Every Program is a Lifestyle Program
Carl said it best in the guidance: every program is a lifestyle program. The question isn’t whether lifestyle matters, it’s whether you treat it as part of training or pretend it’s separate from the gym.
Your customer lives in a single system. Stress, sleep, food quality, hydration, schedule and relationships affect how they train and recover. The body doesn’t compartmentalize these things.
So when a client comes to you and says, “I just need a great program,” it’s tempting to nod and write one. But if you want them to succeed, you have to think, “What needs to be true in their lives for this program to work?”
This change in mindset changes your work. You don’t just write education. You are guiding a person, within a lifestyle, who happens to be working out.
Training is optional, lifestyle is not
One of the strongest lines of guidance is, Education is optional, lifestyle is not. Your client may skip a workout. They cannot skip sleeping, eating or managing their day. Either they do it well or badly, but they do it.
As a coach, your own lifestyle is just as important. If you’re exhausted, sleep-deprived, and scattered, it’s hard to model or coach consistent change. You feel the same decision fatigue that your customers do.
The real problem occurs when people try to pile “great education” on top of a poor lifestyle. You can give someone the smartest, most well-thought-out plan, but if they average 4.5 hours of sleep, drink little water, and eat decent food only half of the time, their body won’t respond the way you expect it to.
They put in hard work in the gym and get half the return, at best. This is a recipe for disappointment.
Adaptation: Education creates the need, lifestyle allows it
Another powerful idea from Carl: Education creates the need to adapt, lifestyle supports the ability to truly adapt.
Consider what a well-written program does. It asks the body to do something a little harder, a little heavier, or a little longer. This stress creates the need to adapt.
Now look at this setup:
You draw a periodic pattern with clean mesocycles and microcycles.
You balance push and pull, squat and hinge.
You add thoughtful lunging at multiple levels.
On paper, it looks great. In real life, your client barely drinks any water, scrolls through disturbing content in bed in the middle of the night, wakes up several times a night, and eats inconsistent meals.
Their bodies get a clear message from training, “We have to change.” Their lifestyle sends the opposite message, “Road closed, no adjustment available.”
In this case, the correct move is not to write a more advanced program. It is to build the road.
Why ignoring lifestyle is failing your customers
When clients don’t see results, they usually blame the program or their work ethic. Most people have no idea how much their lifestyle is holding them back because no one has explained it.
You never want a disappointed customer and agitated. If they’re going to be disappointed, it should be because they know what would help and aren’t doing it yet, not because they have no idea what’s missing.
This is part of your job:
Ask about the lifestyle, in real detail.
Do something with the information.
Link it to their results in plain language.
If you ask how they sleep, eat and live, then ignore their answers and talk only about split squats and interval work, you’re teaching them that lifestyle doesn’t matter. You’re also making your own job more difficult.
Clients hire you for training, but their success depends on lifestyle. If their success depends on lifestyle, then your success as a coach does too. People don’t stay with coaches when they don’t get results.
From Action to Habit: The Real Goal of Lifestyle Coaching
Most lifestyle advice remains at the “action” level. Go to bed earlier. Drink more water. Put your phone away. Useful, but only if it gets stuck.
In the long run, you want customers to move from action on habit. This means that the behavior becomes so automatic that it doesn’t seem like a choice, like brushing your teeth or taking a shower.
Decision fatigue is real. Your customers are already tired from work, family and everyday life. If every lifestyle behavior always feels like a new decision, eventually they will stop doing it.
So the goal with lifestyle coaching is simple:
Choose a clear action.
Support it until it becomes a habit.
Once it becomes automatic, choose a new action.
If you’re still training the exact same lifestyle behavior three years later, something went wrong in that process.
Simple lifestyle actions that matter
The guidance highlighted some simple but powerful habits you can work with clients:
Consistent sleep and wake times: Going to bed at the same time and waking up at the same time gives the body a rhythm it can trust.
Hydration goals: A practical goal is about half of their body weight in pounds in fluid ounces during the day.
Phone habits before bed: Putting the phone away about an hour before bed can help. At the very least, avoid stimulating or disturbing content that keeps the brain wired.
These are not fancy. They are also not easy at first. Your job is to keep them simple, track them, and celebrate when they happen automatically.
A simple, systematic way to coach lifestyle
Lifestyle coaching doesn’t have to be complicated. You can create a simple system that you repeat with each client.
Start with the base layer:
Once you understand the goal, look for the first lifestyle change that would support it. You ask, “What is the lowest hanging fruit?” or “What’s most out of line right now?”
Maybe the quality of their food is solid, but their sleep is all over the place. In this case, don’t start picking their macros. Start with basic sleep hygiene, follow it and check often.
The cycle looks like this:
Try or rate where they are now.
Coach one lifestyle action.
Retest or revise.
Get feedback and reassess what to tackle next.
You don’t try to control their lives. You’re helping them get out of their own way so that the training they’re already doing can finally work.
If you want more structure around this, the OPEX Coaching Method Certificate Program goes much deeper into how to assess, program and coach lifestyle in an iterative way.
Consistency, not innovation, creates results
As coaches, we already know this for training. A random workout here and there does almost nothing. A perfect session does not change a body. It is repetition over months and years that builds strength, muscle, speed and endurance.
The same rule applies to lifestyle.
Customers love innovation. They ask about hacks, cleanups, short experiments and quick challenges. They want a trick that bypasses the work of habit formation.
Your job is to remind them that:
A few basic habits, done automatically, transcend any 30-day cleanse.
A consistent routine for sleep, food quality, and stress over time beats any short-term fix.
No single day of perfect behavior will make or break their future.
You can even tie it back to the gym. Just like 30 days of training isn’t enough to build real, lasting change, 30 days of a “perfect” lifestyle won’t solve everything. What matters is what they can repeat.
When lifestyle habits are fixed, results compound. Training finally has something solid to stand on.
What does this mean for your coaching career?
If clients hire you for training, but their results depend on lifestyle, then your career depends on how well you lead the lifestyle.
You won’t keep many clients who train hard, pay on time and still don’t see changes. They will assume that the program is not working or that the coaching is not helping them. In reality, there is a gap between what they do in the gym and what they do outside of it.
Closing that gap is part of being a professional coach.
This can mean:
Building simple systems to query, track and review lifestyle habits.
Using tools like the free coaching guides from OPEX Fitness to improve the way you talk about the lifestyle.
Manage your own lifestyle so you can shape the habits you train.
If you train online or in person and want software support, you can also explore this CoachRx Software Resources to help you plan, track and monitor both training and lifestyle in one place.
Lifestyle coaching is not extra. It is the glue that holds the entire coaching relationship together.
Conclusion
When you zoom out, the message is clear: lifestyle is the foundation, education is the tool. Training creates the need for adaptation, but only lifestyle enables the body to respond to this call.
If you want better results for your clients, start by choosing a lifestyle action that would make the most difference to their training and guide it until it becomes a habit. Do the same for yourself.
Skip the hacks, focus on consistency, keep conversations honest, and let simple habits come together. This is how you build better clients and a coaching career that really lasts.
