Episodios

  • E 67 | THE SCIENCE OF PRICING: Why Fitness Pros Undercharge (And How to Fix It)
    Apr 6 2026
    Episode SummaryYour price is not just a number. It is a positioning decision, a sustainability strategy, and a direct signal to the market about the quality of your work. In this episode, we break down why fitness professionals -- trainers, strength coaches, and gym owners -- are systematically undercharging, what the research and industry data actually reveal about trainer compensation, and the practical frameworks you can use to rebuild your pricing with confidence.No generic business advice. No fluff. Evidence-based analysis and actionable tools.WHAT YOU WILL LEARNThe psychology behind underpricing: imposter syndrome, the passion penalty, and the fear of rejectionIndustry data on what trainers earn vs. what the market will actually bearWhy undercharging is a direct driver of burnout and early career exitHow to calculate your Minimum Viable Rate before your next client consultationThe difference between hourly and value-based pricing -- and why it mattersThe three-tier pricing model and how price anchoring works in your favorWord-for-word scripts for handling the three most common price objectionsRESEARCH REFERENCEDIDEA Health and Fitness Association Salary and Compensation Report, 2022U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Fitness Trainers and Instructors, Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2023Grand View Research, Online Fitness Coaching Market Report, 2023Rao, A.R. and Monroe, K.B. (1989). The Effect of Price, Brand Name, and Store Name on Buyers' Perceptions of Product Quality. Journal of Consumer Research, 16(2), 351-357.Kim, J.Y., Campbell, T.H., Shepherd, S., and Kay, A.C. (2020). Understanding Contemporary Forms of Exploitation: Attributions of Passion Reduce Perceived Exploitation of Workers. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 118(1), 109-123.Simonson, I. and Tversky, A. (1992). Choice in Context: Tradeoff Contrast and Extremeness Aversion. Journal of Consumer Research, 29(3), 281-295.Ariely, D., Loewenstein, G., and Prelec, D. (2008). Tom Sawyer and the construction of value. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization.DISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre Haute, IN and the Wabash Valley.Brandon is a sponsored athlete with Elitefts and NutraBio where as a competitive powerlifter he currently holds the all-time world record squat in the 132 pound weight class, with a 567 pound squat. He also holds a 330 pound bench press, and 510 pound deadlift in that weight class, totaling 1377 pounds, ranking 4th all-time. He provides online coaching and programming around the world, and has personally worked with over 200 athletes in the US, UK, France, Italy, Mexico, Canada, and other countries. Brandon’s been published at Elitefts, Muscle and Performance, and Muscle and Fitness magazine.He holds his Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS), Level One Sports Performance (USAW), Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) certifications, and is educated in PRI for Fitness and Performance.
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    1 h y 1 m
  • E 66 | Joel Seedman Is the Fitness Industry's Most Dangerous Influencer — Here's the Evidence
    Mar 30 2026
    Episode SummaryIs Joel Seedman the most dangerous influencer in the fitness industry? In this episode of the THIRST For More Podcast, we put his most prominent claims under the microscope -- including his 90-degree joint angle rule, his chaos training methodology, and the business model behind his Advanced Human Performance brand.This is not a rant. This is evidence-based analysis built for fitness professionals who need to know how to evaluate information, push back on pseudoscience with clients, and protect their coaching reputation.WHAT WE COVERWho is Joel Seedman and why his content matters to fitness professionalsThe 90-degree joint angle rule and what decades of research actually show about range of motionChaos training and instability protocols: evidence vs. marketingHow credentials and scientific language get used to sell ideas the research does not supportThe five training principles that are consistently backed by peer-reviewed researchWhat all of this means for your coaching career, your clients, and your professional reputationRESEARCH REFERENCEDBloomquist et al. (2013) - Effect of range of motion in heavy load squatting on muscle and tendon adaptations - European Journal of Applied PhysiologySchoenfeld (2010) - Squatting kinematics and kinetics and their application to exercise performance - Journal of Strength and Conditioning ResearchHartmann et al. (2013) - Analysis of the load on the knee joint and vertebral column with changes in squatting depth and weight load - Sports MedicineBehm and Colado (2012) - The effectiveness of resistance training using unstable surfaces and devices - Journal of Human KineticsBehm et al. (2010) - The use of instability to train the core musculature - Applied Physiology Nutrition and MetabolismRatamess et al. (2009) - NSCA Position Statement on Progression Models in Resistance Training - Medicine and Science in Sports and ExerciseSchoenfeld and Grgic (2020) - Effects of range of motion on muscle development during resistance training - Journal of Human KineticsDISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre Haute, IN and the Wabash Valley.Brandon is a sponsored athlete with Elitefts and NutraBio where as a competitive powerlifter he currently holds the all-time world record squat in the 132 pound weight class, with a 567 pound squat. He also holds a 330 pound bench press, and 510 pound deadlift in that weight class, totaling 1377 pounds, ranking 4th all-time. He provides online coaching and programming around the world, and has personally worked with over 200 athletes in the US, UK, France, Italy, Mexico, Canada, and other countries. Brandon’s been published at Elitefts, Muscle and Performance, and Muscle and Fitness magazine.He holds his Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS), Level One Sports Performance (USAW), Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) certifications, and is educated in PRI for Fitness and Performance.
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    57 m
  • E 65 | The Science of Reactive Strength: Plyometrics That Actually Transfer to Sport Performance
    Mar 9 2026
    Episode SummaryPlyometric training is everywhere. Box jumps, depth drops, bounding — almost every athlete program includes them. But here's the inconvenient truth: most plyometric training produces gym results that never show up on the field, court, or track. In this episode, we dig into why that transfer gap exists and how to close it.The problem isn't that plyometrics don't work — the research is clear that they do. The problem is that most programs confuse explosive output with reactive ability, ignore the role of contact time, and apply general methods without accounting for sport demands. By the end of this episode, you'll have a framework that changes how you think about and program plyometrics entirely.WHAT WE COVERThe neuromuscular basis of the gym-to-sport transfer problemReactive strength vs. explosive strength — understanding the differenceThe three phases of the stretch-shortening cycle and which phase coaches most often neglectThe Reactive Strength Index (RSI) as a practical training and monitoring toolThe most common plyometric programming mistakes (volume, variation, and zero specificity)A specificity spectrum model — from general GPP jumps to sport-replicated movementsHow to periodize plyometrics within a larger training blockSport-specific case studies for sprinting, soccer, basketball, and change-of-direction sportsRESEARCH REFERENCEDChimera et al. (2004) — Plyometric training effects on SSC and muscle activation patternsFlanagan & Comyns (2008) — RSI as a measurement tool for change of direction readinessMarkovic & Mikulic (2010) — Neuro-muscular and morphological adaptations following plyometric trainingMeylan & Malatesta (2009) — Effects of in-season plyometric training in youth soccerLloyd et al. (2012) — Long-term athletic development considerations for plyometric trainingSuchomel, Nimphius & Stone (2016) — Importance of muscular strength in athletic performanceTurner & Jeffreys (2010) — The stretch-shortening cycle: proposed mechanisms and methods for enhancementDISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre Haute, IN and the Wabash Valley.Brandon is a sponsored athlete with Elitefts and NutraBio where as a competitive powerlifter he currently holds the all-time world record squat in the 132 pound weight class, with a 567 pound squat. He also holds a 330 pound bench press, and 510 pound deadlift in that weight class, totaling 1377 pounds, ranking 4th all-time. He provides online coaching and programming around the world, and has personally worked with over 200 athletes in the US, UK, France, Italy, Mexico, Canada, and other countries. Brandon’s been published at Elitefts, Muscle and Performance, and Muscle and Fitness magazine.He holds his Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS), Level One Sports Performance (USAW), Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) certifications, and is educated in PRI for Fitness and Performance.
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    1 h y 2 m
  • E 64 | Progressive Overload Myths: The Evidence-Based Truth Coaches Need to Know
    Mar 2 2026
    Episode SummaryProgressive overload is the cornerstone of every effective training program — and one of the most misrepresented concepts in the fitness industry. In this episode, we go beyond the oversimplified "just add weight" advice and break down seven evidence-based myths that are limiting gains and leading coaches to program ineffectively. Whether you're a strength coach, personal trainer, or serious trainee, this episode will give you a more sophisticated, research-backed framework for applying progressive overload at every stage of training.WHAT'S COVEREDMyth #1 — Progressive Overload Means Adding Weight The research shows load is only one of six overload variables. A 2017 study by Schoenfeld's lab found equivalent hypertrophy across wide load ranges when volume was equated — meaning load alone is not the determining factor for muscle growth at the intermediate and advanced level.Myth #2 — You Must Progress Every Single Session The supercompensation model shows adaptation occurs over training blocks, not individual sessions. Chasing session-to-session PRs increases injury risk and is antithetical to sound periodization principles.Myth #3 — More Is Always Better Exceeding maximum recoverable volume produces catabolic outcomes. The research on overtraining syndrome shows performance decrements can last six months or more in severe cases. Volume must be periodized — not monotonically increased.Myth #4 — Progressive Overload Is Universal Training age, chronological age, and individual response variability require individualized progression models. HERITAGE Family Study data revealed VO2max responses to identical protocols ranging from 0% to over 40% improvement in the same population.Myth #5 — Soreness Equals Progress The repeated bout effect shows that reduced DOMS after repeated exposures is a sign of successful adaptation — not a plateau. Chasing soreness is not an evidence-based programming strategy.Myth #6 — Technique Doesn't Count as Overload Technique improvements that increase mechanical tension on target musculature at the same external load are a legitimate and measurable form of progressive overload. Tempo manipulation research confirms this.Myth #7 — Overload Only Applies to Strength Training Progressive overload governs all physical adaptation — including conditioning, mobility, and sport-specific training. Loaded progressive stretching research from Kassiano et al. (2022) confirms the principle applies even to flexibility and range-of-motion development.PRACTICAL TAKEAWAYSUse all six overload variables: load, volume, density, range of motion, technique, and variationEvaluate training sessions by stimulus quality — not by whether a new PR was setPeriodize volume in accumulation and intensification phases; always include deloadsMatch progression models to training age and chronological ageTrack performance metrics, not soreness levelsApply technique refinement before defaulting to additional load or volumeApply progressive overload principles across all fitness domains — not just the weight roomKEY RESEARCH CITEDKrieger JW (2010) — Single vs. multiple sets, JSCRSchoenfeld BJ et al. (2017) — Load and hypertrophyKreher & Schwartz (2012) — Overtraining Syndrome, Sports HealthDeschenes MR (2004) — Age-related neuromuscular changesMcHugh MP (2003) — The repeated bout effect, SJMSSLorenz & Morrison (2018) — Periodization review, SCJKassiano et al. (2022) — Muscle length and hypertrophy, Sports MedicineDISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre ...
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    53 m
  • E 63 | Recruiting Services, Showcases, and Highlights: The Multi-Billion Dollar Industry Selling False Hope
    Feb 16 2026
    Episode SummaryThe recruiting pipeline is a multi-billion dollar industry selling families a dream that statistically almost never comes true. In this episode, I expose the economics behind recruiting platforms, showcase tournaments, and highlight reel services. I share what college coaches actually say about how they recruit (hint: 80% prefer a direct email over any platform), break down why less than 5% of athletes at showcases get genuinely evaluated, and address the alarming trend of recruiting profiles for twelve-year-olds. Then I give you a seven-step framework that costs 95% less and delivers better results. Whether you’re a parent, coach, or fitness professional, this is the recruiting reality check the industry doesn’t want you to hear.KEY TAKEAWAYS1. The youth sports market exceeds $40 billion annually, with billions flowing into the recruiting pipeline sub-industry (platforms, showcases, highlight reels, recruiting services)2. Only about 7% of high school athletes play college sports at any level; roughly 2% receive any athletic scholarship3. 80% of college coaches surveyed said they dislike receiving messages from recruiting platforms; 98% prefer direct personal emails from athletes4. At a typical showcase with ~960 athletes, fewer than 50 may be genuinely evaluated by attending coaches5. Professional highlight reels are less useful to coaches than raw game footage uploaded for free to YouTube6. Recruiting profiles for 12-year-olds serve parental anxiety, not athletic development7. The proven recruiting approach (direct email, school-specific camps, coaching networks, honest self-assessment) costs $2–4K total vs. $60–80K for the all-in pipeline approachResearch & Sources:• NCAA Recruiting Facts Sheet (2024 data)• NCAA Estimated Probability of Competing in College Athletics• Aspen Institute – State of Play / Project Play Reports• Youth Sports Business Report – Industry Data & Analysis• Athlete College Advisors – Coach Communication Preferences Survey• PwC Sports Industry Outlook Report• TIME Magazine – “How Kids’ Sports Became a $15 Billion Industry”DISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre Haute, IN and the Wabash Valley.Brandon is a sponsored athlete with Elitefts and NutraBio where as a competitive powerlifter he currently holds the all-time world record squat in the 132 pound weight class, with a 567 pound squat. He also holds a 330 pound bench press, and 510 pound deadlift in that weight class, totaling 1377 pounds, ranking 4th all-time. He provides online coaching and programming around the world, and has personally worked with over 200 athletes in the US, UK, France, Italy, Mexico, Canada, and other countries. Brandon’s been published at Elitefts, Muscle and Performance, and Muscle and Fitness magazine.He holds his Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS), Level One Sports Performance (USAW), Certified Personal Trainer (CPT) certifications, and is educated in PRI for Fitness and Performance.
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    1 h y 33 m
  • E 62 | Why You Feel Like a Fraud: Imposter Syndrome in Fitness Professionals
    Feb 9 2026
    Episode SummaryImposter syndrome is one of the most common and least discussed challenges facing fitness professionals today. In this solo episode, we go deep on the psychology, the science, and the solutions — giving you a research-backed framework for managing the feeling that you’re not good enough, even when the evidence says otherwise.WHAT WE COVERThe origins of imposter syndrome research (Clance & Imes, 1978)Prevalence data: why ~70% of people experience this at some pointDr. Valerie Young’s five imposter subtypes (Perfectionist, Expert, Natural Genius, Soloist, Superhuman)Five industry-specific vulnerability factors: low barrier to entry, social media comparison, evolving science, attribution confusion, and professional isolationCareer costs: undercharging, avoided opportunities, burnout, and certification hoardingThe R.E.A.L.S. Framework: Reframe, Externalize, Accept, Leverage Community, Set BenchmarksA 5-step action plan to implement this weekKEY TAKEAWAYS1. Imposter syndrome targets competent people who cannot internalize their competence — it’s not about actual lack of skill.2. The fitness industry creates unique conditions (low barrier to entry, visual comparison culture, evolving science) that amplify imposter feelings.3. More certifications do not fix imposter syndrome — research shows IP scores don’t decrease with increased credentials.4. The goal is not eliminating imposter feelings but changing your relationship with them through cognitive reframing, evidence documentation, and professional community.5. Imposter syndrome has measurable career costs including lower income, avoided growth opportunities, and increased burnout risk.RESOURCES MENTIONED:• Clance, P.R. & Imes, S.A. (1978). The imposter phenomenon in high achieving women. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research & Practice, 15(3), 241–247.• Bravata, D.M. et al. (2020). Prevalence, predictors, and treatment of impostor syndrome: A systematic review. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 35(4), 1252–1275.• Neureiter, M. & Traut-Mattausch, E. (2016). An inner barrier to career development. Frontiers in Psychology, 7, 48.• Vergauwe, J. et al. (2015). Fear of being exposed: The trait-relatedness of the impostor phenomenon. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 88, 182–187.• Hofmann, S.G. et al. (2012). The efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy: A meta-analysis. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 36, 427–440.• Cokley, K. et al. (2018). The roles of gender stigma consciousness and impostor phenomenon in career development. Journal of Career Development, 45(2), 141–154.• Rozgonjuk, D. et al. (2021). Social comparison orientation mediates the relationship between social media use and self-esteem. Computers in Human Behavior, 115, 106587.• Gloster, A.T. et al. (2020). The empirical status of acceptance and commitment therapy: A review. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science, 18, 181–192.• Hutchins, H.M. et al. (2018). What imposters risk at work: Exploring burnout and coping. Human Resource Development Quarterly, 29(3), 267–293.• Locke, E.A. & Latham, G.P. (2002). Building a practically useful theory of goal setting. American Psychologist, 57(9), 705–717.DISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre Haute, IN and the Wabash Valley.Brandon is a sponsored athlete with Elitefts and NutraBio where as a competitive powerlifter he currently holds the all-time world record squat in the 132 pound weight class, with a 567 pound squat. He also holds a 330 pound bench press, and 510 pound deadlift in that ...
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    1 h y 20 m
  • E 61 | Fitness Industry Trends: What's Actually Science vs. What's Just Marketing
    Feb 2 2026
    Episode SummaryEvery year brings new fitness trends that promise to revolutionize training, optimize performance, and deliver better results. But which trends are backed by solid research and which are just clever marketing designed to sell courses and supplements?In this episode, I break down the biggest trends in the fitness industry right now using a simple three-question framework: Is there peer-reviewed research? Is the effect size meaningful? Does the cost-benefit analysis make sense?WHAT'S HERE TO STAY (Backed by Strong Evidence):Velocity-Based Training (VBT) - 47 studies showing 8-15% improvements in power output with precise autoregulation and increasingly affordable technologyIndividualized Protein Targets - ISSN 2023 position stand confirms 1.6-2.2g per kg of lean body mass beats generic "1g per pound" recommendationsZone 2 Cardio - European Heart Journal 15-year study of 10,000 adults shows this is the strongest predictor of longevity and cardiovascular healthBlood Flow Restriction Training - Meta-analysis of 75 studies proves comparable hypertrophy at 20-30% loads vs. traditional 70-80% trainingOVERHYPED BUT HAS MERIT (Nuanced Reality):Menstrual Cycle-Based Training - Small effect sizes (0.2-0.4) with huge inter-individual variation; useful as autoregulation tool, not prescriptive mandateWearable Technology & HRV - Good data collection, improving algorithms, but most people lack interpretation skills; valuable for long-term trends, not daily micromanagementMovement Quality Assessments - Generic screens like FMS show near-zero injury prediction, but watching loaded movement patterns absolutely mattersSTRAIGHT-UP HYPE (Avoid or Question Heavily):Spot Reduction - Definitively debunked in systematic reviews; fat loss is systemic, not localizedExtreme Biohacking - Ice baths can blunt muscle growth post-workout; most protocols have absurd cost-benefit ratios compared to sleep and nutrition fundamentalsMuscle Confusion - Muscles respond to progressive overload, not constant variation; consistency beats random program changes"Optimal" Training Frequency - When volume is equated, frequency explains less than 5% of outcome variance; individualization trumps one-size-fits-all splitsCOMING SOON:Affordable genetic testing for individualized programmingAI-assisted program design for real-time adjustmentsMuscle protein synthesis biomarkers for precision nutritionKEY FRAMEWORK FOR EVALUATING TRENDS:Look for peer-reviewed research in legitimate journalsEvaluate whether effect sizes are practically meaningful (typically 0.5+ Cohen's d)Run cost-benefit analysis against fundamentals like sleep, nutrition, consistent trainingRESOURCES MENTIONED:Journal of Strength and Conditioning ResearchSports Medicine JournalEuropean Heart JournalInternational Society of Sports NutritionBritish Journal of Sports MedicineDISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre Haute, IN and the Wabash Valley.Brandon is a sponsored athlete with Elitefts and NutraBio where as a competitive powerlifter he currently holds the all-time world record squat in the 132 pound weight class, with a 567 pound squat. He also holds a 330 pound bench press, and 510 pound deadlift in that weight class, totaling 1377 pounds, ranking 4th all-time. He provides online coaching and programming around the world, and has personally worked with over 200 athletes in the US, UK, France, Italy, Mexico, Canada, and other countries. Brandon’s been published at Elitefts, Muscle and Performance, and Muscle and Fitness magazine.He holds his Certified Strength and ...
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    59 m
  • E 60 | Training Older Adults: Why Everything About "Senior Fitness" Is Probably Wrong
    Jan 26 2026
    Episode SummaryMost fitness professionals dramatically underserve their older adult clients by following outdated, overly cautious programming that has no research support. This episode challenges the conventional "senior fitness" model and provides evidence-based protocols for getting real results with aging populations.Episode Highlights:Understanding the actual physiological changes that occur with aging, including sarcopenia, type two muscle fiber loss, and neuromuscular adaptations. Learn why many of these changes result from decades of inactivity rather than aging itself, and how proper training can reverse them.Debunking the most harmful myths in senior fitness, including the beliefs that older adults should only use light weights, that high-intensity training increases injury risk, and that balance exercises on unstable surfaces prevent falls. Research proves all of these assumptions wrong.Programming principles for older adults that maximize results while managing legitimate risks. Discover why older adults need to train at seventy to eighty-five percent of their one-rep max, how to implement power training safely, and which variables need adjustment compared to younger populations.Working intelligently around common pathologies like osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, and rotator cuff issues without eliminating effective training. Learn specific exercise modifications and progression strategies that build capacity rather than avoid challenge.Business strategies for capturing the older adult market, including marketing approaches that emphasize functional outcomes, communication styles that build trust, and referral strategies that grow your client base exponentially.Key Research Findings:Older adults can increase muscle mass by ten to fifteen percent and strength by twenty-five to thirty-five percent with proper resistance training, achieving similar relative gains to younger individuals. High-intensity training at eighty percent of one-rep max has been proven safe and effective even in nursing home residents with an average age of eighty-seven. Strength training reduces fall risk by up to forty percent, while traditional balance exercises on unstable surfaces show negligible effects.Who This Episode Is For:Personal trainers and strength coaches working with aging populations or looking to expand into this demographic. Gym owners wanting to capture the fastest-growing and most profitable market segment in fitness. Fitness professionals seeking evidence-based approaches that produce real results rather than following industry conventions.By 2030, all baby boomers will be over sixty-five, representing the largest client base available to fitness professionals. Those who can effectively train older adults based on research rather than myth will dominate this market in the coming decades.RESEARCH REFERENCED:Journal of Applied Physiology: Sarcopenia and muscle loss ratesJournal of the American Medical Association: High-intensity training in nursing home residentsMedicine and Science in Sports and Exercise: Optimal training intensities for older adultsJournal of Strength and Conditioning Research: Balance training effectivenessBritish Medical Journal: Fall prevention through strength trainingSports Medicine: Injury rates in older adult resistance trainingJournal of Gerontology: Power training versus traditional strength trainingOsteoarthritis and Cartilage: Resistance training effects on arthritisDISCLAIMERThis podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered medical, fitness, or professional advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare and fitness professionals before making changes to your training, supplementation, nutrition, or health practices. Individual results may vary. The host and producers are not responsible for any adverse effects or consequences resulting from the use of any information, suggestions, or procedures discussed in this podcast.Subscribe & Review:If this episode added value to your training knowledge, please subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Your feedback helps us reach more fitness enthusiasts, coaches, lifters, athletes or anyone who can benefit from quality training information.About Brandon SmitleyInstagram: @bsmitley @team.thirstSubscribe On YouTube!Website: THIRSTgym.comBrandon Smitley is a world renowned strength coach and athlete for over a decade. He and his wife, Adrian, own Terre Haute Intensity Resistance and Sports Training (THIRST) where they work with youth athletes and personal training clients of all ages. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in Health and Fitness, and his Master’s degree from Indiana State University in Physical Education and Coaching. Brandon has been awarded Personal Trainer of the Year Awards from Purdue University and Indiana State University as well is the 2020 Reader's Choice for Best Personal Trainer in Terre Haute, IN and the Wabash Valley.Brandon is a sponsored athlete...
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    1 h y 22 m