Monday, February 29, 2016

10 Fitness Trends to Look Out For in 2016


As we put 2015 in the review mirror, it is important to take a look ahead and try to identify growing fitness trends that we might be seeing in our studios and gyms over the coming year. The following list is by no means exhaustive, but is meant to provide you with some insight in to what fitness products or programs are likely to become more popular in the coming months. This list can also be used as a guide for choosing professional development, enabling you to offer the highest level of service to your clients and class participants.

1. An increase in public-private partnerships focused on promoting physical activity.

In an effort to help people make the healthier choices necessary to overcome the obesity epidemic, a number of health clubs, equipment companies and fitness organizations will look outside of their walls and become more involved in working directly with the public. In 2016, we will see more public-private partnerships like the one between TRX, the Drew Brees Foundation and local schools. For one month, TRX donates fitness equipment based on how many touchdowns Brees scores in a game. “TRX and Drew Brees share a common mission of championing the importance of physical activity for all, regardless of age or athletic ability. With so many physical education program facing dramatic budget cuts and childhood obesity continually rising, TRX and Drew are committed to making youth fitness a priority,” said Randy Hetrick, CEO and Founder of TRX. Public-private partnerships like these will provide more solutions for helping people make healthier choices while creating new fitness consumers.

2. An increase in faith-based fitness programs.

Over the next year, faith-based exercise will become mainstream as churches, mosques, synagogues, ashrams, temples and other faith-based communities develop programs to promote fitness, health and wellness. Faith-based communities are gathering places where people come together based on shared values and beliefs. Over the past few years, many faith-based communities have begun offering classes, nutrition advice and health coaching to help people improve the physical and spiritual well-being of their adherents. David Jack, the owner of the ActivLab studio in Phoenix, is adamant about the role that spiritual well-being plays in creating the right physical well-being. “If an individual is a member of a faith-based community, he or she is already a member of a community that can provide an environment for community, emotional, mental, spiritual and physical growth. Fitness, wellness and health play an integral role in helping every individual honor their own faith. As people improve their faith and their fitness it helps promote stronger families and communities. Activate the best, magnify the good.” Faith-based exercise programs won’t replace traditional health clubs, but they will become more popular as people who share the same spiritual beliefs come together to improve their physical well-being.

3. More options for streaming fitness and workout videos.

Increasingly demanding schedules, coupled with an international trend toward understanding the role that regular physical activity plays in promoting health and wellness, will spur an increase in the popularity of workout-on-demand and video streaming services. Online video-on-demand subscription services fulfill a need by allowing individuals to do instructor-led workouts on their own time. Daily Burn, the online health and fitness trailblazer, will increase its offerings in the coming year. “With an outstanding year-over-year growth spike, we see an opportunity to further serve our current subscribers and fuel future consumer need,” says Lisa Wheeler, VP of Fitness Programming at Daily Burn. “We are excited to debut a unique, live steaming workout experience, “Daily Burn 365,” that we believe will do just that.”

4. Increased use of technology to take physiological measurements.

Previously relegated to exercise physiology labs and elite performance centers, 2016 will see a significant increase in the use of technology for measuring all sorts of physiological parameters, from body composition to aerobic capacity to intermuscular glycogen storage. PostureCo, for example, uses data on body composition analysis that allows a personal trainer to accurately measure a client’s body composition by simply taking a photo with a tablet or mobile device. Instead of taking awkward (and not always accurate) measurements using calipers, trainers will be able to assess a client’s body fat simply be taking a photo.

5. A return of steady-state cardio training.

After a few years of high-intensity everything, 2016 will signal a shift back toward understanding the role of low-intensity steady-state training (LISS) in promoting weight loss and overall fitness. HIIT works, but too much can cause overtraining and overuse injuries. Plus, recent research demonstrates that HIIT can cause a negative experience and emotional relationship with exercise, which could be used as a reason for quitting an exercise program. Trainers that know how to utilize LISS can give their clients long-term programming solutions that help promote adherence to regular physical activity.

6. Combined formats for group fitness classes.

Responding to consumer demand for instructor-led workouts that offer fun and creative ways to stay in shape, studios and health clubs will start offering group fitness classes that combine workout formats. After all, even with the best playlist, studio cycling is still sitting in the same place for an hour, and HIIT workouts get a little stale after the 1,000th burpee. In 2016, equipment companies will deliver solutions that enable clubs and studios to create a variety of combined formats, such as cycling and boxing, treadmill running and strength training, and rowing and body-weight training. These new formats will provide instructors and trainers with innovative ways for engaging members and producing results.

7. Health coaching for personal trainers.

Astute, career-based personal trainers understand that the workout program is only one component of the long-term solution for helping clients. Professional trainers know that providing a high level of service isn’t just giving a client a workout for a single day. Rather, it involves coaching clients on how to make exercise and healthy choices a foundational part of their lives. Increasing numbers of fitness professionals will evolve their careers to become health coaches capable of guiding their clients to achieving optimal health, both in and out of the gym. For trainers interested in long-term career success, becoming a health coach will provide a number of resources for how to engage and lead clients to achieve the results they seek.

8. Experiences, not simply workouts, will become the norm.

Boutique studios thrive because they create a catered fitness experience that surpasses the expectations of normal health-club patrons. Obstacle course races like the Spartan Race have exploded in popularity because they combine fitness with a unique, challenging experience that is not easily replicated in a traditional gym environment. In 2016, we will continue to see fitness entrepreneurs offer a variety of opportunities to combine people’s passion for exercise with a chance to have a one-of-a-kind, physically challenging experience.

9. How we recover will become as important as how we train.

While the workout provides the physical stimulus, the recovery period after the workout is when the body actually changes to adapt to the applied stimulus. As we learn more about how the body adapts to exercise, we are also increasing our understanding about the role that recovery strategies play in promoting successful physical performance. From cryotherapy in sub-freezing temperatures and compression clothing to understanding heart rate variability and the importance of sleep, 2016 will see more strategies that we can apply to help promote the appropriate recovery to exercise.

10. Education workshops for the average fitness consumer.

Over the course of the next year, we will see a significant increase in the number of fitness education programs designed for the fitness consumer. With the increasing popularity of barbell strength training, high-intensity weightlifting workout programs and Olympic Weightlifting, the average fitness consumer is being exposed to strategies and techniques for exercise that were once reserved for only high-performance athletes. As a result, there is an increased demand in education from professional strength coaches like Tony Gentilcore to help the average fitness consumer learn how to properly perform high-intensity strength training.

Pete McCall Health and Fitness Expert Pete McCall, MS, CSCS, is an ACE Certified Personal Trainer and long-time player in the fitness industry.


 

Workouts For Women

The New Year New You Diet Plan for Losing Weight Fast

By Dietitian, Juliette Kellow BSc RD
Forget about detox or any extreme diet, or giving up all your favourite food in order to lose weight. Instead, follow this fabulous New Year New You plan for losing weight fast that lets you eat – and we mean, really eat!
Devised by Dietitian, Juliette Kellow, this diet plan is guaranteed to help you lose up to a stone in just six weeks – while still enjoying three square meals and snacks each day.
Here at Weight Loss Resources, we don’t believe that losing weight and keeping it off means a life-long sentence of eating sushi, edamame beans, gogi berry juice and poached white fish (like some of our favourite celebs do!).
Instead, like most nutrition experts, we recognise how important it is to have a food plan you can enjoy when you’re losing weight. Of course, it’s vital to eat a diet that includes fewer fatty, sugary and salty foods, and more fruit, vegetables and starchy, fibre-rich foods – both to help us lose weight and stay healthy. But we also know that eating our favourite foods from time to time helps to make losing weight more enjoyable so we don’t feel deprived or that we’re missing out.
That’s why this amazing new plan for losing weight faststill includes foods that most people love, whether it’s chips, biscuits, chocolate, crisps, steak or the odd glass of wine. And it’s this that makes our meal plan so different from many of the other ‘detox’ or ‘deprivation’ diets you typically see at the start of a new year.

Meanwhile, enjoying your favourite foods occasionally means you’ll find it easier to stick to a healthy, balanced diet most of the time. And it’s these newfound good eating habits that will help you lose weight fast and keep it off.
So what are you waiting for? It’s out with the old and in with the new – a new, slimmer, healthier you, forever!

Here’s what to do…

  • Simply follow our week-by-week plan over the next six weeks. Choose one breakfast, lunch and dinner each day. Vary your choices to keep meals interesting and to provide you with a range of nutrients.
  • In addition to your three main meals, choose ONE snack every day. You may choose from either the SAVE (100 calorie) or SPLURGE (250 calorie) snacks – you’ll find treats in both!
  • If you’re stuck for time when you’re trying to loose weight, and want to grab a ready-made meal or sandwich, allow 250 calories for breakfast, 350 calories for lunch and 450 calories for dinner.
  • If you follow a vegetarian diet, choose meals marked with a V – you’ll see there are plenty of options.
  • Each day, have and extra 300ml skimmed milk to use in tea and coffee, to drink on its own or to make into a smoothie using fruit from the food plans. Milk is packed with calcium, needed for strong, healthy bones so it’s important to have this every day.
  • Remember, portion size matters when you’re loosing weight! Follow these guidelines:
  • All teaspoon and tablespoon measurements should be level
  • One small can is equivalent to around 200g
  • Jacket potatoes should weigh around 200g
  • A small glass of fruit juice should be around 150ml
  • Pots of yoghurt should weigh no more than 150g
  • A matchbox-sized piece of cheese should weigh 30g.
  • Add plenty of vegetables or salad to each meal in the plan. Add fat-free dressing or balsamic vinegar to salads to liven them up and vary your choice of salad ingredients so you don’t get bored.
  • Fortunately, this plan for losing weight will help you eat the recommended five different servings of fruit and veg every day to boost your intake of fibre, vitamins and minerals.
  • Aim for 2 litres of fluid every day to prevent dehydration. It’s fine to drink water, tea, coffee, herbal tea, diet drinks and squashes as part of your diet plan.

How many calories does the lose weight fast plan provide?

Each breakfast, lunch and dinner, together with the milk allowance, adds up to 1,150 calories. Choosing a SAVE (100-calorie) snack takes this up to 1,250 calories; choosing a SPLURGE (250-calorie) snack takes it up to 1,400 calories. It’s up to you whether you choose to SAVE or SPLURGE, but as a general guideline, if you have less than 1 stone to lose you should opt for the SAVE snack, while if you have more weight to lose, you should choose the SPLURGE snack. If your plan is to lose weight as fast as possible, healthily, stick with the meal plan and leave out the snacks.