1. The gap between screenshots and reality
If you scroll through SaaS landing pages, almost every coaching app shows the same thing:
- Beautiful cards with a single “Workout of the day”.
- Clean typography, big numbers, minimal UI.
But if you’ve ever run serious programming for functional or performance clients, you know:
- You’re not just writing “Workout of the day”.
- You’re juggling cycles, testing weeks, deloads, multiple tracks, and individual tweaks.
The result is a gap:
- The UI looks nice in a single screenshot.
- It starts to crack the moment you try to live inside it every day as a coach.
2. What real training actually looks like
For modern performance coaches, a “simple” week can include:
- Strength progressions (squats, pulls, presses) with tempo and percentages.
- Conditioning pieces (EMOMs, AMRAPs, intervals, long metcons).
- Skill work (gymnastics, specific movement patterns).
- Accessory work to support the main lifts.
Sessions themselves are rarely “one block, one exercise”:
- Warm‑up → activation → main lift → secondary lift → conditioning → cool‑down.
- Or: strength piece → EMOM → accessory circuits.
Good programming is messy in structure but precise in intent. Any serious program builder has to embrace that complexity instead of pretending it doesn’t exist.
3. Principles for a real program builder
When we started working on Jimmy’s builder, we set a few design principles:
- Weekly first, not daily
Coaches think in weeks and blocks. The builder has to reflect that by default. - Blocks, not walls of text
Programs are made of blocks (strength, conditioning, skill, etc.) that can be moved, duplicated, or edited quickly. - Flexible quantities
The system must support reps, meters, calories, seconds, minutes, rounds — without forcing coaches into one rigid pattern. - Free‑text allowed everywhere it matters
Coaching requires nuance: whiteboard notes, cues, context. There has to be room for that. - Recognize real‑world patterns
EMOMs and similar structures are standard for modern coaches. The builder should understand and support them natively.
We didn’t want to “educate” coaches into a new style of programming. We wanted to build a tool that fits the style they already know works.
4. Weekly view: the coach’s cockpit
The first big decision: Jimmy’s builder is weekly by design.
Instead of:
- “Create a workout → assign to a day → repeat 7 times”,
we start with:
- “Here’s your week. Let’s build it.”
This gives coaches:
- A clear sense of load and density across days.
- A smoother way to create progressions and waves.
- Faster editing when something needs to move (e.g. a heavy day after a tough metcon).
A weekly view is not just a UX preference — it’s an expression of respect for how serious coaches actually plan.
5. Blocks you can drag, drop, and reuse
Within that weekly view, sessions in Jimmy are built from blocks:
- Strength block.
- Metcon / conditioning block.
- EMOM block.
- Skill / accessory block.
Each block can be:
- Reordered within the same session.
- Duplicated to another day or week.
- Edited without rewriting the entire workout.
This lets coaches:
- Build templates (e.g. “Monday strength + short metcon”, “Friday test workout”).
- Iterate quickly when feedback or performance indicates that something needs to change.
Compared to typing everything in one text box in a spreadsheet, blocks give structure without taking away freedom.
6. Flexible quantity fields that don’t fight you
Rigid quantity fields are one of the fastest ways to frustrate a coach.
If an app only accepts “sets x reps” or “time”, real sessions become a hackathon.
In Jimmy, quantity fields are designed to be coach‑friendly:
- Reps, meters, calories, seconds, minutes — all valid.
- You can write “5 x 400m”, “10 min EMOM”, “15 kcal” or “4 rounds” in ways that feel natural.
The system doesn’t try to over‑police how you express work. Instead, it:
- Gives you clear slots (exercise, prescription, notes).
- Lets you write in a way that your clients will understand.
7. EMOMs and structured prescriptions
For many modern coaches, EMOMs and similar formats are not “advanced extras” — they’re staples.
That’s why we’re designing Jimmy to:
- Support EMOMs as first‑class citizens.
- Use patterns like “every X for Y” to describe work (e.g. “Every 2:00 for 10:00”).
Instead of forcing coaches to:
- Either fake EMOMs as “5 sets of 2 minutes”, or
- Explain the entire structure in one giant text field,
we want the builder to:
- Understand that “every 2:00 for 10:00” means 5 intervals.
- Present the workout to clients in a clear, EMOM‑friendly layout.
This is where we see a lot of potential for intelligent parsing:
- If a coach writes a structured line in a certain way, Jimmy can help format it cleanly without changing the meaning.
8. Whiteboard blocks for the human part
Not everything in a workout should be “structured data”.
Sometimes coaches need to say:
- “Move smooth, stay aerobic.”
- “This is a test, don’t game it.”
- “Scale to something you can keep unbroken.”
If the builder doesn’t give them space for these notes, they will:
- Stuff them into exercise names.
- Write them in external messages.
- Or skip them entirely.
That’s why we added whiteboard‑style blocks in Jimmy:
- Pure free‑text zones inside the session.
- Perfect for complex pieces, context, or mindset cues.
This respects the reality that coaching is not just sets and reps; it’s communication.
9. Recognizing how coaches actually name things
Another small but important detail: language.
Coaches don’t always write exercise names the same way:
- “Rower” vs “rameur”.
- English vs local language.
- Abbreviations or slang.
We’re designing the builder to:
- Recognize common synonyms and variations (e.g. “rower” / “rameur”).
- Make it easy for coaches working in bilingual or multilingual contexts.
Again, the goal is not to force a single “perfect” naming convention, but to support what coaches already do in real life.
10. Why this level of detail matters
From the outside, a lot of these choices sound like “nice touches”.
From the inside, they are the difference between:
- A tool you endure because your clients are in it.
- A tool you actually enjoy using because it matches your brain.
For coaches, this means:
- Less time fighting the interface.
- More time thinking about athletes and clients.
- Easier scaling as client numbers grow.
For clients, it means:
- Clearer sessions.
- Fewer misunderstandings about what to do.
- More consistent programming week after week.
We don’t want Jimmy’s program builder to win “best UI on Twitter”.
We want it to win in the only place that matters: the everyday lives of coaches who program serious training.