I used to be a big Starting Strength proponent, and it's what I got my start on, but I'd recommend against it these days, and particularly against it for most of the people here for weight loss. It's a program that is focused on a multiple decades old understanding of exercise science and targeted quite specifically at athletes wanting to get stronger for sports purposes - it was developed with high school football players and college hopefuls in mind.
I love compound barbell movements. They're a lot of fun! I think bench presses, squats, and deadlifts should be a part of every program. But overhead presses? They cause a lot of people shoulder issues, and there are dozens of alternatives. Power cleans? Why?
The reality is most of us here are not lifting with powerlifting, olympic lifting, or sports as our primary goal. We want to preserve muscle mass while losing weight, fill in loose skin with muscle to replace the fat, and just generally have more overall health and aesthetic goals. For that, a more hypertrophy/bodybuilding-style workout is more effective, and generally lower injury risk, too.
3-4 sets of 8-12 reps taken 1-3 reps away from failure per exercise per workout. Periodically take some exercises to failure so you have a better understanding of where failure is - without doing this most people usually underestimate how much they have left in the tank. Ideally get up to 20ish fractional sets (e.g. bench press is 1 set for pecs, .5 sets for triceps) per week per muscle group you are focusing on, but even just 5ish sets is enough in most people to get prevent muscle loss and get some growth with adequate protein intake, etc.
Compound lifts are great and efficient, but people grow their muscles at different rates, we have different amounts of loose skin in different places, some muscles are more important for aesthetics than others, so more isolation focused exercises are often going to be more in-line with our aesthetic goals too. Guys usually want bigger arms and shoulders. Girls usually want bigger glutes. Everybody loves having nice abs, and while that's mostly a function of lower bf%, they're like any other muscle in that doing work on them grows them... they just might push the fat out a bit more at higher bf%.
ChatGPT and similar really can make decent programs these days. They're not going to be top tier, but they can do a lot. I have made my own programs historically, but I'm in the middle of swapping to https://myoadapt.com/ since it stays up to date on the latest exercise science. If you don't know the form to an exercise, a personal trainer isn't a bad choice. At the very least, record yourself and get a form check on one of the reddits dedicated to it - lots of helpful people out there.
I love compound barbell movements. They're a lot of fun! I think bench presses, squats, and deadlifts should be a part of every program. But overhead presses? They cause a lot of people shoulder issues, and there are dozens of alternatives. Power cleans? Why?
The reality is most of us here are not lifting with powerlifting, olympic lifting, or sports as our primary goal. We want to preserve muscle mass while losing weight, fill in loose skin with muscle to replace the fat, and just generally have more overall health and aesthetic goals. For that, a more hypertrophy/bodybuilding-style workout is more effective, and generally lower injury risk, too.
3-4 sets of 8-12 reps taken 1-3 reps away from failure per exercise per workout. Periodically take some exercises to failure so you have a better understanding of where failure is - without doing this most people usually underestimate how much they have left in the tank. Ideally get up to 20ish fractional sets (e.g. bench press is 1 set for pecs, .5 sets for triceps) per week per muscle group you are focusing on, but even just 5ish sets is enough in most people to get prevent muscle loss and get some growth with adequate protein intake, etc.
Compound lifts are great and efficient, but people grow their muscles at different rates, we have different amounts of loose skin in different places, some muscles are more important for aesthetics than others, so more isolation focused exercises are often going to be more in-line with our aesthetic goals too. Guys usually want bigger arms and shoulders. Girls usually want bigger glutes. Everybody loves having nice abs, and while that's mostly a function of lower bf%, they're like any other muscle in that doing work on them grows them... they just might push the fat out a bit more at higher bf%.
ChatGPT and similar really can make decent programs these days. They're not going to be top tier, but they can do a lot. I have made my own programs historically, but I'm in the middle of swapping to https://myoadapt.com/ since it stays up to date on the latest exercise science. If you don't know the form to an exercise, a personal trainer isn't a bad choice. At the very least, record yourself and get a form check on one of the reddits dedicated to it - lots of helpful people out there.


