Getting you to your fitness goal, guaranteed.
Alongside a certified personal trainer, you'll be taken through our 4-step Shift for Life program. We are so confident in our ability to get you to your end fitness goal in this program that if you aren’t satisfied with the results you were promised, we’ll give you your money back, no questions asked.
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Get started on that fitness goal today.
How it Works
Whether you're looking to lose weight, gain muscle or do both, you'll be taken through our science-based 4-step Shift for Life program.
The parts of this program that do change are your exercise and nutrition plan, the length of time spent in the program and your end goal.
1
Learning
Working with a certified personal trainer, the learning phase lays the foundation upon which progress will be built.
Timeline: Weeks 1-6
Goals:
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Establish a training baseline
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Determine appropriate training method to maximize your results
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Cultivate the habit of incorporating exercise (4)
2
Progressive Overload
Progressive overload is the gradual stress being placed on your body. You will learn how to apply it correctly to maximize your results.
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Timeline: Weeks 6-20
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Goals:
3a
Overcoming Plateaus
Plateaus hold your goals back. To combat this, we look at objective data and make adjustments to your program before they become an issue.
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Timeline: Goal dependant
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Goals:
3b
Optimization
As one gets closer to their genetic window of adaptation, the rate of adaptation will slow. This is where optimizing and switching up your program is vital to reaching your goal.
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Timeline: Goal dependant
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Goals:
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Build on our previous successes with similar training methods that are more challenging
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Build mastery in fundamental movement patterns
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Less monitoring and a greater shift to focus on integration into your lifestyle
4
Monitoring Progress & Maintenance
You’ve worked hard for your results, so we work hard to make sure you keep them in this phase.
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Timeline: Goal dependant
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Goals:
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Maintain an evidence-based threshold of activity per week to maintain goal (6)
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Make exercise a lifelong habit
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Explore new goals
A serious program with serious results
Kyle tried different exercise programs, diets, and even had a fitness coach in the past to try to reach his weight loss goal. His desire to lose at least 30lbs, build muscle, and become independent remained, and he was able to
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loose 46 lbs and now focus on building muscle
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have a better relationship with food
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develop a better understanding of fitness
September 2022
146lbs
January 2022
196lbs
What People Say
The Nitty Gritty
Here are the terms. Whether you’re looking to gain muscle or lose weight, our Shift for Life system is built to get you to your end goal. Not satisfied with your results? We’ll give you your money back. It’s that simple.
References
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Räntilä, A., Ahtiainen, J. P., Avela, J., Restuccia, J., Kidgell, D., & Häkkinen, K. (2021). High responders to hypertrophic strength training also tend to lose more muscle mass and strength during detraining than low responders. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 35(6), 1500-1511.
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Hubal MJ, Gordish-Dressman H, Thompson PD, et al. Variability in muscle size and strength gain after unilateral resistance training. Med Sci Sports Exerc 37: 964–972, 2005.
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Kraemer, W. J., & Ratamess, N. A. (2004). Fundamentals of resistance training: progression and exercise prescription. Medicine & science in sports & exercise, 36(4), 674-688.
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Norcross, J. C., Krebs, P. M., & Prochaska, J. O. (2011). Stages of change. Journal of clinical psychology, 67(2), 143-154.
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Grandou, C., Wallace, L., Impellizzeri, F. M., Allen, N. G., & Coutts, A. J. (2020). Overtraining in resistance exercise: an exploratory systematic review and methodological appraisal of the literature. Sports Medicine, 50(4), 815-828.
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Donnelly, J. E., Blair, S. N., Jakicic, J. M., Manore, M. M., Rankin, J. W., & Smith, B. K. (2009). Appropriate physical activity intervention strategies for weight loss and prevention of weight regain for adults. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 41(2), 459-471.
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Ratamess, N. A., Alvar, B. A., Evetoch, T. E., Housh, T. J., Ben Kibler, W., Kraemer, W. J., & Triplett, N. T. (2009). Progression models in resistance training for healthy adults. Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 41(3), 687-708.
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Schoenfeld, B. J. (2010). The mechanisms of muscle hypertrophy and their application to resistance training. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 24(10), 2857-2872.