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Saturday, October 16, 2010

Choosing the Right Fitness Professional

I was asked very recently about how to choose a good personal trainer. In my opinion, a good personal trainer will not just be a "trainer", but a fitness professional. The professional must take into account the needs as well as what the client wants - which often may not be the same. Here is a general approach to a good fitness professional:

ASSESSMENTS:

Assessments help us determine what the client needs (movement analysis), what direction we will be taking our client (road map) and any special considerations that relate specifically to the client (injuries, health issues and goals). The professional will use this information to develop a periodized program specific to the client.

If a professional does not do any assessments or show a plan for success, then I'd call foul.

BEHAVIOR CHANGE vs. OUTCOME

An outcome would be losing 10 lbs. A behavior change would be encouraging a client to be accountable for their weekly training and meal frequency. If a behavior is changed, then the outcome will follow with a focus on implementing these aspects PERMANENTLY into their lives.

Placing your focus on the outcome will leave the client psychologically unchanged in their approach to a plan and can set them up for a fall.

RECORD KEEPING

Does your trainer wing it? Do they ask you what YOU feel like doing in the workout? Answer this: Why pay them if YOU are going to be dictating the workout. I often tell my students, there is a large difference between winging it and changing on the fly. No plan = winging it. Implementing planning flexibility in a changing environment = changing on the fly.

On top of this, how will the trainer record the client's success? It's through validity and reliability that testing (assessment) protocols are founded. If there is no value, how can the trainer help the client? They won't.

Find the value and measure the success. Photos, workouts, re-assessments, body measurements - ANYTHING.

SUMMARY:

Ultimately, I look at everyone as an athlete regardless of age, gender or goals (it's the strength coach in me...). Next time you're with your trainer, or you are thinking about hiring a trainer - take these bits and use them to your advantage.

Good luck!

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