Tag: FITT principle

Why Your Fitness Goals Keep Failing and the Simple Fix That Works
Muscle Building & Strength Training

Why Your Fitness Goals Keep Failing and the Simple Fix That Works

By mid-January, the gym is quieter, the running shoes are back in the closet, and those bold New Year promises start to feel… distant. It’s not laziness—it’s structure. Or rather, the lack of it. What many people call a “failed resolution” is often just a vague intention with no real blueprint. Saying “I’ll work out more” sounds good, but it doesn’t tell your body—or your schedule—what to actually do on a Tuesday evening after work in Accra traffic or a long day on your feet. The real shift happens when fitness stops being a mood and becomes a system. One of the most underrated tools in exercise planning is the FITT principle—Frequency, Intensity, Time, and Type. It sounds technical, but it’s surprisingly practical. Think of it like planning your weekly meals. You wouldn’t just sa...
The FITT Formula: How to Build an Exercise Plan That Actually Works
Muscle Building & Strength Training

The FITT Formula: How to Build an Exercise Plan That Actually Works

Every January, fitness goals surge. Gyms fill up, running shoes come out of storage, and people promise themselves that this year will be different. Yet by the time February or March arrives, many of those resolutions quietly disappear. Fitness experts say the problem is rarely motivation—it’s planning. Across the world, common New Year goals tend to sound familiar: exercise more, lose weight, stop smoking, or cut back on alcohol. While the intentions are good, many of these resolutions fail because they lack structure. Simply deciding to “exercise more” is often too vague to translate into lasting behaviour change. Health and fitness professionals say successful exercise plans share several core elements: readiness for change, clear goal-setting, a structured workout plan, and co...