts, the philosophy remains the same and it’s the exercise or the timing that changes.  My overall philosophy remains exactly the same.  It’s lunges and pushups again today remember what you got the last time and try to improve upon it.  These people got to have a stimulus in slightly increasing doses.  It’s like a drug in the medical field:  you give people a dose and you see how they respond.  You don’t constantly increase the drug or change the stimulus.  That’s a myth.  You’re going to have a really hard time convincing me from a physiological basis that you’re doing better work by changing your programs all the time and I don’t believe that your business is as successful as it could be if you’re allowing….  I’m not saying all the same workout all the time, I do like to change it up.  I’m saying 2 or 3 tops within a month and then a bigger change.  Give people a chance to learn and improve and get the adaptation and not just change it.  We’re doing training we’re not doing “entertaining” right?  It has to be fun but people want to learn too.

This is one thing that really gets me fired up because you will hear that people are doing the run of the mill, will change things every day thing, they are going to come… I do a lot of coaching for bootcamp owners and they come to me and say they don’t like it and they want to go back to what we were doing before.  Well, how did you position it in?  Did you position the benefits of doing things this way versus what you have done in the past?  Also, how did you present it?  One thing I love about your presentation is, you say, you should never, ever, ever as your clients feedback on workouts because you are the pro.  Now feedback on how you like the way the place smells or the new shirts you are putting together that’s different.  On the exercise programming side of things, you should not care what they think because they are coming to you because you are the expert  and I think a lot of people out there are so insecure in terms of what they are doing that they feel that they have to constantly change things because the results aren’t there or they are just too concerned about, like you said, “entertrainment” instead of really providing results based culture.

The only reason that we are successful at Results Fitness is that we change people. We change their lives, we change their bodies, we change their performances.  That’s my belief in my program.  I’m going to listen to people if they say they have an injury, then we’ll make adaptations.   But if you say “Hey dude, I like doing chest and upper body and get the pump” and if you stop listening to me and that’s all you give me, you may enjoy the workouts, but you’re not going to get in shape.  I require more than just rep sets of pump exercises to change your body and help you feel better.  If you don’t you’re going to leave me inevitably and that would reflect upon a trainer who doesn’t have faith in their programming and the results.  I always think it’s dumb when you hear that somebody says to the client, “where do you feel that?”  That’s just made me completely aware that you have no clue what you’re doing because you just asked me what muscle does this exercise work.   That’s what you’re asking me.  It’s like your asking the client to have zero stimulus from the programming.  Or even worse, “where do you feel it?”  because your’e asking the client because you have no idea what this does.  My idea is to stick with the program.  It’s not magic what we do, we have to work but if you’re asking them for feed back about what workouts they like and enjoy, that’s  OK as long as you don’t lose sight of effectiveness.  My answer every time a trainer asks me that I like doing upper body for higher reps to get pumped up, I feel good when I do that.  I might feel good and be your greatest fan for a month but a month later when I haven’t lost any body fat and I don’t feel any better and I have more imbalances and more shoulder pain because of the dumb programming, I’m leaving and I’m badmouthing you everywhere I go.

Absolutely!  This is actually a great segue to the next part of it which is  building a winning culture or culture of results.  Clearly, you guys are results-centric.  That is the name of the facility, Results Fitness.  I was reading a Mike Boyle article on circuit training. Coach Boyle for a very long time hasn’t been that big of a fan of circuit training  but he found that with his hockey guys it was very effective.  The answer you gave to him was  “psychology beats programming every time”  I think that what you guys have done at Results Fitness, as an outsider looking in,  you have done an extraordinary job of is building the psychology, particularly when it comes to weight loss.  We are active therapists and it’s a mind game when it comes to losing weight.   You’re dealing with emotional eating and boredom eating issues.  People that have a lot of stress and a lot of stuff on their plate and people around them sabotaging them consciously or unconsciously.  Can you talk about  what it is that you do at that gym when people step in the door an d they leave, there’s a magic that happens for them.  You talk about you being that third place for them:  Home, work and you, the gym.  Talk about that because people want to market and do the latest, greatest thing and use a good lead generation tool that keep people from going out the door within a month or so because the culture isn’t there.

That’s the entire model.  You have to have a culture and model that sets people up for results.  A lot of trainers… Weight Watchers which just requires you to go to open weigh in, like a UFC fight, and get on the scale in front of of everybody, has a higher success rate than the majority of personal trainers, fitness professionals and group instructors out there.  why?  It’s because there’s a culture of social support.  So our idea is what can we build that results in fitness?  What’s our overwhelming 2 driving statements that we keep in mind?  Number 1 is “Changing the way fitness is done.”  Fitness has a bad rap.  There’s bad trainers out there and instead of complaining about it and writing 400 posts about it.  YOu know, “the girl  in the Biggest Loser was awful and her form was bad.”  That doesn’t help anybody.  Lead.  Lead from the front and change it starting with you.  Number 2, “We are the best part of the member’s day, every day.”  I had stage IV cancer and I didn’t tell everyone.  They could guess by looking at me because I wasn’t around too much.  I didn’t want my place to become somewhere that is negative or sad.  So we have some core values that we go through at the gym  that applies to us as staff  and applies to members and if you don’t fit in to these values, you can’t be a staff or a member.  Number 1, “Bring your best.  Do you best every day.”  Number 2, “Be professional.”  Number 3, “Be honest and transparent.”  Number 4, “Have only good days and great days.”  Number 5, “Be we, not me”  It’s all about the teamwork.  Number 6, “Constantly learn and always improve.”  Number 7, “Have fun and a sense of humor.”  BJ, I’ll talk stuff like, “Body building is one of the goofiest things I’ve ever seen.”  The guys will diet down until they can barely stand and then they put Speedos on and oil and then they stand on stage and just spasm and the judges vote who spasmed the best.  Then I get hate mail from guys on the website who tell me they are going to kick my ass when they see me.  I’m just joking.  MMA, which is my background, is goofy too!  Guys in Speedos lying around on top of each other, right?  Trying to squeezing him so hard he says stop squeezing!  Right?  That’s just as ridiculous but hey, we’re having fun.  I’ve gone out on consults with my group and been at clubs and watched bootcamps and I watch people coming out of their cars and walking over to their training session and they look miserable.  They are dreading this.  Let’s change that!  Let’s put the fun back in it!  We got all caught up in evaluating and measuring angles but let’s have fun and a sense of humor!  Number 8, is that we also want to strive for profitability in our business.  Profitability is your return on your investment.  Your goal is to get a return on your training investment.   Number 9, “Exceed expectations and keep leading.”  So we build a culture of support that is teamwork.  If you come in and you’re having a bad day, I will send you home.  I don’t care if you’re a client or staff member.  Only good days and great days in here.  We want  to create a culture.  People are so busy that they only really have 3 places.  And you can see this based on looking at TV. In the 1980’s it was Cheers.  Everyone went to the bar and everybody knows your name.  You went to work, you went home and you went to 1 more place and that was the bar.   Some guys still do that.  In the 90’s when the show friends came out, it was the coffee shop or on Seinfield, it was the diner.  Home, work, one more place.   In today’s world that still exists.  Starbuck’s isn’t locking in that market for a lot of people.  I want it to be Results Fitness.  I want it to be the other place that you come   where you feel just as accepted  as you do at work, when you come home and everybody says “Hey!  How was your day?”  That’s what I want Results Fitness to be.  The fact that why we do cool programming.  It’s almost irrelevant because my support system…  I could take the worst program in the world and plug it into Results Fitness.  With that social support system, something good will happen.  The magic is when I got world class programming and world class culture in the gym.  A lot of people will hear me – and you can look up our core values on our website at resultsfitness.com – just don’t copy mine.  Some people are like “Have fun and a sense of humor” and say I don’t think you should joke about it.  It’s not a debate.  Just chose what you want.  Create your own core values.  Other guys we’re very big on team work empower my staff.  I’ve got a UFC fighter flying over from England to work with us.  Everybody in the industry will be like, I’m going to train that guy.  No my staff can do it, we’re a team, we’ll be just as good.  So you got to embody that culture.  Other guys will be like I want to do everything, I don’t want any staff.  That’s OK, that’s your culture, your core values.  But the best piece of advise I could give to a fitness professional is to establish what are your core values?  The way to do that is to look at people that you admire and see what their core values are.  One of my business heroes is Richard Branson.     He seems to just have fun.  I looked at his outposts to see his core values and one of theirs is “have fun and be a little lackey.”  So I’m always looking at these things  and asking do these resonate with me?  There was a soccer game shown in the UK and there was a local sports bar that shows all the soccer games that’s owned by a British guy,   I was flying back from the UK, when you add in travel to and from the airport and connections it ends up being an 18 hour day.  I said I’ll be in to see the game that evening because I was going to miss it on the plane.  So I arrive and I’m exhausted and I’m not that huge of a soccer fan, but I wanted to go because keeping my word is very important to me.  Other people would be that there’s no right or wrong core values, there’s only strong core values.  What’s the culture?  I don’t know what the culture is at Workout Muse, but I know when I play it, I can tell that it’s about hard directed effort while having a great time.  So it fits in with me!  If it came in and it was sterile and it was deadly serious and nobody should be smiling, that wouldn’t work in my place.   Similarly it might not work in other people’s places.  I love the circuit training environment.  Mike makes a good point, he didn’t like it.  Mike always comes from a different angle and I think people forget that because of his prestige in our field the.  The guy’s a legend, but most of his experiences are with Division I, elite level college athletes.  He doesn’t have a lot of experience with the general population like the rest of us.  He only started done some personal training a couple of years ago.  He’s only had one real weight loss client.  That’s not a slam on Mike, Mike’s a genius.  For him, he’s looking at hockey performance and making decisions.  I’m looking at making a culture in my environment and making decisions based on that.  One of my primary questions is, “Hey, should I bring in a flat screen TV’s and put them on the treadmills?”  I don’t even have tread mills and I don’t think it will help results and it won’t help the culture because people will stop talking to each other.  If you want a culture in your gym were people are very individualized and it’s like little pods where people don’t talk to anyone  then that’s fine.  My culture has got to be about team work.  Semi-private group training.  If you don’t want semi-private or group training you don’t want Results Fitness, you want another gym.  Everything hinges on the environment including your staff.  When I interview people we go through 10 questions and each question is designed to see if your core values are in line with mine.  If they are, I will train you to be a great trainer.  I’ve got access to 1000’s of DVD’s.  I can get BJ Gaddour on the phone any time I want to talk to my staff if I want.  I can bring people in to improve my people but I can’t improve core values.  You have to come in with them.  We interview based on attitude we train on skill.

I love it!  I think this is by far the most difficult, at least in my opinion as a business owner, the hardest part of any business is finding good people.  People who you can trust to take your business vision and contribute to it and make it their own the way that they are contributing to the business.   This is what most trainers, particularly in the group training atmosphere, struggle with the most.  How do you find somebody that will give that same energy, that same dynamic that will give the kind of performance that you do and most people really struggle with this.  You can never become a business until you can have people that execute business for you while providing 80-90% of what it would be if you were there.  Clearly you have figured this out.  Can you share some insight for the trainer that just doesn’t know, who’s just right on the edge of breaking through and taking things to the next level, but they can’t find a way to get people to help them and take things to that level. So how do you guys do it?

I’m going to try to answer this fast because I could spend a couple of hours on this because this is huge.  Number 1:  If you’re a true leader in your field, you have to get it into your head, you have to empower others to do things for you. You have to give them the opportunity to help train your clients and to run your business.  So we have a rule that if somebody can do it 70% as good as me, I  delegate to them and I train from there.  That’s Part 1, you have to let go a little bit.  The joke is entrepreneurs is a French word for get the hell out of my way, I’m going to do it.  We’ve got to empower people to do this stuff.  So get it out of your head that you can do it better.  You are a trainer  who started off with your first client once too, and somebody gave you a shot.  I know it’s hard to believe that I sucked at one time,  I was awful.  Somebody gave me a shot and I got better.  If someday didn’t give me a shot, I would be doing something else right now. You’ve got to empower and you’ve got to pay it forward.  So the next 2 parts of this are 1.  Only hire people in line with your core values.  you can learn skill.  You can get a black belt in tai kwan do and you can learn jujitsu and a black belt in judo and kung fu in five years.  You can have zero knowledge of how to swim and you can be swimming in a few months.  A course of chemotherapy from start to finish is maybe 6 months of treatment.  That’s massive change, that’s massive things.  If you look at a degree, it’s 4 years.  In actual fact of attending classes, it’ probably about 1 year and a half.  With all the days off and all the personal study time, it’s not 4 years, 52 weeks a year, 8 hours a day, 5 or 6 days a week.  You could get a college education in a shorter time, only if they have these core values, only if everything else can be trained.  So we start with core values and we hire people with that same energy.  The last part, I call the Cookie Monster theory.  I like cookies, white chocolate macadamia nut cookies, I like those.  I have no idea how to make cookies.  I have no idea where to start BJ.  But I know that if you gave me your family recipe or Naomi’s family secret cookie recipe and it said, Step 1, Alwyn, go to the store and buy these 4 ingredients, I can do that.  Step 2, come home and turn the oven on to 400 degrees.  I can do that.  I can follow these steps in the recipe and I could come out with pretty good cookies.  As good as Naomi could do?  Absolutely not.  As good as an expert?  Absolutely not.  But 70% is good on my first try, maybe 80% on the their time and maybe 90% on my fourth time and maybe after being coached with following the recipe, I’ll be as good.  I don’t need to be as good today, but I need to be as good after a while. A recipe is just a system.  A system stands for Save Your Self Time Energy Money.  So my idea is that you empower these people.  You hire them based on your core values and you train them well then, you say here’s how I run a class, watch what happens.   Number 1, I’m like hey everybody, line up.  I want you in 3 lines the first exercise is this.  Maybe you have to write it all down like a script for a movie.   If they remade Star Wars with different actors and the same script, different actors can play the same part.  Maybe not as good, but good enough.  That’s the idea.  I wan them to be about 70% as you to begin with because they are going to grow from there.  Then they just follow your script for everything.  My idea is that I don’t need a trainer to do their own thing.  I need a trainer to do my thing.  I need you to be Alwyn Cosgrove in front of the group and just do what I would do.  Eventually, you’re good enough and you got your own style and that’s amazing.  McDonald’s doesn’t hire anybody for their spaghetti recipe, they hire people with their core values who can execute their system.  That’s why a Big Mac’s the same all over the world.  What I want at Result Fitness is a good staff member with these core values and who can execute my system.  I’ll create elite trainers.  I will train them.  In the last year, we brought a bunch of top names in for private training with my guys.  We have 150 educational DVD’s that they can check out at any time.  They should be checking out 1 per week or I’m getting upset.  If I have a question and I need to get you on the phone, I can get you to conference call with my team. There’s advantages of working with me as far as education but it all starts with core values and your ability to follow the recipe.   I don’t want artists free styling right now I need you to execute the steps.  So the 3 things are:  Get it out of your head that you’re better than anybody.  Your job as a leader is to empower people and give them a chance to grow because someone gave them a shot.  Number 2:  Hire based on core values not on skill. Skill can be trained.  Core values and attitude cannot be trained, they are inherent.  Lastly, create the system and have your guys get the steps.

I love it!  Just script out everything.  I read Men’s Health magazine, I’ve got a subscription and I enjoy the magazine a lot and obviously and you and Rachel or your business are pretty much on almost every page of the magazine.  One thing I saw is that it’s also your staff.  The Group Exercise Director or the Program Manager is featured in Men’s Health.  So I think at some point it’s great to have accolades as an individual, we all work hard for that, but there’s no better model of how you take yourself out of the spotlight to do things better behind the scenes that will grow the whole pie and feature your stars.

My whole thing is that I learned it fast because I got sick and I had to step out.  So people, listen, you don’t have to get sick to learn it.  Trust me.  You need to empower people and let them grow.  If 10 years from now I’m still the main guy standing at Perform Better, teaching my thing while my staff are standing in the back of the room then I failed.  That’s not success.  There’s older guys on the tour now and you know we have to be replaced by the next generation or we failed.  Even if you have a bootcamp with 6 people in it in the park if years from now you’re still running it, you may love it but you haven’t empowered anyone to move on and replace you.  I had to learn it because I was sick and it had to happen, but trust me you just have to do it.  I’ve said this to guys that I’ve been coaching all along that my goal is that a lot of guys will say, “Hey, you’ve helped me a lot, how can I repay you?”  You don’t repay me.  My life is fine.  You repay it forward. That’s how you repay me.  Same thing with your business and your staff, you pay  it forward and you help other people to grow.

I know you’re doing all these 1 or 2 day events at Perform Better, you speak at Perform Better, have a ton of great products,  regarding semi-private training.  Where’s the best place for people to, as an enthusiast or a professional, to get empowered with all the cool stuff you put together?

The primary spot is resultsfitnessbiz.com.  and following that is my blog.  My personal website which is alwyncosgrove.com

Alwyn, thank you so much!  This is probably one of the biggest honors to get on the phone with you.

Thanks for sharing your insights with our group and if there’s anything I can ever do for you, please let me know and you can consider it done.

Cheers Brother!  Thanks very much.

Take care buddy!

Bye bye!

Crank it with BJ: D.A. Wallach of Chester French!!

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010
The other day I was honored to work out celebrity D.A. Wallach, the lead singer of Chester French. D.A. and I went to high school together and have stayed in touch since.
For those of you who don’t know, Chester French is a pop music duo comprising singer D.A. Wallach and multi-instrumentalist Max Drummey. The group originally formed in 2003 as a five piece live band at Harvard University, where the band members were freshmen. A year later, D.A. and Max began working as recording engineers at the school’s student recording studio, and continued writing, producing, and engineering their music as a duo. By their senior year, the album that they had made for less than $2,000 sparked a bidding war between some of the biggest artists in popular music, including Kanye West and Pharrell Williams. Ultimately, D.A. and Max signed with Williams to his Star Trak imprint on Interscope Records (home to U2, Eminem, Gwen Stefani).

Since then, Chester French has played hundreds of shows with its three piece backing band, touring the US and Europe as a headliner or with Blink 182, Weezer, N*E*R*D, Common, or Lady Gaga. D.A. and Max have also made a point to connect with their supporters through free, intimate acoustic performances in dozens of sneaker shops and record stores around the U.S. Their relentlessly energetic and engaging sets have won fans of a variety of styles of music, and the group’s audiences are as diverse as its sound.

In April of 2009, Chester French released its highly-anticipated debut album, Love the Future, which has received broad critical acclaim. People Magazine’s Chuck Arnold called it “a delightfully whimsical pop pastiche that evokes everyone from the Beach Boys and the Beatles to Prince,” and the Boston Globe hailed the release as “too wise – and too catchy – to possibly be the debut from the recent Harvard grads.”

To promote Love the Future, the duo simultaneously released a free, full-length concept album of comedy-infused hip-hop and pop music entitled Jacques Jams Vol. 1: Endurance. Overseen by renowned DJ Clinton Sparks, the album featured collaborations with Jermaine Dupri, Diddy, Pharrell, Talib Kweli, Bun B, Janelle Monae, and many others. Over 300,000 fans have downloaded Jacques Jams, available at www.ChesterFrench.com/mixtape, and publications ranging from VIBE to the New York Times have praised the project’s creativity.

Chester French rounded out 2009 with national network television performances on NBC’s Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, and ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live!. Both appearances showcased the group’s fiery live show, as well as D.A.’s and Max’s typically unconventional sartorial stylings, which have landed the duo in GQ and Vogue.

In order to stay connected with its fans, the band has created www.ChesterFrench.com, where fans can buy music and merchandise directly from D.A. and Max. It is also the hub of their unique VIP Concierge Service, a free membership network through which Chester French provides its fans with extraordinary personal service, news, and invitations to exclusive events.

You can expect their new album in 2010 and D.A. is also embarking on a solo project in the New Year as well.

Be sure to head over to their Facebook fan page and follow them as they are quite talented and a ton of fun:http://www.facebook.com/chesterfrench

Crank it!
BJ

PS- iWorkout Muse PRO has been submitted for your review for to the Apple iTunes store so now it’s just a waiting game. But if past experience is any indicator, we expect this baby to be ready by the end of this year or early 2011… stay tuned!

Bootcamp Automator December 2010 Movie Trailer

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Below us is outline of the Bootcamp Automator December 2010 Program Design:

Continuous 30-Second Movement Ladders- 20 Minutes Total: Start by performing 1 movement for 30 seconds followed by a 30 second rest. Each round perform 1 additional movement for 30 seconds. Just listen, the music will tell you exactly what to do!

15-30-45-60-60-45-30-15 Pyramid Interval Trisets- 20 minutes total: First perform AScending 15-30-45-60 ladder intervals for 3 different exercises switching exercises every set and then perform DEScending 60-45-30-15 ladder intervals for 3 different exercises switching exercises every set. There is only a short 15 seconds rest and transition between exercises. Just listen, the music will tell you exactly what to do!

Ascending and Descending 10-20-30 Ladder Intervals Circuit Training- 20 Minutes Total: Start by performing AScending 10-20-30 ladder intervals with a 1:1 work to rest ratio for each exercise before moving to the next exercise in the 5-exercise circuit. Then finish by performing DEScending 30-20-10 ladder intervals with a 1:1 work to rest ratio for each exercise before moving to the next exercise in the 5-exercise circuit. Just listen, the music will tell you exactly what to do!

Equipment-Based Metabolic Workout Routines

30-Minute EXPRESS Workouts for Busy People

- These equipment-based workouts involve group exercise friendly equipment options like resistance bands, TRX suspension training units, stability balls, valslides, dumbbells, kettlebells, med balls, battle ropes, etc. Please reference the provided equipment-free versions of these workouts if you have limited equipment access.

3 Equipment-Based Workouts

Equipment-Based

Workout A

Equipment-Based

Workout B

Equipment-Based

Workout C

Interval Protocol

Continuous 30-Second Movement Ladders

15-30-45-60-60-45-30-15 Pyramid Interval Trisets

Ascending and Descending 10-20-30 Ladder Intervals Circuit

Exercise Selection and Order

1- KB 2-Leg Hip-Hinge + Row Variation

1- TRX Squat Sequence Complex Variation

1- TRX Mountain Climbers Variation

2- Band-Resisted Triceps Push-up Variation

2- KB Alternating Shuffle Swings Variation

2- MB Split Squat Slams

3- 1-Leg Deadlift Variation

3- Corkscrew

Push-up Variation

3- Battle Ropes In and Out Waves Variation

4- DB Biceps Push-up Variation

4- KB Side to Side Sumo Deadlift Jumps Variation

5- Band-Resisted 1-Leg Hip-Hinge Variation

5- Lateral Stationary Running Variation

6- Hands Over the Line Variation

7- KB Swings Variation

8- DB Zottman Curls

Equipment-Free Metabolic Workout Routines

30-Minute EXPRESS Workouts for Busy People

- These equipment-free workouts are modified versions of the aforementioned equipment-based workouts for those camps with limited access to fitness equipment. Simply substitute Equipment-Free Workout A for Equipment-Based Workout A and so forth as needed. These equipment-free routines are ideal for outdoor camps and corporate camps where equipment is limited.

3 Equipment-Free Workouts

Equipment-Free

Workout A

Equipment-Free

Workout B

Equipment-Free

Workout C

Interval Protocol

Continuous 30-Second Movement Ladders

15-30-45-60-60-45-30-15 Pyramid Interval Trisets

Ascending and Descending 10-20-30 Ladder Intervals Circuit

Exercise Selection and Order

1- Back Pillar Variation

1- Squat Sequence Complex Variation

1- Wall Mounted Mountain Climbers Variation

2- Triceps Push-up Variation

2- Lateral Shuffle Shuttle Variation

2- Rear-Foot-Elevated (RFE) Split Squats Variation (L)

3- 1-Leg Deadlift Variation

3- Corkscrew

Push-up Variation

3- Rear-Foot-Elevated (RFE) Split Squats Variation (R)

4- Biceps Push-up Variation

4- T-Push-up Variation

5- 1-Leg Hip-Hinge Variation

5- Lateral Stationary Running Variation

6- Hands Over the Line Variation

7- Vertical Jumps Variation

8- Triceps Push-up Variation

The top fitness bootcamp owners in the world automate their camps with Bootcamp Automator.



Each month comes with one month OF done-for-you program design taken straight out of my MISSION: METABOLISM BOOTCAMP in Milwaukee, WI, including:


- THREE custom interval training workout music soundtracks powered by Workout Muse

- SIX instructional workout videos: 3 equipment-based and 3 bodyweight

- ONE program design cheat sheets PDF

For more info about the best fitness boot camp workouts in the world for corporate and community camps, indoor and outdoors camps, and start-up and veteran camps, please visit our store and search for BOOTCAMP AUTOMATOR:

https://www.workoutmuse.com/store/

OR email us at:

support@workoutmuse.com

PLUS, if you email us, be sure to mention you saw this YouTube video and blog post to get a special offer ;)

Crank it!
BJ

Movie Trailer: 2010 Bootcamp Workout Highlight Video

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

I got some cool new iLife ‘11 software for my mac so I put together a super dramatic movie trailer as kind of a bootcamp highlight video of 2010.

It was tough to jam several hundred people and a year’s worth of workouts into a 77 seconds, but I did my best.

Please take a minute of your day to check it out below:

If you run a boot camp or fitness business, be sure to make your own highlight video to recognize your clients and campers for all of their hard work in 2010…

It’s probably the best and most fun marketing you can do to end the year ;)

And if you want to get fit in 2011, do yourself a favor and find a local fitness bootcamp in your area that uses Workout Muse so that you have someone who knows what they’re doing to push you to the next level.

Crank it!
BJ

Monday Crankfest: 20-10 Thunderband Workout

Sunday, December 12th, 2010

I thought I’d throw a little Monday motivation at you with this slick Thunderband Workout powered by Workout Muse.

Special thanks to top strength coach and WM user Vince McConnell of McConnell Athletics based in Fairhope, Alabama for sharing ;)

To learn more about the 20-10 resistance band training tabata interval track used in the video, click the image below:

To check out other 20-10 tracks, simply click the link below:

https://www.workoutmuse.com/store/

Click “Interval Protocols” and select “20-10″ to see all the 20-10 tracks we offer!!

To learn more about those awesome thunderbands those guys are rocking in the video, go to the band man’s store here:

Crank it!
BJ

Best Abs Workout to Burn Belly Fat

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Mixed Equipment Workout

ADRENALINE ABS Workout- 20 minutes: Alternate between 10 seconds of maximum effort for a total body exercise and a core stability exercise with a short 5-second transition between exercises. Perform for 5 straight minutes followed by a 1-minute rest and transition. The workout ends with a surprise finisher consisting of 2-minutes of continuous work for a total body exercise.

Station#

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

1

1- TOTAL BODY:

KB 1-Arm Hang Clean Variation

DB 1-Arm Hang Clean

KB 1-Arm Assisted Hang Clean

KB 1-Arm Hang Clean

2- CORE STABILITY:

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold Variation

Short-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Long-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold

2

1- TOTAL BODY:

Med Ball Slams Variation

Decrease Loading and/or Speed of Movement

Med Ball Slams

Increase Loading and/or Speed of Movement

2- CORE STABILITY:

Med Ball Mountain Climbers Variation

MB Push-up Hold

MB Slow Mountain Climber

MB Fast Mountain Climber

3

1- TOTAL BODY:

Band Split Stance Push Press Variation

Band Parallel Stance Push Press

Band Split Stance Push Press

Increase Resistance

2- CORE STABILITY:

Back Pillar Hold Variation

Bent-Knee Hip Extension Hold

4-Point Back Pillar on Hands

3-Point Back Pillar Hold on Hands

FINISHER

Running in Place Variation

Upper Body Running or Marching in Place

Jogging in Place

Running in Place

Battle Ropes Alternative Workout

ADRENALINE ABS Workout- 20 minutes: Alternate between 10 seconds of maximum effort for a total body exercise and a core stability exercise with a short 5-second transition between exercises. Perform for 5 straight minutes followed by a 1-minute rest and transition. The workout ends with a surprise finisher consisting of 2-minutes of continuous work for a total body exercise.

Station#

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

1

1- TOTAL BODY:

Battle Ropes Up-Down Waves Variation

Decrease Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Battle Ropes Up-Down Waves

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

2- CORE STABILITY:

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold Variation

Short-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Long-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold

2

1- TOTAL BODY:

Battle Ropes Side to Side Waves Variation

Decrease Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Battle Ropes Side to Side Waves

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

2- CORE STABILITY:

Mountain Climbers Variation

Push-up Hold

Slow Mountain Climber

Fast Mountain Climber

3

1- TOTAL BODY:

Battle Ropes Figure 8 Waves Variation

Decrease Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Battle Ropes Figure 8 Waves

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

2- CORE STABILITY:

Back Pillar Hold Variation

Bent-Knee Hip Extension Hold

4-Point Back Pillar Hold on Hands

3-Point Back Pillar Hold on Hands

FINISHER

Partner “I Go, You Go” 20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves and T-Push-ups Superset

20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves/Push-up Hold

20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves/T-Push-up Hold

20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves/T-Push-up

Want more of this insane ADRENALINE ABS template?? Click the links below to check out audio and/or video samples to see which product is the right fit for you:

Bootcamp Automator- 1-Month of Done-for-You ADRENALINE ABS Group Ex Program Design

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/adrenaline-abs-for-fitness-professionals

Workout Automator- 1-Month of Done-for-You ADRENALINE ABS Home/Travel Fitness Program Design

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/adrenaline-abs-for-fitness-enthusiasts

Workout of the Month- Featured AA Workout with Workout Videos and Soundtracks

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/workout-of-the-month-september-2010

Soundtrack of the Month- Featured AA Interval Workout Music Track

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/soundtrack-of-the-month-september-2010

Crank it!
BJ

30-15 Interval Metabolic Circuit with TRX, Valslides, Battle Ropes, Resistance Bands, Kettlebells and Dumbbells

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

Since my MISSION: METABOLISM BOOTCAMP only has 2 weeks of training for the month of December before a 2-week holiday break, I’ve decided to select my 6 favorite workout templates of 2010.

Here’s my first favorite template and a done-for-you Level I, II, III program design chart like we do in Bootcamp Automator each and every month (plus the tracks and instructional videos to go with it and bodyweight alternatives for each workout).

30-15 Six-Exercise Metabolic Circuit with TRX, Valslides, Battle Ropes, Bands, Kettlebells and Dumbbells- 20 Minutes: Alternate between 30 seconds of work and 15 seconds of rest for each exercise in the following 6-exercise circuit followed by a 60-second rest and transition between circuits.

Station#

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

1

TRX 180-Degree Split Squat Jumps Variation

TRX Split Squats

TRX Split Squat Jumps

TRX 180-Degree Split Squat Jumps

2

Battle Ropes 1-Arm Up-Down and Side-to-Side Waves Superset Variation

Decrease Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Battle Ropes 1-Arm Up-Down and Side-to-Side Waves Superset

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

3

Sliding Mountain Climbers Variation

Push-up Hold

Progress from Slow to Fast Sliding Mountain Climbers

Sliding Mountain Climbers + Push-up

4

Band Pull-Aparts Variation

Decrease Resistance

Band Pull-Aparts

Increase Resistance

5

Kettlebell (KB) Sumo Deadlift Variation

Progress from Bodyweight to External Loading

KB Sumo Deadlift

Increase Loading

6

Dumbbell (DB) Push-up Rows Variation

DB Push-up Hold

DB Push-up Rows

Increase Loading

And here’s a great Medicine Ball Workout Alternative that I used at another location:

Med Ball Workout Alternative

30-15 Six-Exercise Metabolic Circuit- 20 Minutes: Alternate between 30 seconds of work and 15 seconds of rest for each exercise in the following 6-exercise circuit followed by a 60-second rest and transition between circuits.

Station#

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

1

Med Ball Burpees Variation

MB Sumo Deadlift: Progress from Bodyweight to External Loading

MB Burpees

MB Jumping Burpees

2

Med Ball Slams Variation

MB Slams

MB Side to Side Slams

Increase Loading and/or Speed of Movement

3

Med Ball 1-Leg Hip-Hinge Variation (L)

Bodyweight 1-Leg Hip-Hinge

MB 1-Leg Hip-Hinge

MB 1-Leg Hip-Hinge + High Knee

4

Med Ball 1-Leg Hip-Hinge Variation (R)

Bodyweight 1-Leg Hip-Hinge

MB 1-Leg Hip-Hinge

MB 1-Leg Hip-Hinge + High Knee

5

Med Ball Walking Lunges Variation

MB Split Squat: Progress from Bodyweight to External Loading

Progress from MB Alt. Reverse Lunges to MB Alt. Forward Lunges

MB Walking Lunges

6

Med Ball Cross-Body Mountain Climber Variation

MB Push-ups Hold

MB Cross-Body Mountain Climber

MB Cross-Body Mountain Climber + Push-up

Want more custom 30-15 interval training workout music soundtracks and/or done-for-you workouts??

Simply click on one of the images below to learn more and listen to audio samples or view video samples ;)


MISSION: METABOLISM for Fitness Professionals- $67

THIS PRODUCT IS FEATURED IN BOOTCAMP AUTOMATOR AUGUST 2010 AND IS TAILOR MADE FOR FITNESS PROS AND BOOTCAMP OWNERS LOOKING TO AUTOMATE THEIR GROUP EXERCISE WORKOUTS. DO NOT BUY THIS PRODUCT IF YOU ALREADY OWN THIS CONTENT!

The official 30-minute express metabolic circuit training system from BJ Gaddour’s world famous MISSION: METABOLISM BOOTCAMP in Milwaukee, WI!

This DIGITAL product includes:

- THREE 30-15 interval six-exercise metabolic circuit mp3 soundtracks that tell your clients and campers exactly what to do

– SIX instructional mp4 workout videos, 3 equipment and 3 bodyweight workouts each, showing you exactly how to teach and demo custom Level I, II, and III exercise progressions for all fitness levels

- ONE program design cheat sheets PDF outlining your group exercise workouts


MISSION: METABOLISM for Fitness Enthusiasts- $47

THIS PRODUCT IS FEATURED IN BOOTCAMP AND WORKOUT AUTOMATOR AUGUST 2010 AND IS TAILOR MADE FOR FITNESS ENTHUSIASTS LOOKING FOR A DONE-FOR-YOU HOME/TRAVEL FITNESS PROGRAM. DO NOT BUY THIS PRODUCT IF YOU ALREADY OWN THIS CONTENT!

The official 30-minute express metabolic circuit training system from BJ Gaddour’s world famous MISSION: METABOLISM BOOTCAMP in Milwaukee, WI!

This DIGITAL product includes:

- FOUR 30-15 interval six-exercise metabolic circuit mp3 soundtracks that tell you exactly what to do, including exercise section and order

- FOUR instructional mp4 workout videos, 2 equipment and 2 bodyweight workouts each, showing you exactly what to do with custom Level I, II, and III exercise progressions for all fitness levels

- ONE program design cheat sheets PDF outlining your workouts


Workout of the Month- August 2010- $24.95

THIS CONTENT IS ALSO FEATURED IN BOOTCAMP AUTOMATOR 2010 and MISSION: METABOLISM. DO NOT BUY IT IF YOU ALREADY OWN THIS CONTENT!!

This DIGITAL product includes:

- TWO 30-15 interval six-exercise metabolic circuit mp3 soundtracks that tell you exactly what to do, including exercise section and order

- TWO instructional mp4 workout videos, 1 equipment and 1 bodyweight workout each, showing you exactly what to do with custom Level I, II, and III exercise progressions for all fitness levels

- ONE program design cheat sheets PDF outlining your workouts


Soundtrack of the Month- August 2010- $14.95

THIS TRACK IS FEATURED IN BOOTCAMP AUTOMATOR AND WORKOUT AUTOMATOR FOR AUGUST 2010. DO NOT BUY IT IF YOU ALREADY OWN THIS CONTENT!!

This DIGITAL product includes:

- ONE 30-15 interval six-exercise metabolic circuit mp3 soundtrack: 20 minutes total

Crank it!
BJ

Cardio Kickboxing Workout

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

Here’s a great Cardio Kickboxing Workout put together by our fantastic MMA instructor Eloisa DeLeon from our new Cardio Kickboxing class at The Fitness Asylum in Milwaukee, WI.

Boxing Intervals: 3 Minutes on, 1 Minute Off

1- Jabs @ 30 seconds with immediate transition
2- Hooks @ 30 seconds with immediate transition
3- Upper Cuts @ 30 seconds with immediate transition
4- Front Kicks @ 30 seconds with immediate transition
5- Back Kicks @ 30 seconds with immediate transition
6- Side Kicks @ 30 seconds with immediate transition

The great thing about Cardio Kickboxing is that all you need is your bodyweight, plus some skilled instruction, to get in a great workout.

For fitness facility owners, it’s also a great walk-in or punch card class to offer to your campers or clients that can’t get enough of what you do.

Stay tuned for the NEW Boxing Intervals Workout Music Soundtrack that’s powering this workout next week!

To learn more about this Cardio Kickboxing class in Milwaukee, WI at The Fitness Asylum, please visit:

http://www.MilwaukeeFitnessAsylum.com

Crank it!
BJ