4 Week Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss: A Video Guide

 
Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss
 

I want to take a hot second to talk about the title of this post.

Whenever I engage in writing like this I always do some research on what title I want to go for exactly. I have an idea in my head, and then take to Google and start looking at things.

My first idea for this post was:

“Full Body Workout Plan”

Then I realized I am known as The Gym Starter and thought I better add the word beginner:

“Full Body Workout Plan for Beginners”

Which sent me into a wormhole of things like:

“Strength Training Routine for Beginners”

“4 Day Gym Plan for Beginners”

“Weight Lifting for Weight Loss Female Plan”

And then the title of this article popped out at me:

“Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss”

The reason this one popped out at me is that it combines my two loves when it comes to fitness.

And it puts those two loves in the order upon which I try to get all of my clients to focus.

Building strength first and then helping people achieve their weight loss goals.

This is why today I am sharing with you a four-week beginner strength training routine - with a video guide to help you feel comfortable and at ease when you go to the gym to do it.

I firmly believe in seeing you get stronger, and then allowing that strength to allow the weight loss to happen.

The foundation of a leaner body is muscle mass, not the absence of fat.

My coaching program is called The Strong & Confident Program and yes, it does help people lose weight, but it also teaches you to move better, learn to fit fitness into your life, and help you build a better relationship with food, exercise and yourself.

If that sounds like something you might need help with either right now, or you think you might at some point in the future then it’s probably a good idea you send me a friend request. You can do that by just putting in your email address below, and we can stay in touch that way….

Thank you for becoming my friend.

Now here are the workouts you are after…


4 Week Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss: A Video Guide


TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR:

4 Week Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss: A Video Guide:

  1. How This Workout Plan Works

  2. The Workouts: Day 1 and Day 2

  3. How To Lose Weight As Well As Get Strong


HOW THIS WORKOUT PLAN WORKS

How Many Workouts A Week Are You Going To Do?

This plan is two full-body workouts a week.

If you are new to working out, or even if you are just resetting yourself and getting back into it, the good news is you don’t need to be in the gym four to five times a week in order to get stronger and lose some fat.

You will make incredible progress if you can just get into the gym two times a week and work out with enough intensity for the next 3-4 months.

And this program is the start of that.


How Many Workouts Are In The Plan?

Two.

I am aware that variety can be important when it comes to working out, but variety is also counterintuitive to your long-term motivation and your ability to be consistent.

I could very easily come up with 8 different workouts for you, but that would overwhelm you. Each week you would have to learn new movement patterns, you wouldn’t develop the skill to get the most out of the movements you are doing and thus you wouldn’t be working to enough intensity for progress.

So there are two workouts.

These two workouts are designed for you to grow within them. They are designed so that by the end of the month you can see that you have improved:

  • The weight you are lifting

  • The form with which you are lifting the weight with

  • The amount of confidence you have from executing the plan consistently.

If you want variety, gain it by adding more weight, improving your form, and by trying to push yourself a little harder each time you do another rep.

The variety comes from your skill and development to achieve.

If you manage that, you will indeed make progress you never thought possible.

What Days Should I Work Out?

Don’t overthink this. In an ideal world you would have a few days between each workout so that you can recover fully from your last workout, and manage to then put your most into the next workout you do. But we don’t live in an ideal world - we live in a world where you have to balance an awful lot of your life against your health and fitness - so in truth, you have to go back to back days, then do, it won’t hinder you anywhere as much as you think it might or that the internet would have you believe.

When coaching clients I am always telling them to remember to balance what is optimal with what is possible.

We don’t all have the privilege to be optimal all of the time.

How Much Weight Should I Lift?

I can’t answer this in the way that you would probably like me to. I can’t tell you how much you can Lat Pulldown or Goblet Squat - and any program you find on the internet that tells you how much weight to lift - you should find another plan. Like this one.

I have never seen you move. I have no idea how strong you are.

But luckily in the Fitness Industry, we have a way around this.

It is called the RPE Scale. RPE stands for Rate of Perceived Exertion and is a subjective scale upon which you can judge how hard you are working across a set.

Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss
 
 

Across both of your workouts, you want to work to an RPE between 8-10.

In terms of the weight you lift, I would say this:

You are probably stronger than you give yourself credit for, you are probably more capable than you think, and that capability will grow very quickly if you remain consistent.


READ MY ARTICLE THAT HAS HELPED HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE NAVIGATE THE GYM MORE SAFELY

WHEN TO INCREASE YOUR WEIGHTS IN THE GYM


Progressing Through The Workouts?

As the weeks roll on - you should be wanting to progress your workouts as much as possible.

This will mean one of three things - you either:

  • Increase the weight you are lifting

  • Change the weight you are using

  • Change aspects of the form to make the lifts harder

You will adapt to these workouts, and therefore I want you to feel empowered to make the changes you feel you need to in order to make sure they remain challenging.

With some exercises, an increase in weight will not be possible, and therefore I would recommend you change the exercise you do.

Here is a list of adaptations you can try:

DAY 1

Box Squat -> Barbell Back Squat

Lat Pulldown -> Assisted Pull Up Machine

Incline Push Up -> Push Up

Glute Bridge -> Single Leg Glute Bridge or Hip Thursts

DAY 2

Reverse Lunges -> Split Squats or Walking Lunges

Single-Arm Dumbbell Row -> Single-Arm Dumbbell Row with a 1-second pause at the top

You can also change from Kettlebells to Dumbbells or to Barbells to help change the intensity and the variety of the movements you might do.

Do I Have To Do Cardio?

No.

Well, certainly not in the manner upon which you think you probably do.

I haven’t written any Cardio in your workouts for you.

I personally am a huge fan of walking - and if your goal is to lose weight, you are probably underestimating the benefits that walking for 20mins a day can have, and overemphasising the effect that a workout can have on your ability to lose weight.

Put as simply, you don’t burn anywhere near as many calories working out as you think, and you burn a lot more calories walking than you think.

This is why at the heart of working out to lose weight, the conversation has to be changed from working out to burn calories and lose weight, to working out to get strong and once your strength is built, good things will happen from there.

If you want to do Cardio, of course, you can. It won’t hinder your progress, it will look after your heart which I am a huge fan of. It won’t burn away all of your muscle. I promise.

And here is another dose of good news - you don’t need to do hard 5kms or sit on the recumbent bike for an hour - that hardly will fit into your life, will it?

You need to do 20mins a day - walking - at a pace that makes you feel like you don’t need a jacket and do need a bottle of water if it is late Autumn or Early Springtime.

How Much Rest Should I Take?

Rest is quite a personal thing.

I personally like quite a lot of rest between heavy sets, usually at the start of my workout. Then I can put the most effort into what I am about to do.

Then as my workout progresses, I reduce my rest between each set.

See how you go. Work to the maximum rest you can take at 2mins and the minimum to 30secs.

In the workouts, I have put rest between each set or superset - but they are just guidelines.

What is a Superset?

I feature Supersets quite a bit in this 4-Week Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss. For, two reasons.

Firstly they save time - and long gone are the days where you should be spending hours on end in the gym working out.

Secondly, they are a great way to get variety into your workout - and help stop the feeling of boredom

It basically means that you do one exercise, then the next exercise with no rest between exercises.

You can also superset three exercises together as a little circuit.

Warm-Ups and Cool Downs

In the workouts, I have put “optional” warm-ups.

I strongly advise you do them, but if you are short on time, you will probably be ok if you skip them.

They aren’t “walk on the treadmill for 5 minutes” although if you are short on time, and you need to just get in and get out, that is an adequate warm-up.

The warm-ups focus on developing mobility and improving your ability to work out in a much better way that will improve your results over time, and thus actually end up costing you less time - as you will make more progress quickly.


THE WORKOUTS

DAY 1 - FULL BODY

WARM UP

The Worlds Greatest Stretch - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Spiderman Rocks - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Split Stance Rock To Tall Split Kneel - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

 


CORE

Bird Dogs - 2 Sets, 10 on each side

Russian Twists - 2 Sets, 10 on each side

 

MAIN MOVEMENTS

Box Squat - 4 Sets, 8 Reps - (use a Barbell, a Dumbbell or your Bodyweight)

1.5 Dumbbell Bench Press - 4 Sets, 8 Reps

Rest for 2 minutes between all sets.

 
 

SUPERSET 1:

Lat Pulldown - 3 Sets, 12 Reps
Incline Push Up - 3 Sets, 12 Reps

Squat Thruster - 3 Sets 12 Reps

Rest for 1 minute after completing one set of all exercises

 
 
 

SUPERSET 2:

Plank Shoulder Taps - 3 Sets, 10 Reps on each side
Overhead Press - 3 Sets, 12 Reps on each side

Glute Bridge - 3 Sets, 12 Reps

Rest for 30 seconds after completing one set of all three exercises

 
 
 

DAY 1: SUMMARY

Warm-Up:

The Worlds Greatest Stretch - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Spiderman Rocks - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Split Stance Rock To Tall Split Kneel - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Core Activation:

Bird Dogs - 2 Sets, 10 on each side

Russian Twists - 2 Sets, 10 on each side

Main Movements:

Box Squat - 4 Sets, 8 Reps - (use a Barbell, a Dumbbell or your Bodyweight)

1.5 Dumbbell Bench Press - 4 Sets, 8 Reps

Rest for 2 minutes between all sets.

Superset 1:

Lat Pulldown - 3 Sets, 12 Reps
Incline Push Up - 3 Sets, 12 Reps

Squat Thruster - 3 Sets 12 Reps

Rest for 1 minute after completing one set of all three exercises

Superset 2:

Plank Shoulder Taps - 3 Sets, 10 Reps on each side
Overhead Press - 3 Sets, 12 Reps on each side

Glute Bridge - 3 Sets, 12 Reps

Rest for 30 seconds after completing one set of all three exercises


DAY 2 - FULL BODY

WARM UP

The Worlds Greatest Stretch - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Wide Stance Rock on Forearms - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Toes Touch to Squat - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

 


CORE

Plank - 2 Sets, 30 seconds

Air Bikes - 2 Sets, 30 Reps

 
 

MAIN MOVEMENTS

Deadlift - 4 Sets, 8 Reps - (use a Barbell, a Dumbbell or Kettlebell)

Barbell Bench Press - 4 Sets, 8 Reps

Rest for 2 minutes between all sets.

 
 

SUPERSET 1:

Reverse Lunges - 3 Sets, 10 Reps
Single-Arm Dumbbell Row - 3 Sets, 10 Reps

Rest for 1 minute after completing one set of both exercises

 
 

SUPERSET 2:

Romanian Deadlift - 3 Sets, 12 Reps
Seated Row - 3 Sets, 10 Reps

Hamstring Walkouts - 3 Sets, 10 Reps

Rest for 30 seconds after completing one set of both exercises

 
 
 

FINISHER: SUPERSET 3

Walkouts - 2 Sets, 5 Reps

Lunge Driver - 2 Sets, 5 Reps on each side

No rest between sets or exercises

 
 

DAY 2: SUMMARY

WARM-UP

The Worlds Greatest Stretch - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Wide Stance Rock on Forearms - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

Toes Touch to Squat - 2 Sets, 10 Reps on each side

CORE ACTIVATION

Plank - 2 Sets, 30 seconds

Air Bikes - 2 Sets, 30 Reps

MAIN MOVEMENTS

Deadlift - 4 Sets, 8 Reps - (use a Barbell, a Dumbbell or Kettlebell)

Barbell Bench Press - 4 Sets, 8 Reps

Rest for 2 minutes between all sets

SUPERSET 1:

Reverse Lunges - 3 Sets, 10 Reps
Single-Arm Dumbbell Row - 3 Sets, 10 Reps

Rest for 1 minute after completing one set of both exercises

SUPERSET 2:

Romanian Deadlift - 3 Sets, 12 Reps (use a Barbell,m Dumbbells or Kettlebell)
Seated Row - 3 Sets, 10 Reps

Hamstring Walkouts - 3 Sets, 10 Reps

Rest for 30 seconds after completing one set of both exercises

FINISHER: SUPERSET 3

Walkouts - 2 Sets, 5 Reps

Lunge Driver - 2 Sets, 5 Reps on each side

No rest between sets or exercises


How To Lose Weight As Well As Get Strong

Over the years I have been doing this job I have worked with people who solely wanted to lose weight.

I have also worked with people who solely wanted to get strong.

And I have found that those who work on getting stronger first, usually lose weight and maintain it at a much more successful rate than those who only focus on losing weight.

They also enjoy their movement a lot more.

When you’re dragging yourself to the Gym as a means to lose weight it can often feel like you are doing it with a weight around your neck. It’s a chore, it’s something you “have to do”, and the results never seem to come quick enough.

When you approach your movement as a way of improving your strength, and not just your physical strength…but your mental strength, your emotional strength and your overall resilience, movement takes on a whole other meaning.

You embrace the challenge, you embrace the gift of your body.

Which is pretty epic.

So if you want a workout plan to solely lose weight, I am very sorry that doesn’t exist.

Yes, you do burn calories in the Gym, but nowhere near as much as you would need to create a deficit appropriate for you to lose weight.

You control your weight loss by controlling your energy balance - also known as a Calorie Deficit. On this website, I have extensive resources educating you and empowering you on how to execute a Calorie Deficit.

Articles like:

Any one of those articles will give you a blueprint to losing weight - and the article you are now at the end of is the blueprint for getting strong.


What’s Next?

Beginner Strength Training Routine for Weight Loss
 

Well, I suppose you had better get to the Gym to start your journey of getting strong…

However, there’s also some other things I would love to draw your attention to.

The first is my Facebook Group - which you can now consider yourself personally invited to.

It is called Straightforward Fat Loss and I would adore you to join - you can ask me direct questions there, I go Live once a week and jam on a topic. It also has lots of resources to help you make your Fat Loss journey as straightforward as possible.

You can also let me know in the group how you are getting on with these workouts - which would be one of the greatest honours I would have as a coach - to see you sharing your work with me.

If you aren’t on Facebook, we can still become friends and you can get just as many resources from me for your Fat Loss Journey as if you were on Facebook.

Just send me a friend request using the form below - and I will be in touch immediately with you.

 

Thank you so much for reading my work, and good luck with your new gym routine.

I cannot wait to see how you go!

Coach Adam