
Stop Wasting Time on Useless Exercises: The 10 That Matter
Your Gym Time Is Precious—Stop Wasting It
Compound exercises are the foundation of any effective strength training program. You walk into the gym with a plan, but half your workout is fluff.
Leg extensions, bicep curls, and cable flyes won't build the physique you want. Focus on compound movements—multi-joint exercises that recruit multiple muscle groups.
These are the money-makers.
Forget isolation. Compound exercises spike testosterone, burn more calories, and build functional strength.
Here are the 10 exercises you need. No more, no less.
The Big Three Compound Exercises
1. Barbell Back Squat
The king of leg development. Nothing builds quads, glutes, and core stability like a loaded barbell on your back.
Drive through your heels, keep your chest up, and hit depth.
If you can only do one leg exercise, this is it. Add weight weekly and watch your lower body transform.
2. Deadlift
The ultimate full-body pull. From your hamstrings to your traps, every muscle fires.
Hinge at the hips, pull the slack out of the bar, and stand tall.
Don't ego lift—perfect form first. This lift separates the strong from the posers.
Do it on your back day or as a standalone strength movement.
3. Bench Press
Upper body power starts here. Chest, shoulders, triceps—all engaged.
Keep your scapulae retracted, lower the bar to your sternum, and press explosively.
Forget the incline, decline, and dumbbell variations. Master the flat barbell bench.
It's the standard for a reason.
Pulling Power: What Your Back Craves

These compound exercises target your posterior chain.
4. Pull-Up (or Weighted Pull-Up)
Your back needs vertical pulling. Pull-ups build lats, biceps, and grip strength.
If you can't do ten, start with negatives or assisted versions.
Once you can do sets of eight, add weight. A thick back screams strength.
No machine can replicate this movement.
5. Barbell Row
Horizontal pulling completes your back. Bend over, keep your spine neutral, and pull the bar to your lower ribs.
This builds thickness in the mid-back and rear delts.
Don't jerk the weight. Control the eccentric and squeeze at the top.
It's a trap that many skip—don't be that person.
Overhead and Dips: Shoulders and Triceps
These compound exercises build shoulder strength.
6. Standing Overhead Press
Shoulder health and strength depend on this. Press a barbell from your clavicle to full extension overhead.
Engage your core, don't arch your back.
It's humbling. You won't press as much as you bench, but that's fine.
This movement builds boulder shoulders and a stable core.
7. Parallel Bar Dips
The squat of the upper body. Dips target your lower chest, triceps, and front delts.
Lean forward for more chest, stay upright for triceps.
Add weight with a belt when bodyweight gets easy. This one exercise can replace three isolation moves.
Glutes and Grip: The Forgotten Foundations
8. Barbell Hip Thrust
Your glutes are the engine of your body. Hip thrusts activate them better than squats or deadlifts.
Set your back on a bench, roll a barbell over your hips, and thrust up.
Pause at the top and squeeze. Strong glutes improve your squat, deadlift, and sprinting.
Don't neglect them.
9. Farmer’s Walk
Carry heavy weights in each hand and walk. Sounds simple, but it challenges your grip, traps, core, and conditioning.
Use dumbbells or kettlebells.
Walk for distance or time. This is a full-body stabilizer exercise that builds real-world strength.
The Finisher: Power and Explosiveness
10. Power Clean
If you're ready for advanced training, the power clean develops explosive power. Pull the bar from the floor to your shoulders in one motion.
It engages every muscle from your calves to your traps.
Learn the technique with light weight. It’s not for beginners, but once you get it, you’ll be stronger and more athletic in weeks.
How to Program These Lifts
Pick 3-4 compound exercises per workout. For example: squat, bench, row on day one.
Deadlift, overhead press, pull-ups on day two. Use progressive overload: add weight or reps each week.
Track your numbers. Don't skip the basics.
These 10 compound exercises are all you need to build a strong, muscular body. Everything else is decoration.
For more on effective training, explore our Fitness & Sports archive. And if you want proof, read this study on compound exercises vs. isolation or this review on resistance training variables.
Stick to compound exercises for maximum results. Now stop reading and go lift.
The weights don't move themselves.