How to Spot PRs and Training Trends Faster
Learn how to track PRs and training trends using simple weekly checkpoints, volume review, and practical adjustments.

Learn how to track PRs and training trends using simple weekly checkpoints, volume review, and practical adjustments.

Progress is not always loud. Most PRs are small wins stacked over time. Here is a simple way to surface them without a complex spreadsheet.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes.
Record the heaviest high-quality set of your primary lift each week. For many lifters, this creates a clear trend line over a training block.
Weekly volume by movement pattern can be more informative than total gym time alone. If volume trends up while form quality stays consistent, that may signal productive training.
This is easier to apply when your sessions are logged consistently with a repeatable process like a 5-minute workout log habit.
If two weeks pass with no meaningful change, consider a small adjustment: reduce volume slightly, improve recovery, or slow your progression jump size. You do not need to wait for a full block to make minor course corrections.
If load stays the same but reps climb with clean form, that is still progress. Mark it and build on it.
You do not need dozens of metrics. Track top sets, volume trends, and rep PRs, then connect those trends to your progressive overload plan.
Simple checkpoints can make progress easier to see and easier to act on. Keep your review process lightweight, consistent, and specific to your training context.
Both can work.
If you prefer an app workflow, Bazu includes a feature to track all PRs in one place so you can review progress trends without maintaining a custom sheet.
Bazu on the App Store
A weekly review works for many lifters. If your training is highly variable, review every two weeks to reduce noise.
A rep PR at the same load can still indicate progress, especially when form quality and range of motion stay consistent.
Use the method you can maintain consistently. Spreadsheets offer flexibility, while apps can reduce logging friction and speed up trend review.
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