Group Assignment

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Group Assignment allows you to organize multiple clients or athletes within a single session by dividing them into smaller training groups. This makes it easier to manage rotations, monitor performance, and collect data efficiently across multiple users or devices.

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Overview

Groups can be assigned inside a session after clients have been added. Each athlete is placed into a designated group (A, B, C, etc.), allowing to quickly filter who is active during training or testing.

All group data remains within the same session, making post-session review simple and centralized.

Step 1: Creating a Session with Groups

-Groups are assigned from within a session by clicking "Create new session" quick link.
-Add the client and exercise.

Step 2: Assigning Clients to Groups

  • Select an athlete from the session list.
  • Assign the athlete to a group (Group A, B, C, or additional groups if needed).
  • Repeat for each athlete.

Example:

  • Athlete 1 → Group A
  • Athlete 2 → Group B
  • Athlete 3 → Group C

There is no limit on how many clients or athletes can be in a group. It is custom choice by the user.

Step 3: Viewing and Training by Group

Group filters are controlled from View Settings.

  • Open the view settings menu (top speed, total time, or metric view).
  • Select the group you want to train or test.
  • Only athletes assigned to that group will be visible.

This allows you to:

  • Rotate groups between units
  • Manage larger teams
  • Keep training organized during busy sessions

Step 4: Collecting Data Across Groups

Even when clients are separated into groups, all data is collected within the same session.

This means:

  • Each group can train individually.
  • Results are saved together in one session file.
  • Coaches can review all athletes from the home screen after training.

Best Practices

  • Assign groups before starting runs to avoid confusion.
  • Use groups when working with multiple devices or stations.
  • Keep group sizes balanced for efficient rotations.

Tutorial Video