The first time is always worth remembering. Whether it was the first time you benched 225 pounds, set a new PR on the squat, or even the first time you had to buy bigger jeans because your thighs got too big, the feeling of conquering new challenges propels you to keep driving for continued success in the gym.

But continued gains don't just happen by accident; in fact, they quickly stall once you pass beginner status. And that makes this precisely the right time to begin your first strength phase. So, ladies and gentlemen, it's time to get strong—Hercules, Hulk, human-crane-type strong.



Follow these simple steps to build your own surefire strength routine!

1. Find Your Max

A starting point is pivotal for setting—and achieving—measurable, realistic goals. Do you already know your current squat, bench, and deadlift one-rep maxes (1RM)? If so, write them down. If not, you'll have to test. There are two ways to easily test your 1RM:

  1. Work up to a heavy set of 3 and approximate. You should be able to lift 90 percent of your 1RM for 3-4 reps. So if you can do 225 pounds for 3 reps, divide 225 by 0.9. Your 1RM is roughly 250 pounds.
  2. Test it! Simply test your 1RM by working up to the heaviest single that you can lift without complete form breakdown. Plan a week of testing and test each lift on a different day.

Whichever method you choose, knowing your maxes allows for two pivotal training processes: setting realistic goals and planning your training loads.

2. Set Your Strength Goals

A typical strength cycle lasts 12-16 weeks. Gaining 5-10 percent on your maxes during a cycle is typical for a beginner, so if your best bench press is currently 225 pounds, we're looking to move the bar to 235-245. However, gains don't continue at this rate indefinitely. As the training years accumulate, each pound added to the bar is a hard-fought victory. Consider this as you set your first round of goals: shoot to increase your lifts by 5 percent.

Maxes are also used to select training loads. Take your absolute max—the number you just acquired via testing—and decrease it by 5-10 percent. This is your training max. It's different from the absolute max to ensure that you plan enough quality training volume without overtraining. The goals here are more quality reps without going to failure, appropriate loads that your body adapts to, and better lifting technique.

3. Practice Your Form

Being a newcomer to strength-specific training dictates a practice-first strategy. It may be against our nature as physically driven humans to dial back and master the basics, but that's precisely what a lengthy training career requires. Go balls out at the beginning and you'll have a blast—for a little while—before your training collapses face first. That's because you won't acquire the requisite skills to progress without ruining your body and its ability to adapt to heavier training.

Focus on learning the lifts—squat, bench, deadlift, and overhead press—early on and you'll consistently get stronger during your training career. Don't hyperfocus on your one-rep max: it has its purpose, but it doesn't predominate the process. Commit to growing into a skilled lifter.



4. Select A Simple Strength Scheme

Thanks to the Internet, there's an endless multitude of experts who provide programs from which you can choose. Avoid them.

Westside is alluring and Smolov squat cycles have a challenging attraction. But they're complicated, requiring a huge training base—fitness and skill—and you don't need them right now. These are, of course, only two examples of many, many complicated programs out there.

The current mandate is simplicity. Sets of 5 in the 70-85 percent range and sets of 3 in the 75-90 percent range are perfect for your main lifts. Assistance lifts employ sets in the 5-8-rep range, keeping a few reps left in the tank at the end of each set. Since this is not bodybuilding, you're not going to muscle failure.

5. Select Your Exercises

Multijoint lifts are done with barbells, dumbbell, and kettlebells. There's no place for machine training and very little room for single-joint training in absolute strength development. It's simply wasted training volume.

Focus on:

  1. The deadlift and its variations: rack pulls, Romanian deadlifts, and sumo deadlifts.
  2. The bench press and its variations: incline bench presses, floor presses, and dumbbell bench presses.
  3. The squat and its variations: front squats, box squats, goblet squats.
  4. The overhead press and its variations: seated military presses, dumbbell overhead presses, kettlebell overhead presses.

Putting together a routine should be fairly simple. Use a full-range deadlift, bench press, or squat as your main lift, doing sets of 3 or 5, and select a variation of each as your assistance exercise (e.g., rack pulls with deadlifts, floor presses with bench press, front squats with the squat, and so on).

6. Avoid Bodybuilding Goals

Many new to absolute strength training mistakenly apply their general fitness or bodybuilding habits to their strength regimens—and that means they plan too many exercises and too much volume.



Strength development is increasingly nervous-system intensive, unlike its bodybuilding counterpart that mostly taxes the musculoskeletal system. This means you must plan less volume for strength development; if you try to match volume with a bodybuilding program, you'll short-change recovery and could eventually regress.

There's no magic formula for determining the exact number of exercises, but it lies somewhere in the 3-6 range. There's variation because it depends on several factors: for one, whether you're planning an upper-body session, a lower-body session, or a full-body session. You must also consider the intensity, or percentage of 1RM, you're training at during a session. Heavier sessions—that is, those with higher intensities—require reduced volume.

Lighter sessions and upper-body sessions can contain more volume. The load on the nervous system isn't as great, making recovery less of an issue. As a general rule, pack more volume on upper-body days than lower-body days. When in doubt, however, choose lower volume.

7. Putting It All Together

The program below is predicated on a four-day split, but the actual number of days you train may well be determined by your schedule. The four-day split works well because it follows an upper-body/lower-body schedule.

Before you begin lifting, remember your goals: Shoot for numbers 5 percent above your current maxes. Once you've penned your goals, plan backward from the date you'll achieve them—it should be about 12 weeks from your program start date—and progress through sets of 5 and 3, increasing overall intensity—using heavier weighs for fewer reps—as the weeks progress.

"Before you begin lifting, remember your goals: Shoot for numbers 5 percent above your current maxes."

A month's worth of 5-rep sets on your main lifts is a solid place to start. Month 2 intensifies with sets of 3 reps. Month 3 finishes with sets of 3 on Week 1, 5s on Week 2, heavier 3s on Week 3, and then Week 4 is a test week.



Remember that starting light is never a mistake, and enhancing your skills (technique!) is your current focus. Choose the big lifts, set goals, plan, and get to work. You'll take a strong first step in a lengthy strength journey!

Deadlift Day
1
Barbell Deadlift
4 sets, 5 reps (70-85 percent of your 1RM)
2
Rack pull
3 sets, 5-8 reps (8-10 percent of your 1RM)
3
Seated Leg Curl
3 sets, 5-8 reps (8-10 percent of your 1RM)
Squat Day
1
Barbell Bench Press - Medium Grip
4 sets, 5 reps (using 70-85 percent of your 1RM)
2
Barbell Incline Bench Press Medium-Grip
3 sets, 5-8 reps (using 10RM)
3
Dumbbell floor press
3 sets, 5-8 reps (using 10RM)
Squat Day
1
Barbell Squat
4 sets, 5 reps (70-85 percent of your 1RM)
2
Barbell front squat
3 sets, 5-8 reps (using 10RM)
3
Barbell side split squat
3 sets, 5-8 reps (using 10RM)
Overhead Press Day
1
Military press
4 sets, 5 reps (using 70-85 percent of your 1RM)
2
Seated barbell shoulder press
3 sets, 5-8 reps (using 10RM)
3
Single-arm kettlebell push-press
3 sets, 5-8 reps (using 8-10RM)

About the Author

Todd Bumgardner

Todd Bumgardner

Todd Bumgardner, MS, CSCS, is a strength coach, nutrition coach, and manual therapist in the new York City area.

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