
In this episode of The Athletes Compass, Paul Warloski, Dr. Paul Laursen, and Marjaana Rakai discuss how everyday endurance athletes can make meaningful progress with limited training time, especially when balancing work, family, and life. The conversation centers on the “minimum effective dose” of training, why context and goals matter, how to use intensity wisely, and why consistency is often more important than perfection. They also explore the role of strength training, aerobic base work, walk-run programs, HIIT, recovery, habit stacking, and practical scheduling strategies for athletes training around five to seven hours per week.Key episode takeawaysThe best training plan depends on the athlete’s goal, background, fitness level, and available time.Five to seven hours per week can be plenty for some goals, such as a 5K, 10K, half marathon, or gravel event, but may be unrealistic for many athletes targeting an Ironman.Consistency is the first priority: spreading workouts across the week is better than cramming all training into one day.For newer athletes, walk-run sessions can produce major aerobic gains without any high-intensity training.HIIT is time-efficient, but it is not necessary or appropriate for every athlete.Three hard training days per week is likely the upper limit for most athletes.Strength training is worth the time investment, even if it is only 10 to 20 minutes at a time.Recovery counts as training, and sometimes performance improves after backing off.Calendar blocking, commuting, dog walks, playground workouts, and habit stacking can help busy athletes stay consistent.Doing something is usually better than doing nothing.Paul Warloski - Simple Endurance CoachingMarjaana Rakai | Nordic Performance Lab
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