Dominant: Tempo
DO: Just get out the door and do it. Have a plan for the distance you will be covering, and the paces you need to hit, and then get started. Record what you achieve and next week, try to beat it, turning your running into a competition. Dominant types benefit from having clear outcomes and results and then trying to beat those next time.
DON’T: Overthink your paces, distance or the fine details of each mile. Overanalyzing for dominants leads to frustration and a feeling of being overwhelmed, and this takes up mental energy and may even cause them to throw in the towel and not do it at all.
Learn more about buying online with confidence the Landice way
Influential: Long Run
DO: Plan out your route, where you can get water along the way (if not carrying it with you), and where you will take in each fuel source. Have an approximate time to get from your start to finish and be familiar with each section in between.
DON’T: Leave home without a route planned, or no knowledge of how far each section is and how long you expect to be gone for. Failure to know the details of getting between Point A and Point B will not set you up for success.
Stable: Track Workout
DO: Head to the track with a group and a pre-determined workout lined up, such as three sets of 6 x 400m. Have other members of the group indicate the start for each 400m sprint. Use the time to connect with others while being slightly pushed out of your comfort zone, without needing to make decisions.
DON’T: Tackle workout sessions, such as intervals, hills or track workouts, alone and without a plan. The need to make too many decisions, or having to do things alone does not bode well for stabilizers who follow a “let’s do it together,” mentality. As a general rule, stabilizers are group runners, not solo runners.
Compliant: Fartlek Workout
DO: Write down the workout before your session with clear details, deciding whether to use time or distance as your metric and accounting for the specifics of each part of the workout.
For example:
2 mile warm-up7 Fartleks, 1 mile each; 0.25 mile recovery between
1.5 mile cool down
Total: 12 miles
DON’T: Leave the house without a measured plan, thinking that you will just make each Fartlek from one block to the next. Lack of details and specifics will cost you a lot of mental energy during the session and make your performance suffer.
Me, I think I fall into the Dominant category. I don't like to overthink it. I like to compare how fast I ran from workout to workout, which is a competition with myself - someone who like to challenge.