• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

  • Fitness
  • Workouts
    • Best Shoulder Workouts
    • Best Chest Workouts
    • Best Leg Workouts
    • Best Leg Exercises
    • Best Biceps Exercises
    • Best Kettlebell Exercises
    • Best Back Workouts
    • Best HIIT Workouts
    • Best Triceps Exercises
    • Best Arm Workouts
  • Reviews
    • Supplements
      • Best Pre-Workout
      • Best BCAAs
      • Best Testosterone Boosters
      • Best Bodybuilding Supplements
      • Best Creatine
      • Best Supplements for Weight Loss
      • Best Multivitamins
      • Best Collagen Supplement
      • Best Probiotic
      • Best Non-Stim Pre-Workout
      • Best Greens Powder
      • Best Magnesium Supplements
    • Protein
      • Best Protein Powder
      • Best Whey Protein
      • Best Protein Powders for Muscle Gain
      • Best Tasting Protein Powder
      • Best Vegan Protein
      • Best Mass Gainer
      • Best Protein Shakes
      • Best Organic Protein Powder
      • Best Pea Protein Powder
      • Best Protein Bars
    • Strength Equipment
      • Best Home Gym Equipment
      • Best Squat Racks
      • Best Barbells
      • Best Weightlifting Belts
      • Best Weight Benches
      • Best Functional Trainers
      • Best Dumbbells
      • Best Adjustable Dumbbells
      • Best Kettlebells
      • Best Resistance Bands
      • Best Trap Bars
    • Cardio Equipment
      • Best Cardio Machines
      • Best Rowing Machines
      • Best Treadmills
      • Best Weighted Vests
      • Concept2 RowErg Review
      • Hydrow Wave Review
      • Best Jump Ropes
  • News
  • Exercise Guides
    • Legs
      • Back Squat
      • Bulgarian Split Squat
      • Goblet Squat
      • Zercher Squat
      • Standing Calf Raise
      • Hack Squat
    • Chest
      • Bench Press
      • Dumbbell Bench Press
      • Close-Grip Bench Press
      • Incline Bench Press
    • Shoulders
      • Overhead Dumbbell Press
      • Lateral Raise
    • Arms
      • Chin-Up
      • Weighted Pull-Up
      • Triceps Pushdown
    • Back
      • Deadlift
      • Trap Bar Deadlift
      • Lat Pulldown
      • Inverted Row
      • Bent-Over Barbell Row
      • Single-Arm Dumbbell Row
      • Pendlay Row
Fitness

Integrated Strength: The Right Tool at the Right Time for the Right Person

I am sick of seeing people throw away exercises because they can't combine them. This integrated approach allows you to pick the right tool at the right time for the right person - every single time.

Andrew Read

Written by Andrew Read Last updated on Oct 25, 2022

Back in the days when dinosaurs roamed the earth and I started as a trainer, things were different. The fitness industry of today has grown largely by encouraging people to think of themselves as part of a tribe.

Back in the days when dinosaurs roamed the earth and I started as a trainer, things were different. The fitness industry of today has grown largely by encouraging people to think of themselves as part of a tribe.

Each “tribe” has its own speciality, and by being part of a particular tribe, people feel somehow smarter than another tribe. It’s kind of like the Dr. Seuss book about the Sneetches.

The Problem With Tribes and Trainers

This tribe tendency is not necessarily a bad thing, as being part of a group can help people get out the door and actually make it to training, rather than stay at home and sit on the couch.

But I often see or hear from trainers whose tribe has obviously led them astray. Because of the way marketing works, each tribe is focused on a certain niche of training, or even aimed at a certain person.

There are kettlebell tribes, bodyweight tribes, power- and Olympic lifting tribes, and even tribes for people who want to wear tactical pants and pretend to be tough guys.

But if you’re a trainer and you start to think of yourself as a “kettlebell guy” or a “bodyweight guy” or whatever it happens to be, then you have lost sight of something important – you are being hired to be a results guy.

If you start to think that all your problems can be solved with a bar, or a kettlebell, or by doing pull ups, then you’re in for a shock – because they can’t be.

And not only can’t you solve the world’s problems with a single tool or exercise, not all your clients are going to want to do the same thing for the rest of their lives because they’ll be bored out of their brains.

It’s all well and good for the tribe leaders to give sermons from their ivory towers about how people shouldn’t need to find training enjoyable or entertaining (after all, they haven’t trained anyone in person for years).

But the reality is that if you give someone a workout that is a single exercise, done with a single tool, for every training session for the next few weeks, no matter how successful it may be or what the research says will happen, that person will likely leave you. And then you’ll be a broke kettlebell guy.

Most People Are Beginners

I know what people will say. You’ll say, “But my X is weak, therefore I need a specialization plan to bring up X.” Perhaps. But let’s look at some stark realities when it comes to strength.

In traditional Russian literature, people are regarded as beginners in strength training until the point they hit a double-bodyweight squat or deadlift. Now let’s be honest about this. How many people do you see in a typical gym even approaching that number?

And the best way forward for a beginner isn’t a specialized plan, but a general strength plan.

This is something the Gym Jones guys understand better than anyone else I’ve spoken with, and one of the many reasons they have so much success taking people from ordinary to extraordinary. (Even literally turning a man into Superman.)

And because what most people need is a general plan that covers a variety of movements, they’re likely going to need a variety of tools. And as much as different types of training require the same approach, e.g. strength is usually gained in the three to five rep range and done for three to five sets, some tools or movements do require different use than others.

Pistol squats, for example, are generally a terrible high repetition endurance exercise and work much better with lower reps, while kettlebell swings are generally much better off being done more like running intervals, for moderate to high volume and limited rest periods.

It’s all about picking the right rep and set range to match the tool, then selecting the right tool to match the person.

Things to Keep in Mind When Building Workouts

  • Kettlebells are a fantastic way to train for people who have had hand or wrist injuries that prevent them from being in the position needed to barbell front squat, push press, or jerk. Keeping a straight wrist will allow them to train hard when they otherwise wouldn’t be able to.
  • Barbells are the best tool to increase overall strength quickly. While we use a kettlebell to pattern the deadlift, we always get people onto the bar as fast as possible, and their strength skyrockets when we do.
  • Simple lifts are better than complex ones. I know Olympic lifting is sexy, but many people lack the mobility and coordination to do them well. This is an area where kettlebells again can be a quick way forward. Learning to clean or snatch with a single kettlebell is incredibly quick and easy to do with an experienced trainer in front of you. Is it as effective, given the loads are far lower? No, but with so many people having poor posture, using a single kettlebell to replicate the quick lifts allows them to train the movements and get the timing, and with far more wiggle room than they have with both hands locked in place on a barbell. The progression goes: single hand before two hands (or double bell), and hang position before from the floor (and kettlebells are always essentially from the hang position)
  • Not many people actually need genuine speed work. Gains in speed are minimal until strength levels surpass those double-bodyweight beginner standards. So time is much better spent on developing raw strength first. Clients can spend their time with you getting more strength reps and decreasing their injury risk at the same time.
  • A squat is a squat is a squat. While you may have slightly different positions for each of the main squats – goblet, double kettlebell, front squat, back squat, overhead squat – they should all be the same. And regardless of if you need to slightly adjust to accommodate your own imperfections, they are all still a squat pattern. Given that what most people need is just to squat, it matters little what type of squat they use in training. Pick a rep and set scheme that ties in with the goal of the day – lower rep/higher weight if strength is the goal, and high volume/ lower weight if strength endurance or hypertrophy are the goals. The same goes for hinges, presses, and pulls, too, by the way.
  • Kettlebell quick lifts are different to barbell lifts that share the same name. You just need to do more reps. If you would do a set of power cleans with a barbell for three to five reps, a simple rule is to double the number of reps you do with the kettlebell, even if you’re doing double kettlebell work. 5 sets of 10 double snatches is an incredible upper-body developer, just the same as 5 x 5 power snatches would be (and for many, these are far easier to master and quickly get to using challenging weights).
  • Bodyweight work has it’s own rules, and volume is king. It’s not unusual to hear of people doing bodyweight workouts that take hours, just working a single movement. I’ve done sessions of up to twenty sets of front lever work while building my front lever. When you can only hold a variation for seconds at a time, then you need the volume to build that strength.

Sample Workout

Here’s a workout that uses everything:

1. Back Squat 5/2/5/2/5/2

2A. Front lever x 5 seconds

2B. Tuck planche x 5 seconds

2C. Support Flag x 5 seconds each side

Ten sets

3A. Double kettlebell snatch x 10 reps

3B. Incline DB bench press x 5-8 reps

Five sets

As a trainer, you can’t get tied in to one tool or way of thinking. Be able to integrate everything.

I began coaching what I call integrated strength two years ago because I got so sick of seeing people throw away ideas or exercises because they couldn’t figure out how to combine them.

This integrated approach that I’ve explained here allows you to pick the right tool at the right time for the right person – every single time.

Photo 1 courtesy of Karl Buchholtz Photography.

Photo 2 & 3 courtesy of CrossFit Impulse.

Andrew Read

About Andrew Read

Andrew Read is like that old guy in the Rocky movies - he has a funny accent, hates everyone, and no one ever knows if he's happy or sad. But just like Mickey, he knows training.

Even back in grade school his teachers would complain he was spending too much time reading bodybuilding magazines or trying new exercises in the gym. These days nothing has changed and even after a lifetime of competitive martial arts and some time spent in special forces he still maintains that same passion for increasing human performance, especially that go all day, out run a zombie, live in an apocalyptic wasteland kind of fitness.

Having been a Master RKC, Andrew is recognised as one of the best kettlebell trainers in the world.His specialty is elite performance and he has been involved with training three world BJJ champions.

View All Articles

Related Posts

Fergus Crawley 5K Run Tips Photo
Fergus Crawley Shares 5 Tips For Running a Better 5K
Actor Chris Hemsworth in gym performing dumbbell row
Chris Hemsworth Diagrams a Killer Upper Body Workout Fit For an Action Star
Hugh Jackman Deadpool 3 Workouts Spring:Winter 2023
Hugh Jackman Returns to Wolverine Condition in Workouts for “Deadpool 3”
Method Man Incline Dumbbell Presses December 2022
Check Out Rapper Method Man Cruising Through 120-Pound Incline Dumbbell Presses for 10 Reps

Primary Sidebar

Latest Articles

New Year’s Fitness Sales (2025)

XWERKS Motion BCAA Review (2025): A Registered Dietitian’s Honest Thoughts

Assault Fitness AssaultBike Pro X Review (2025): Assault’s Best Bike Yet?

13 Best Exercise Bikes for Home Gyms (2025)

Transparent Labs BCAA Glutamine Review (2025): The Key to Post-Workout Recovery?

Latest Reviews

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt Review (2025)

Omre NMN + Resveratrol, Lifeforce Peak NMN, and partiQlar NMN on a red background

Best NMN Supplement: Fountain of Youth in a Bottle? (2025)

The Titan Series Adjustable Bench on a red background

Titan Series Adjustable Bench Review (2025)

A photo of the NordicTrack Select-a-Weight Dumbbells on a red background

NordicTrack Adjustable Dumbbell Review (2025): Are These Value Dumbbells Worth It?

woman lifting barbell

Be the smartest person in your gym

The Breaking Muscle newsletter is everything you need to know about strength in a 3 minute read.

I WANT IN!

Breaking Muscle is the fitness world’s preeminent destination for timely, high-quality information on exercise, fitness, health, and nutrition. Our audience encompasses the entire spectrum of the fitness community: consumers, aficionados, fitness professionals, and business owners. We seek to inform, educate and advocate for this community.

  • Reviews
  • Healthy Eating
  • Workouts
  • Fitness
  • News

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS Feed

© 2025 · Breaking Muscle · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy · Affiliate Disclaimer · Accessibility · About