Immersive Fitness Experiences
While the fitness industry continues to explore the growing influence of data, digital tools, and connected experiences, performance is ultimately shaped by a broader mix of factors: environment, equipment, and coaching. Together, these factors define how people train and progress.
In this article, Luke Carlson, founder of Discover Strength and Chairman of the Health & Fitness Association, offers a grounded perspective on what modern training actually looks like. Drawing on decades of coaching experience and his own preparation for the Boston Marathon, he explores how data, digital tools, physical equipment, real-world environments, and human coaching integrate to drive results—and where operators should focus to deliver more meaningful fitness experiences.
I woke up this morning and did what many athletes now do first—I checked my recovery data. My Oura Ring sleep and readiness scores are top of mind as I get closer to the Boston Marathon—now just days away.
Within an hour, a friend who’s also racing texted me his WHOOP recovery score. He was “green.” He was ready.
This is a snapshot of modern fitness.
We’re preparing for one of the most traditional events in sport—over a century old, run on the same roads into Boston. But the path we take to get there has fundamentally changed.
When I reflect on the past 18 weeks of training, it’s clear: performance today is built through a blend of data, technology, environment, and human coaching.
1. Environment and Access
Training doesn’t happen in one place. Living in Minnesota through the winter, I logged hundreds of miles indoors on a Life Fitness treadmill—often during long runs of 20+ miles. Streaming Netflix and YouTube content wasn’t a distraction; it was a tool that made consistency possible.
2. Data and Feedback
Wearables like Oura and Garmin Connect provide constant feedback on sleep, recovery, and performance. Not all data is equally valuable—but used appropriately, it helps inform decisions and identify trends.
3. Training Technology That Matters
There’s a tendency to think of “technology” as screens, apps, or AI. But the most important technology I use isn’t digital—it’s physical.
The design of a Hammer Strength machine is technology. It’s the tool that directly challenges physiology—muscle strength, hypertrophy, and physiological durability.
Twice per week, I train using these tools—focusing on movements that not only build strength but help reduce injury risk. My favorites include the Hammer Strength Plate Loaded Super Squat Press and Tibia Dorsi- Flexion.
4. Real-World Training
My Boston build has included hundreds of outdoor miles. Over the last 18 weeks, I’ve run on the roads and trails in Minnesota, along Bayshore Boulevard in Tampa, the lake front in Chicago, the “res” in Boulder, Co, an oceanfront road in Cozumel, Mexico, and a hotel parking lot in Houston to name a few. I even had the opportunity to run the last 7 miles of the Boston marathon course a few weeks ago when my work brought me to Boston.
5. Coaching (The Multiplier)
The most important variable isn’t the device or the environment—it’s the coach.
Every strength workout I’ve performed has been supervised 1-on-1 by an exercise physiologist. The research is clear: if you want to maximize the benefits of resistance training, direct supervision matters.
Coaching ensures effort, precision, and progression. I’ve trained with direct supervision for 28 years.
This is what modern training looks like.
Not one solution—but an integration
- Data that informs
- Equipment that drives adaptation
- Environments that enable consistency
- And coaching that ensures results
The industry often overemphasizes the digital.
But the reality is simpler:
- Technology can support the process
- Data can inform decisions
But results still come from applying the right stimulus—with the right level of effort—consistently over time.
And that’s still a human process.
Luke’s perspective highlights an important reality: digital innovation plays a meaningful role in today’s training experience, but it’s most effective when it works alongside the fundamentals. Progress is driven by the right combination of equipment, environment, coaching, and technology, not any one element alone.
At Life Fitness / Hammer Strength, that belief shapes how we approach innovation. Our Digital Solutions are designed to deliver connected, personalized, and practical experiences that support real progress, always grounded in a deep understanding of both operators and exercisers. Each tool is built with a human-first mindset, using digital integrations to enhance—not replace—coaching and decision-making.
Explore how our Digital Solutions can bring greater clarity, connection, and personalization to every training experience.