How to Onboard New Clients With a Structured Training Plan
- By Bruno F -
- March 7, 2026
The first month with a new client is make-or-break. Get it right and you lay the foundation for a long, productive relationship. Get it wrong and they’ll be gone before the second invoice.
Step 1: The Initial Assessment
Before writing a single workout, invest time in understanding who you’re working with.
Training History
- How long have they been training?
- What programs have they followed?
- What did they enjoy? What didn’t work?
- Any previous injuries or limitations?
Lifestyle Context
- How many days per week can they realistically train?
- How long is each available session?
- Sleep quality, stress levels, nutritional habits
Movement Screen
A basic movement assessment — bodyweight squats, hip hinges, overhead reach, single-leg balance — reveals mobility restrictions, asymmetries, and movement confidence that inform your exercise selection.
This assessment demonstrates that you’re paying attention to them as an individual, not handing out a template.
Step 2: Set Realistic, Collaborative Goals
Most new clients arrive with a goal that’s either too vague or too ambitious. Refine these into specific, measurable targets:
- Long-term goal (6–12 months): The big-picture outcome
- Medium-term goal (3 months): A meaningful milestone
- Short-term goal (4 weeks): What they’ll achieve in the first block
Involve the client in this process. Goals that are co-created feel like commitments, not obligations.
Step 3: Build the First 4-Week Block
The first block has a specific job: build confidence, establish habits, and create early wins.
Programming principles for weeks 1–4:
- Frequency: Start with the sessions the client is confident they can complete — not what you think they need.
- Intensity: Keep it moderate. RPE 6–7. The goal is to finish feeling accomplished, not destroyed.
- Exercise selection: Prioritize compound movements with regressions available. Teach patterns, don’t test them.
- Volume: Less than you think. New clients adapt quickly to modest stimuli.
A client who finishes week one feeling capable will show up for week two. A client who can barely walk after day one might not.
Step 4: Establish Your Communication Cadence
In the first month, err on the side of more communication:
- Before the first session: Send the plan in advance
- After each session (weeks 1–2): Quick check-in — “How did that feel?”
- Weekly (weeks 3–4): Brief summary of the week
- End of block 1: Review session to discuss progress and the next phase
Step 5: Manage Expectations
Address timelines directly:
- Strength gains: Noticeable in 3–4 weeks
- Body composition: Visible changes take 8–12 weeks
- Non-linear progress: There will be good weeks and bad weeks
- External factors: Sleep, nutrition, and stress are force multipliers
Step 6: Create Early Wins
Engineer small wins in the first four weeks:
- A bodyweight exercise they couldn’t do in week 1 that they nail in week 3
- A measurable increase in weight on a key movement
- Completing all prescribed sessions for a full week
- Improved movement assessment scores
Point these out explicitly. Clients often don’t recognize their own progress unless you highlight it.
Step 7: Know When to Reassess
At the end of the first block:
- Revisit initial goals — still appropriate?
- Review completion rates — were sessions realistic?
- Reassess movement — improvements or new findings?
- Gather feedback — what did they enjoy? What would they change?
The Bottom Line
Onboarding isn’t a single session — it’s a structured process spanning the first training block. Your first program doesn’t need to be perfect. It needs to be appropriate, achievable, and delivered with clear communication.