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Fitness & Performance

Training that makes you better at life & sport

There is more to

performance

than sport

When most people hear the word performance, they picture an athlete. Someone training for a race, a competition, or a sport. Someone with very specific goals and very serious methods.

But performance is not reserved for athletes. It describes how well your body does what you ask of it, and that applies to everyone, regardless of whether you have ever competed in anything.

The parent who wants to keep up with their children without getting winded. The professional who wants more energy and focus through a demanding week. The person who loves hiking, cycling, golf, or tennis and wants to do it better and for longer. The 50-year-old who wants to feel as capable physically as they did ten years ago.

All of these are performance goals. And all of them are achievable through structured, well-coached training.

What Performance Training Actually Means

Performance training is training with a purpose beyond how you look. It is about building physical qualities — strength, stamina, cardiovascular fitness, mobility, power — that translate into better function in the activities and situations that matter to you.

The specific qualities you train for depend on what you are trying to improve. But the underlying principles are consistent: progressive overload, structured programming, adequate recovery, and coaching that keeps you on the right track and moving in the right direction.

What separates performance training from general fitness is intentionality. Every session has a reason. Every progression is deliberate. You are not just turning up and doing something — you are building something, systematically, over time.

Performance is not about being the best in the room. It is about being better than you were last month.

The Physical Qualities That Drive Performance

Private Training in Tarporley

Strength

Strength is the foundation of almost everything. It is not just about lifting heavy weights; it is the capacity of your muscles and connective tissue to produce and manage force. Better strength means better posture, better injury resilience, more power in the activities you enjoy, and a body that handles the physical demands of daily life with ease rather than effort.

Strength training also has the best long-term return on investment of any physical quality. The muscle you build in your 40s and 50s will serve you for decades, and the habits you build around training will serve you even longer.

Cardio-Vascular Performance

Cardio-Vascular Performance

Cardiovascular fitness, the efficiency of your heart, lungs, and circulatory system, determines how long you can sustain effort and how quickly you recover from it. It is the quality that determines whether you can play two sets of tennis or three holes of golf before your body starts asking you to stop. Improving cardiovascular fitness does not require endless running. It comes from any sustained activity that challenges the heart and lungs consistently over time, and at Instinct, we build it into training in ways that are varied, purposeful, and far more engaging than grinding out miles on a treadmill.

Stamina & Endurance

Stamina & Endurance

Related to but distinct from cardiovascular fitness, stamina is your ability to sustain effort, physical or mental, over extended periods. It is what determines whether you still feel capable and sharp at the end of a long day, a full round of golf, or an afternoon in the garden. Building stamina requires training that progressively extends the duration and demands of effort, which is exactly what a well-structured programme does over time.

Mobility & Movement Quality

Mobility & Movement Quality

The ability to move freely, efficiently, and without restriction is a performance quality that most people only notice when it starts to deteriorate. Poor mobility limits the power you can generate, increases injury risk, and makes physical activity feel harder than it needs to. Maintaining and improving mobility, through structured training, dedicated mobility work, and the kind of coaching that pays attention to how you move, not just how much, keeps the body functioning at its best across every other quality.

Performance Looks Different for Everyone

This is worth saying clearly, because it changes how you should think about your training.

For one person, performance means being able to run a 10k without stopping. For another, it means getting back on the golf course after a knee operation and playing a full round without pain. For someone else, it means having the energy and physical capacity to travel comfortably, carry luggage, walk all day in a new city, and still feel good at dinner.

None of these goals is more or less valid than any other. And all of them benefit from the same approach, building the physical qualities that underpin capability, through consistent, progressive, well-coached training.

The difference between someone who achieves these goals and someone who does not is rarely talent or genetics. It is almost always consistency and structure.

 

The goal is not to become an athlete. It is to become more capable in the gym and everywhere outside it.

How We Train for Performance at Instinct

At Instinct in Tarporley, performance training is not a niche offering for a specific type of member. It is built into how we train everyone because everyone deserves to feel capable, strong, and physically confident in their life.

Our semi-private personal training sessions are structured around periodised programming, planned across the year, adapted to each member individually, and progressed deliberately over time. The format gives you the benefits of personal coaching, along with the energy and accountability of training with others who are working just as hard.

For those with more specific or individual performance goals, our one-to-one personal training takes that further, a programme built entirely around you, your objectives, and what your body needs to achieve them.

Our coaching team has over five decades of combined experience working with members across every goal and starting point. Between them, there is very little in the area of performance training they have not seen, addressed, and helped someone work through.

Where to Start

Performance improvements do not happen overnight. But they do happen, and often faster than people expect, when the training is right and the coaching is consistent.

The first step is a conversation. Let us know what you are working toward, where you are starting from, and what you have tried before. From there, we will build a picture of the training that makes sense for you, and a plan to get you there.

Whatever your version of performance looks like, we have seen it before. And we know how to help you reach it.

Start Your Journey

Next Steps