Why technique matters more than intensity if you've plateaued
If you've spent a year or two in a high-intensity group class around Capalaba, Alexandra Hills or Chandler, you'll probably recognise this pattern. The first six months are brilliant. You're fitter, sweatier, and proud of yourself for showing up. Then, somewhere around month eight, the progress slows. You're still working just as hard, but the scales won't move, your knee niggles at you on leg day, and the sessions start to feel more like survival than progress.
This isn't a motivation problem. It's usually a sign that your training needs a different kind of structure, and it's one of the most common reasons people across the Redlands come to us at Rebuild Capalaba looking for something a bit more tailored.
What the research actually says about high-intensity training
High-intensity functional training has genuine, well-documented benefits for fitness and health. It's also one of the most researched group training formats around, which gives us a good picture of what makes it work well. A systematic review and meta-analysis of studies covering more than 11,000 participants found injury rates during high-intensity functional training varied enormously between programmes, from as low as 0.04 injuries per 1,000 hours of training to as high as 18.90 per 1,000 hours.
That's a wide range, and it tells us something useful: outcomes depend far more on how a programme is coached than on the format itself.
Mayo Clinic researchers who studied a six-week high-intensity functional training programme reached a similar conclusion. Most injuries were tied to ballistic, ie explosive or fast, movements performed without optimal technique, and the study's authors specifically pointed to close coaching and technique monitoring as the factor that kept injury risk low.
In other words, intensity itself isn't the issue. What matters most is whether someone is watching how you move and refining it over time.
Why technique is easy to lose sight of as training becomes routine
Once a movement feels familiar, it's natural to stop thinking about it closely and just focus on getting through the workout. This happens in any format, and it tends to show up more as fatigue builds through a session.
A systematic review of injuries in CrossFit, cross training and high-intensity functional training programmes noted that a loss of technique under high repetition and high intensity is one of the clearest predictors of injury, and that a qualified coach correcting form in real time is essential to managing that risk.
If you've ever caught yourself rounding your back on the fortieth rep of a workout because you were just trying to finish, you've experienced exactly this. It's not a lack of effort. It's simply what happens when fatigue outpaces attention on form, and it's completely normal. The fix isn't training less hard, it's having someone track your movement patterns consistently enough to catch it early.
What structured coaching looks like at Rebuild Capalaba
This is the gap our 60-minute coached group classes are built to close. Our programming follows a structured cycle, so the same movement patterns are revisited and refined over weeks, rather than only appearing once and then not again for a while.
That means:
- Your coach can track how your squat, hinge and press are progressing, not just whether you finished the workout
- Technique corrections build on each other, rather than starting fresh every session
- Intensity increases once a movement is safe and repeatable, not before
For members who've trained in a variety of formats before finding us, this is usually the biggest shift they notice. The sessions still feel hard. But the soreness starts to feel like progress again, rather than wear and tear.
Signs it might be time for a technique check-in
A few common signs we see in new members from Capalaba, Alexandra Hills and Chandler:
- You've plateaued despite training consistently for six months or more
- The same joint (often a knee, shoulder or lower back) niggles regularly
- You genuinely aren't sure whether your squat or deadlift form is correct
- Workouts feel like they're testing you rather than building you
None of these mean you need to train less. They usually mean it's a good time for someone to take a proper look at how you move, not just how hard you're working.
Where to start
If any of this sounds familiar, the first step is a free Success Session, a one-on-one conversation with one of our coaches to look at where you're at, what's been holding you back, and whether structured coaching is the right fit for you. Book yours at Rebuild Capalaba and let's have a proper look at what's going on.

