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Pillar 01
Training
Stimulus · Volume · Progression
Leather-bound Hardgainer Training Codex with golden embossing surrounded by vintage stopwatch and engraved weight plate as a symbol of dosed training stimuli and progression in muscle building

Training for Hardgainers

Pillar Volume Progression

Stimulus, volume, progression — the map for everything hardgainers need to know about training. For us, training is not a feat of strength — it is a question of dosage. Five pillars hold the whole thing up; when one drops out, everything tilts. The concrete numbers, splits, and plans wait in the deep dives.

0Pillars that carry the training
0Terms core vocabulary — directly linked
0Myths busted & cleared up
In 90 seconds

Training for hardgainers rarely fails on too little drive. It fails on too much of the wrong thing. More sets, more weight, more days at the gym — the body does not adapt through force but through precisely dosed stimuli, which in the recovery phase turn into growth.

Five questions decide whether your training works or dissipates:

  • How much? Volume — the most important dosage variable. Between MEV and MRV, growth happens. Pillar 01.
  • How often? Frequency — distributed stimulus beats bundled. Two to three times per week per muscle group. Pillar 02.
  • How do you progress? Progression — measurably upward, not by feel. Weight, reps, or cleaner technique. Pillar 03.
  • How hard? Intensity and RIR — reserve over failure. One to three reps short of the wall. Pillar 04.
  • With which exercises? Compound movements build the foundation. Isolation sharpens the detail. Pillar 05.

This page shows you what. The deep dives deliver exactly how much. The Hardgainer Guide walks you step by step through the complete build-up. Here you are inside the subject itself.

The five pillars everything rests on

Pillar 01 · Volume

Volume control

How much stimulus does a muscle need — and from when does it become too much? MEV, MAV, MRV mark the corridor in which growth happens at all. Below it: too little signal. Above it: too much fatigue. Where you as a hardgainer train within that corridor decides between progress and standstill. The concrete set counts live in the deep dive.

Pillar 02 · Frequency

Training frequency

Cram it all into one brutal session — or spread it across the week? The evidence is clear: distribution wins. Higher frequency lowers fatigue per session and keeps the muscle more often in the anabolic window. For hardgainers, a double lever — fewer slumps, more signals.

Pillar 03 · Progression

Progressive overload

No progression, no growth. Simple as that. But “more” does not necessarily mean “heavier”. It can be one clean rep added. A controlled negative phase. A better RIR. What counts is the measurable move upward — over months, not over a single training day.

Pillar 04 · Intensity

Intensity & RIR

How hard does a set have to be? Hard enough for real stimulus, controlled enough for clean repeatability. Muscle failure on every set is not the goal — it is a mistake. It tips the balance between stimulus and fatigue. Work with reserve in the tank. Your progress thanks you over months, not over days.

Pillar 05 · Exercises

Exercise selection

Not every exercise pays the same stimulus per unit of fatigue. Compound movements build the foundation — squat, deadlift, pull-up, press. Isolation sharpens the detail. For tight recovery budgets — and that is what we hardgainers have — the right selection is not a luxury. It is an efficiency requirement.

Christian Schönbauer training on the cable machine — controlled, focused, with reps in reserve
2005

I wanted to “maximise” every session. Every set to the last twitch, no reserves, no thought about tomorrow. Week after week I got weaker, more drained, more frustrated. The mirror showed the same body, the dumbbells the same numbers. At some point I stopped training against it — and started to dose. That changed everything.

Christian Schönbauer

Deep Dives

Article · Volume Training Volume for Hardgainers: How Many Sets per Muscle Group? The complete deep dive on MEV, MAV, and MRV — including a 4-day split, a volume ranking per muscle group, and the 8-week build-up from entry level to deload. With concrete tables and a practice template to print.

More deep dives in preparation: Progressive overload for hardgainers · Rep ranges — 6–12 or 8–15? · The 8-week mesocycle. If you want to be notified when they go live: Hardgainer Mission Briefing™.

Where hardgainers most often go wrong

→ Full overview: Hardgainer Myth Busting — new myths every Thursday.

Training in the glossary

Every term in one place — each explained, each one click away:

Tools that turn this into a plan

Other pillars

All six pillars in the Knowledge Base

Christian Schönbauer
About the author Christian Schönbauer, MSc Founder & Managing Director · Hardgainer Performance Nutrition GmbH

Training since 1999. Starting weight back then: under 50 kg. Over 25 years of personal training and nutrition practice — from HIT purism to today’s MAV-based system, built specifically for hardgainers.

More about the author →
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