How to add exercises to your workout plan
Adding exercise to your routine isn't always about motivation. Often it's about decision fatigue. A 2018 study found that people spend an average of 11 minutes deciding what to do in the gym before they even start moving. That's time you could already be using for a short, effective workout. A 20-minute high-intensity session with zero planning gets you similar aerobic gains to a 40-minute moderate workout. Dorsi removes the guesswork by adapting your programming based on your readiness and schedule. No more staring at the app wondering what to do next. This page breaks down how to build a program that respects your time and energy.
Practical Playbook
Identify the missing movement pattern
Look at your current program. Are you missing horizontal pulls, single-leg work, or a specific plane of motion? If you bench and press but never row, that's a problem. Dorsi's program builder spots these gaps automatically, but you can do it manually by listing your primary lifts and checking for balance.
How do I slot in the new exercise without wrecking fatigue?
Don't just tack it on at the end. Replace a similar exercise or add volume only if your recovery allows. Rule of thumb: start with 2 sets of a new movement for two weeks before increasing. Overload kills momentum. Track your soreness and sleep, if they tank, back off.
Pick a version you can actually execute
Not every exercise fits your level. Can't do a full pull-up yet? Use bands or negatives. Add exercise doesn't mean add complexity. Keep technique clean. A sloppy rep is worse than a skipped one. Choose the variation that lets you move well first, then add load.
Reassess progress and tweak after two weeks
After two weeks, evaluate. Did your strength in that movement improve? Any joint pain? If not, add a set. If something hurts, drop it, that's data, not failure. Your program should evolve with you. Rinse and repeat as you plateau or adapt.
Common Mistakes
- Mistake
- Adding a new exercise every single week without letting your body adapt.
- Why
- Your nervous system and muscles need at least 2-3 weeks to habituate to a new movement pattern. Constant novelty keeps you in the sore phase and stalls true strength gain.
- Fix
- Stick with one new addition for at least 3 weeks before swapping it out. Track your reps, if performance drops, you're probably doing too much.
- Mistake
- Piling on isolation exercises when the compound lift isn't stable yet.
- Why
- A wobbly squat won't be fixed by adding leg extensions. You're just accumulating fatigue without addressing the weak link.
- Fix
- Build capacity on the main lift first. Once your squat form holds for 3x8 at a consistent weight, then consider accessory work.
- Mistake
- Adding exercises that duplicate movement patterns from the same session.
- Why
- Two horizontal pushes (bench press + dumbbell press) in the same workout kill your recovery. You'll fatigue the same muscles twice, not build more.
- Fix
- Pick one primary horizontal push per session. Replace the second with a pull or a vertical push to distribute the load.
- Mistake
- Dumping new exercises at the end of a workout when you're already gassed.
- Why
- Technique and load suffer when you're tired. You reinforce sloppy patterns, and the adaptation stimulus is weaker.
- Fix
- Put new or technically demanding movements early in the session, right after your warm-up. Let the stale, simple movements close out the workout.
- Mistake
- Adding an exercise just because it's trending or a friend recommended it.
- Why
- Without a clear reason tied to your goal (strength, hypertrophy, endurance), you're wasting training capacity. Every rep has an opportunity cost.
- Fix
- Write down one specific reason for the addition, 'I'm adding deficit deadlifts because my pull off the floor is weak.' If you can't, skip it.
From the Dorsi blog
How Dorsi's AI Adapts Your Workout in Real Time
Discover how Dorsi's 7-dimension AI system adapts your workouts based on sleep, mood, time, and recovery.
What Happens When You Just Show Up: The Science of Adaptive Training
The scientific foundation of adaptive training science: autoregulation, RPE, HRV, and why consistency beats perfection.
Just show up. Dorsi handles the rest.
- HRV-driven readiness — today's plan adapts to how recovered you actually are.
- Adapts every session — no decision fatigue, no second-guessing your numbers.
- Apple Watch native — log a set with your wrist, not your phone.