Invested Strength Blog

Should I Hire a
Strength Coach?

By Megan Costilow  •  Invested Strength Studio, Naperville, IL

If you've been asking yourself this question, you're probably not thinking about competitions or bulking up. You're thinking about something more personal. Staying strong enough to keep living your life the way you want to.

That's the conversation I have with almost everyone who walks through our door.

They've heard that muscle loss speeds up with age. They're worried about injuries. They want to stay independent. They want to keep traveling, staying active, playing with their grandkids, without their body becoming the thing that holds them back.

Those are the right things to be thinking about. The question is whether you can address them on your own, and whether the investment makes sense. If you are also weighing cost, our post on whether personal training in Naperville is worth the cost breaks that down directly.

Most people try. And most people run into the same wall every time.

They aren't sure if they're doing exercises correctly. They don't see results fast enough to stay motivated. They get hurt. Life gets busy. And without a clear structure or someone in their corner, consistency becomes almost impossible to maintain.

Here's what a good strength coach actually does: removes all of that friction. If you want to understand the method itself, our post on why 20 minutes twice a week is enough explains exactly what happens inside your body during each session.

You don't have to figure out the program. You don't have to wonder if your form is off. You don't have to push through alone on days when you're tired or sore or convinced your body can't handle it. A coach reads where you are that day and works with you.

One of my clients recently came back from a trip and couldn't wait to share something with me. She had loaded her own luggage into the overhead bin. She walked all day, every day, without pain or discomfort. That might sound like a small thing. It wasn't. It was the thing she thought she was losing.

That's what strength training done right actually gives you back.

So who should hire a strength coach? Someone who is serious about their long-term health, willing to show up even when it's not convenient, and ready to trust the process even on days when they don't feel 100 percent. A good coach will adjust for soreness, work around your schedule, and meet you where you are. What they can't do is want it for you.

Who shouldn't? Someone who will find reasons not to come in instead of reasons to show up. And anyone managing an injury or medical condition that hasn't been cleared by a doctor. Strength training is incredibly effective, but it works best when your medical team is part of the conversation.

If you're on the fence, ask yourself one honest question: Is what I'm doing right now actually working? If the answer is no, it might be time to stop going it alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a strength coach actually do in a session?
At Invested Strength, your trainer is with you for the entire 20 minutes. They set up the machines, coach your movement, adjust resistance, and track your progress from session to session. You are never left to figure it out on your own.
How is a strength coach different from a personal trainer at a gym?
The environment and attention are completely different. A gym trainer may be managing multiple clients at once. At Invested Strength, every session is one-on-one in a private studio with no distractions, no wait times, and no shared equipment.
How is the training method at Invested Strength different from most personal trainers?
Most personal trainers use a mix of free weights, bodyweight exercises, and cardio. At Invested Strength we focus almost exclusively on strength training using professional-grade equipment including MedX, Nautilus, and Cybex machines. Every exercise uses slow, controlled movements with deliberate time under tension, typically one to one and a half minutes per set, working toward momentary muscular failure. That is the point at which the muscle has been fully fatigued and the strength signal is strongest. It is a precise method and it is very different from what most people have experienced in a gym.
How often do I need to train with a strength coach to see results?
Two sessions per week at 20 minutes each is our standard. That is the frequency supported by the research on high-intensity training and it is enough to produce meaningful strength gains without overtraining. Many clients feel noticeably stronger within their first three or four sessions.
What if I have an injury or medical condition?
We work around a lot. Soreness, old injuries, joint issues. What we do require is that anything needing active medical attention has been cleared by your doctor before you train with us.
How do I know if I am ready to hire a strength coach?
The best indicator is whether what you are currently doing is working. If you are not seeing results, struggling to stay consistent, or avoiding the gym because you are not sure what to do, a coach removes all of that friction.
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