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How to Coach More Runners Without Working More Hours

Why Every Running Coach Needs a System (Not Just a Session Plan)

As a running coach, you already know that getting results isn’t just about effort, if only hey! It’s about structure. Your athletes rely on you for direction, and a clear path forward.

The problem most coaches run into (pardon the pun) isn’t knowledge. It’s time. Writing bespoke plans for every client, fielding the same questions over and over, and rebuilding frameworks from scratch every time someone new comes on board, it’s exhausting, and it’s not sustainable.

That’s where structured systems and done-for-you guides change the game. Not just for your runners, but for the long-term health of your coaching business.

Why structure matters more than motivation

Even the most driven runners fall apart without a clear plan. As a coach, you can spot the gaps immediately, too much volume too soon, not enough recovery, training without real purpose.

Structure solves this, and when that structure is already built for you, you’re not spending hours designing it from scratch every time a new client signs up.

A well-built system does a few things at once:

  • Standardises the quality of your coaching across every client
  • Removes guesswork for your athletes so they train with confidence
  • Ensures progressive, safe improvement over time
  • Frees up your time for the high-value coaching only you can do

Making the most of modern running tools

Platforms like Strava and Runna are now central to how most runners train but the majority of athletes don’t fully understand how to get the most out of them.

That’s an opportunity for you as a coach.

With the right user guides in place, you can:

  • Help clients understand their data, pace, effort, consistency, heart rate zones
  • Improve accountability through better tracking habits between sessions
  • Reduce the repetitive questions that eat into your coaching time
  • Give athletes the tools to become more self-sufficient, while still relying on your expertise for progression

Instead of explaining the same thing to every new client, you hand them a resource that does it for you.

Distance-specific guides: a scalable coaching asset

Most runners fall into predictable goal categories, finishing their first 5K, stepping up to a 10K, chasing a PB. Instead of building bespoke plans every single time, structured distance guides let you deliver proven programming efficiently and consistently.

For 5K-focused clients, a solid framework helps them:

  • Build speed and running economy progressively
  • Stay engaged with shorter, sharper sessions
  • Chase personal bests with a clear plan behind them

For 10K clients, a structured guide supports:

  • Developing endurance at pace across a longer effort
  • Improving race strategy and pacing discipline
  • Making a confident, injury-free transition from shorter distances

MyBrand has two done-for-you running guides built specifically for coaches to hand directly to their clients:

Both are customisable, so they look and feel like your own work, not a generic template.

And if you want to take the data side further, the Race Pace Calculator Google Sheet lets you calculate projected finish times and required paces for clients in seconds, and the Runner’s Predictor goes even further, covering heart rate zones, interval calculations, and pacing targets.

From time-heavy to system-driven coaching

Without systems, coaching becomes reactive. You’re always putting out fires instead of driving progress.

With the right structure in place, your role shifts:

Without systems

With systems

Writing every session from scratch

Refining and adapting proven frameworks

Repeating the same instructions

Focusing on feedback and performance

Managing chaos

Leading a structured, scalable process

This doesn’t dilute your coaching. It makes it more effective because your energy goes where it actually matters.

What this looks like in practice for your clients

When your runners have access to clear, well-designed resources, they show up to sessions better prepared. They understand the why behind their training. They stay consistent between check-ins which means your coaching conversations are more productive, not just more frequent.

That’s the difference between coaching that drains you and coaching that scales.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I coach more runners without burning out?

The key is moving from bespoke to systematic. Done-for-you training guides, platform user resources, and distance-specific frameworks mean you’re delivering the same quality without rebuilding everything for every new client. You create or source it once and it works for every runner who comes through your door.

What tools do running coaches use to manage clients?

Most coaches work across a combination of training platforms (Strava, Runna, TrainingPeaks), spreadsheets for pacing and tracking, and branded resources they hand to clients. The difference between coaches who scale and those who burn out is usually how much of this is templated versus built from scratch each time.

How should I use Strava with my running clients?

Beyond basic tracking, Strava is most powerful for accountability and data interpretation. Coaching your clients on how to read their pace data, use segments, and engage with training between sessions reduces the back-and-forth considerably. A structured Strava guide removes the need to explain this individually every time.

What should a 10K training plan include?

A solid 10K plan covers progressive long runs, tempo work, pace-specific intervals, recovery days, and race strategy. For coaches, having a done-for-you guide means your clients get all of this in a clear, structured format without you writing it from scratch for every athlete.

How do I scale a running coaching business?

Scaling comes down to removing the bottlenecks that only work when you’re the one doing them. Structured client resources, distance guides, and automated systems mean your coaching quality doesn’t drop as your client numbers grow.

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