Archive for career
The Zen of Strength and Conditioning: 3-Days To Becoming A Better Coach
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(I'm screwed!)
These days S&C coaches and fitness professionals are in a tough spot. Where do they go to get reliable information that is not only backed by science but also has a firm footing in the real world? More importantly where can they go and actually sit down with the coaches and discover first hand the tried and tested strategies that they've used to get results. You can spend hours trawling through the internet, reading books, watching DVD's but there's nothing quite like taking the opportunity to actually get stuck in. Options are limited because there are a lot of internet gurus out there that are amazing in cyber space but can't actually cut it on the floor in front of clients and athletes.
There's a HUGE difference between knowing and DOING.
You need to get ahead of your competition and search for ways to get the same results in less time. If you are feeling overwhelmed by the huge amount of information out there and are struggling to make sense of it all then the only solution is to simplify.
Myself and Duncan French are once again opening our doors to strength and conditioning coaches, personal trainers, physical therapists, sports therapists, and other health professionals to participate in our Performance Training Mentorship Programme. Whether training high performance athletes, young athletes or weekend warriors, learning our training methodologies will help you raise your level as an achiever in your profession. The 3-day mentorship will change the way you train yourself and your athletes/clients and we will improve your skills as a trainer giving you the confidence to work with anyone, from weekend warriors through to Olympic level athletes.
Get yourself out of that tough spot, simplify your search and make yourself stand out in fiercely competitive market.
Don't just take our word for it…
I spent the best part of yesterday morning with Duncan looking through the applications. It's not too late to apply but before you do make sure you watch the video below…if you don't tick these boxes there's little point! We need passionate people because it's a packed 3-days.
We are almost full for the only 2012 mentorship programme so you need to get a move on (we can take applications until the end of January).
Top 10 Posts That Rocked 2011…
Posted by: | CommentsIt's become a tradition to take a look back through the archives and pull together the top 10 posts that I've shared on the site during the past twelve months. Just in case you missed any, check out the list from 2011.
1. The Ten Training Commandments – this seems like an obvious place to start – the world according to me! If you want to get a feel for how I coach and the princples that form the cornerstone of my training programmes, take a look.
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2. Foam Rolling 101 – if you've been living under a rock and still don't know what a foam roll is and how it can have a huge impact on your training then you really should take some time to read this article.
3. Yoga For Sports Performance – this is an interesting introduction to the benefits of Yoga for athletes – and not a weird happy clappy person in sight!
4. Evolution Not Revolution – I originally wrote this article for Leaders in Performance. Some simple but effective concepts that every coach needs to be aware of.
5. Pre-Season Bingo and B******T – Back in July i lost he plot! I kept seeing highly paid sportsmen doing the most ridiculous pre-season training. Read this to find out why running around with the Marines isn't going to help your team avoid relegation.
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6. Fuzzy Fitness – Art and Science of Coaching – Hunches, gut feelings, blurring of lines and grey areas are all part of being a strength and conditioning coach. Not that you would think it when you read and listen to some of the self proclaimed ‘guru’s’ that are only too quick to tell you that there is a right or wrong way to lift.
7. The Book Club – pretty simple really, if you want to to what I've got in my library, this is the article for you!
8. Productive Practice: The Bittersweet Spot – I was lucky enough to see Daniel Coyle speak in November at the UKSEM conference. I love the talent code and this article explains a key concept that all coaches and athletes need to be aware of.
9. Tool Boxes, Haynes Manuals and Coaching Workshops – if that title doesn't make you wonder what the hell I'm talking about then I don't know what will. This piece came about after I delivered a workshop in London. It's pretty much the key message I try to get across to PT's and S&C coaches.
10. Three Things Every S&C Coach Needs – seriously, do I really need to explain why you would want to look at this article?!
Never Lend Books!
Posted by: | CommentsI'd forgotten about these three books!
I let one of my former athletes borrow these a couple of years ago and just before Christmas he popped them round to me! I'd completely forgotten about them. They've not made it into the library that I compiled in the summer but they are crackers. If your Christmas money is burning a hole in your pocket and you are thinking about getting some books, check these three out.
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People

Tough read but well worth it. Probably the first 'self development' book that I ever read. I spotted it on the bookshelf of one of my first mentors, Nigel Stockill. He's a sharp guy and has always offered me great advice when needed.
The E-Myth

Another one of my mentors, Alwyn Cosgrove suggested I read this book when I was thinking about leaving the English Institute of Sport to go it alone. It's a fantastic book and I reckon this is a book that's had a major influence on Alwyn's business model. Well worth a read.
Under The Bar

I bought this book for one of my S&C coaches (I have a Christmas tradition of buying books for my S&C coaches – not very rock and roll but it's all about development!). I took a sneak peak before wrapping it and purchased a copy for myself. Dave Tate brings together his experiences and offers some real pearls of wisdom. If you want to be successful then this is the book for you. One of Dave's rules on education and books is "Don't Loan It!" – I must have missed that bit!
Three Things Every S&C Coach Needs
Posted by: | CommentsI get asked every week by aspiring S&C coaches what they need to do to break into the industry. There's a ton of stuff that they need to do but when you boil it down I reckon there are three essential elements.
Let me know what you think – agree, disagree, or have I missed something?
I Pity The Fool…
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(I pity the fool that doesn't sign up to Nick and Duncs mentorship programme – urghhh)
OK, I'm sorting out a few bits and pieces before I head down to the UKSEM Conference in London where I'll be delivering two workshops. I'm really looking forward to this conference, it was cracking last year and the line up for 2011 is pretty damn good (no wonder it's Europe's largest sports science and medicine conference).
Anyway, I said last week that I'd finally managed to get Duncan French to fix some dates in his diary so that we could deliver our second mentorship programme.
We ran one back in September 2010 and it went down a storm, so much so that we intended to run another one in 2011 but our schedules went crazy and we just couldn't get three days where both of us would be in Newcastle at the same time. So, we've managed to set a date for 2012.
March 30th – April 1st 2012
(now do you see the link between the date and Mr T's famous catchphrase – I don't just make this stuff up as I go along you know!)
This is going to be the only mentorship programme that we run in 2012 (Duncan is flat out working wonders with Newcastle United and I'll be AWOL between May-August preparing the GB Basketball team for the Olynmpics).
We can’t accept applications for the Spring programme after the 15th January 2012 and the next programme won’t run until 2013, so check out what we are going to cover in March and get yourself up to Newcastle for 3-days of hands on learning, backed up with solid theories and principles.You may even get time to have a night oot on the toon!
If you are thinking about booking on then follow this link for full details of the programme. If you have any questions you can fire them over to me on this e-mail address info@nickgrantham.com
>>>Performance Training Mentorship Programme<<<
I'm not going to do some long sales page – not my style. Bottom line is that if you want to learn directly from two coaches that are out there delivering on a day to day basis rather than a here today gone tomorrow internet guru you'll sign up! Simple.
Here's what the 2010 intake thought of the 3-days.
You'll all know my credentials but if you want to find out more about Duncan check out his website www.duncanfrench.com where you can check out his background and see that he is the real deal!
Combat Training For Rugby
Posted by: | CommentsCraig White (former National Squad Performance Manager for the Welsh Rugby team) recently contacted me to give me the heads up on a workshop taking place in December. This is going to be a great workshop and I'm sure it will be of interest to many of you.
Just in case you don't know who Craig is here's a brief overview of his career (it's not a bad CV!)
Craig was recruited in May 2008 by the Welsh Rugby Union as conditioning coach to complete the national squad coaching team. He then took on the position of National Squad Performance Manager.
He was previously Head Strength and Conditioning Coach at Leicester Tigers and has worked at the top level with the Irish Rugby Union, London Wasps and the 2005 and 2009 British & Irish Lions. He worked with Warren Gatland, Shaun Edwards and Rob Howley at Wasps at a time when the club won the European Challenge Cup, Heineken Cup and three Premiership titles. While working at Leicester, the club won the EDF Energy Cup, the Premiership title and reached the Heineken Cup final.
He has an impressive track record in top class soccer with Bolton Wanderers and has studied with experts from many other sports including athletics, power lifting and AFL. He played amateur rugby league for Great Britain before moving into the strength and conditioning side of coaching with Waterloo.
So now you've got an idea of the caliber of Craig you know this is going to be an information packed day.
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Here's an overview of what you're going to learn:-
Treat yourself to an early Christmas present and get yourself along to what promises to be a great workshop.
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email: info@whitehealthandperformance.com
or cwfootballscience@hotmail.com
Productive Practice – The Bittersweet Spot
Posted by: | CommentsOne of my all time favourite books is the Talent Code by Daniel Coyle. The book went AWOL in my house for a while and then appeared back in my bookshelf yesterday (my wife had been reading it!). It prompted me to take another look through and look specifically at the parts I had scribbled next to, underlined and highlighted. One of the sections discussed the importance of PRODUCTIVE PRACTICE and coincidentally I had a great example of this very issue this morning.
One of my former clients that trained with me for a couple of years before moving away from the area was back for a few days and popped in to train. He had been working on his Olympic lifts and wanted me to cast my eye over his technique. He had a decent amount of load on the bar and proceeded to run through the snatch and clean and jerk.

Now, anyone that has ever worked with me knows that I'm not a "Cheerleader" (I love that phrase – thanks Keir!) and I will tell you what you need to know rather than what you would like to hear. The client was hoping for affirmation that his lifts were good but the bottom line was they were not. They weren't terrible, but they weren't good. Whilst he was a bit miffed he understood the value of the coaching he was getting because unlike a lot of people that train, he understood the importance of PRODUCTIVE PRACTICE.
So what is PRODUCTIVE PRACTICE? Well, Daniel Coyle explains it nicely in his book, so over to Daniel!
..as I travelled to various talent hotbeds, I asked people for words that described the sensations of their most productive practice. Here's what they said:
ATTENTION
CONNECT
BUILD
WHOLE
ALERT
FOCUS
MISTAKE
REPEAT
TIRING
EDGE
AWAKE
This is a distinctive list. It evokes a feeling of reaching, falling short, and reaching again…deep practice is not simply about struggling; it's about seeking out a particular struggle, which involves a cycle of distinct actions.
1. Pick a target.
2. Reach for it.
3. Evaluate the gap between the target and the reach.
4. Return to step one.
(here is a list of words I didn't hear: natural, effortless, routine, automatic)
So the next time you are training or coaching make sure you are productive. There's no point just going through the motions, grunting the load up with crappy technique, working within your comfort zone, doing the things you like to do and ignoring the drills and techniques that will actually make you a better coach or athlete.

Sure we should enjoy training but it shouldn't always be fluffy and sugar coated. Danial Coyle notes that "judging by the facial expressions that he saw in the talent hotbeds , the SWEET SPOT might better be named the bittersweet spot!" My client this morning certainly had that expression on his face, but like anyone who 'gets it', he's acquired a taste for it and understands that if he is to really improve he needs to have honest feedback. The session this morning was a great example of PRODUCTIVE PRACTICE. He had his target, he reached for it, I made it very clear to him the gap between the target and his reach and we went back to step one. That was a good session – I didn't slap him on the arse and shout "good job!" and wave my pom-poms around (I've not got pom-poms by the way…well not at the gym!). I coached and he practiced – productively.
Connections, Spinning Plates and Cheerleaders
Posted by: | CommentsSome people just keep popping up on my radar and over time they prick my interest. Keir Wenham-Flatt is one of those coaches (not least because he has a funky name!). We’ve bounced a few e-mails back and forth and I recently read a great post that fits in rather nicely with a lot of my recent posts regarding breaking in and forging a career as an S&C coach. Keir has recently done what a lot of the young aspiring coaches that write to me are trying to do – GET A FOOT IN THE DOOR. In this guest post Keir will share with you some of the key lessons he’s picked up during the past 12 months. Over to Keir.
In July 2010 I took a gamble. I left my comfortably paid job as a personal trainer, moved away from my relatively new girlfriend to the most expensive city in the country, to work a full time, unpaid internship for London Wasps. It was a long 12 months, but in the end I was fortunate enough to have my services retained. I learned a bunch of lessons along the way, the top 7 of which are featured below.
- Book smarts- having a balanced, deep and scientifically current knowledge of physical preparation.
- Coaching smarts- things like being able to put the theory into practice, manage and motivate a group, and get the best out of your athletes whilst keeping them injury free.
- Walking the walk- keeping yourself in good physical condition, have competed as an athlete to a decent standard and be able to kick your athlete’s asses in at least one area or physical test. It shows you are serious about what you do and can be useful in getting athletes ‘on side’.
- A proven track record- having a long list of previous or current high achieving colleagues and athletes who speak highly of you as a professional.
- In contact sports the shoulder takes a battering on a daily, if not weekly basis. Loading an already sore shoulder with lots of weight in an anatomically precarious position like that seen in the lifts is plain stupid.
- Perhaps 95% of coaches perform the lifts with subpar form themselves. If you suck at something, your athletes will probably suck at it too. I suck at the Olympic lifts, so I don’t teach them to my athletes.
- The learning curve with the Olympic lifts is a slow one. Spending months trying to perfect an athlete’s technique when preseason is maybe only 8 weeks long is a foolish way to spend precious training time.
Great article and wise words for someone just breaking into the industry. If you enjoyed this guest post from Keir, take a look at his site www.trainingbykeir.co.uk
Poker Face: Part I – Coaching Lessons From Zappos!
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I’m away at the moment working with a team and inevitably I’m finding myself spending more time than I care to think about sitting on a coach travelling between the hotel and training venue. Every cloud has a silver lining though, I have some time every day to read. At the moment I’m reading Delivering Happiness by Tony Hseih. What is an S&C coach doing reading a book about the guy who created Zappos (listed as one of Fortune magazine’s top 25 companies to work for, and was acquired by Amazon in a deal valued at over $1.2 billion…yes I said BILLION!). Well, if you read the great guest post back in July from Alwyn Cosgrove you understand the importance of reading outside your specialist interest. I’m reading the book primarily to see what I can pick up and use at SMART FITNESS as well as ways I can improve on my delivery as an S&C coach working with various teams and athletes.
In the second chapter Tony talks about taking up Poker and lessons he learnt playing poker that he thinks transfer over to the business world. Some of the lessons learnt struck a cord with me and I think they can also apply to the world of coaching. I’ve pulled out the lessons that I think would be useful and tried to give examples from my coaching career to illustrate each point. I hope you find it useful.

Table Selection
- Table selection is the moist important decision you can make,
- It’s OK to switch tables if you discover it’s too hard to win at your table.
- If there are too many competitors, even if you’re the best it’s a lot harder to win.
Some important lessons to be learnt in the first section. When I went to university I thought I was going to be a sport psychologist but after a year I knew that physiology, not psychology was the area I wanted to specialise in. I ‘selected the table’ that I wanted to play at. Once I started working as a sport scientist I started to realise that maybe I needed to switch tables again! I was interested in what happened between fitness tests and started to move into the world of physical preparation. In the back of my mind I felt that sport scientists were going to be ten a penny in the near future (I was proved right!). Everyone was studying sport science at Uni. Maybe the table that I was sitting at was going to be too hard to win at in the future and there were going to be too many competitors in the market. I made the switch and became a strength and conditioning coach. I selected my table and I’ve been playing that table ever since. Think carefully about what you want to be but there’s no problem if with switching tables if you think it’s the right thing to do. The worst thing you can do is try and play at two or three table at the same time. I’ve worked at companies that have advertised for three separate jobs at the same time in the same region. Funny then to see applications coming in from the same people for all three jobs! Those applications rarely made it through the paper sift because when I’m selecting employees I want to make sure they want to play at my table.
Marketing and Branding
- Act weak when strong, act strong when weak. Know when to bluff.
- Your brand is important.
- Help shape the stories that people are telling about you.
Now some may be thinking what has marketing and branding got to do with being a coach, well I think it has a lot really. Back in 2007 I travelled to China to work with the Chinese National Football Team to help them prepare for the Asian Cup. I’d worked for almost a decade as a strength and conditioning coach but this would be the first time I had worked with a senior international football team. Let’s just say there was a bit of pressure during that first training session in front of the media covering the tournament. If ever there was a time to act strong when weak, that was it! I had to make it look as if I did this sort of thing every day. This was the one opportunity I had to gain the respect of the coaching and playing staff. I had to walk the walk.

(Act strong when weak)
There are also times when you need to underplay your skill set. Some coaches will be only to quick to drop names about who they have worked with and how great they are. I’ve found that when I work with a new sport (particularly when working with the athletes), I’m humble. During weeks and months you build a relationship and more often than not the athletes dig around to find out about the person that is looking after their physical preparation. It’s much better for an athlete to find out for themselves that you’ve worked with say, previous Olympians than it is for you to rock up in a GB tracksuit and immediately drop in to conversation that you worked with XY and Z! Sometimes you need to act weak when in fact you are super strong!
Helping shape the stories people tell about you is a really important one in this day and age. Information is readily available and you need to be aware that unlike any other time in history, what you do, how you behave and the people you socialise with is out there in the public domain. Having a website saying how professional you are as a coach and then posting on your Facebook page that you were hammered last night at a strip club is not a smart move! You are a product of the people you surround yourself with and the way you conduct yourself. You have an opportunity to shape the stories people are telling about you by both personally and professionally. When you apply for a job I guarantee your name will be googled and Facebook pages will be looked at. Think about what you want prospective employers to be looking at!
Strategy
- Don’t play games you don’t understand, even if you see lots of other people making money from them.
- Don’t cheat. Cheaters never win in the long run.
- Stick to your principle.
- Be Patient and Think Long Term
I have friends and colleagues that make good money doing a range of activities. In the past I’ve thought, “I’ll do a bit of that”. More often than not it’s not worked out because I don’t fully understand the games they are playing. I’m not the ‘Bootcamp King’ or the ‘Kettlebell Guy’ of the man that can get you to do 100 chin ups in 6 weeks’. I’m the performance coach and I stick to what I know and continue to try and be the best I can be.
Cheating is an interesting one. The strength and conditioning community is a small one and you really don’t want to start telling fibs about what you have done and who you have worked with. You will get found out at some point and that will be your career done and dusted. I’ve received applications from coaches that tell me they have worked with an athlete or team that I was in fact working with! I kid you not! Just because you have walked past an athlete at a training ground doesn’t mean you have worked with them. When I worked at the English Institute of Sport we had some very high profile track and field athletes training at the centre. My colleague was responsible for their strength and conditioning support. Sure I knew these athletes, sure I was in the gym when they were training, but I didn’t have the overall responsibility for their training. These were people that were well known to the public but they weren’t ‘my athletes’. We also had a bunch of athletes that were highly successful in their own sport but the general public wouldn’t have know them from Adam, I looked after those guys! When friends, family and colleagues asked me who I worked with and did I work with anyone famous it would have been easy to real off a list of names that trained at our facility and make out I worked with them. I didn’t. I talked about the people I actually worked with. Don’t cheat, you’ll get found out.

(you will get caught!)
Sticking to your principles is an important one. Working in some professional sports or with the general public can challenge your philosophy. Don’t become the ‘Hollywood’ coach, doing things that keep the coaches and athletes happy but don’t really impact on performance, changing your principles every season. As a coach you should have a training philosophy. We live and operate in a world where everything needs to be new, flash with quick fixes to keep everyone happy. We are thirsty for innovation. Well, sometimes simplicity if pure genius and athletes just need to train consistently. Sometimes you have to walk away when faced with an environment that demands a ‘Hollywood’ approach to training.

(Hollywood is not reality)
Evolution not revolution. Don’t walk in to a new team or club and throw your weight around trying to change the systems in a day. You may get radical changes in the short term but it rarely leads to long term success. As coaches we are educators and that takes time. Embrace slow change, it lasts longer. I’ve worked with squads where I can see there are ten things that need to be changed but I’ve had to be patient and work on one aspect at a time, slowly chipping away until one day you reach the tipping point. In my experience walking in a shouting about how great you are and how you will revolutionise training rarely works in the long term.

(Don’t be a Charlie Big Spuds – no one is impressed!)
So that’s the end of Part I, I’ve got a ton of information to go through in Part II next week when I’ll take a look at the importance of continual learning and developing a culture.
Let me know what you think of the first part, any thoughts or personal experiences you may have had that relates to the key points in this post.
Perfect 10 Q&A
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(This is my S&C intern ‘Bo-Bear’ who is traveling with me this summer. He comes highly recommended by my 6 year old daughter who recruited him. I have to send photo’s of his adventures with the team. Here he is showing the importance of hydration, although I’m not happy about his choice of footwear, let alone the fact that he thinks it’s acceptable to walk around in boxer shorts when working on a women’s team).
So I’m sat in a hotel room in Poland at the moment at the Eurobasket champtionships with the Women’s GB Basketball team and but I’ve taken some time out from the day to day delivery to answer ten questions posed by Keir Wenham-Flatt, an S&C coach based in London who likes to play around with odd shaped balls (he’s a bit of a rugby league player).
He has an interesting blog and a regular Q&A section. It was my pleasure to answer some very good questions. If you want to find out what athletic performances have impressed me or the one thing in the industry that is sure to wind me up then check out the Q&A over at his site.
Thanks for asking me Keir.
Follow the link below to read the Q&A.
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