Do me a favor, stand up, arms at your side. Now lift your arms forward until they point straight out in front of you. Got it? Good, now put your arms back at your side. Again, lift your arms but this time straight out to the sides, not to the front. Hold for a second and put them down. Finally, lift your arms straight up above your head, hold for a few seconds and then put them back down at your side. So why the heck did I have you do this? Because it’s a good illustration of what’s good and bad with many workouts.
Why Direction Matters
It’s funny, but when I say the shoulder muscle group most people hear only the first two words. They hear shoulders and muscle and that’s all. So they go ahead and incorporate one or two shoulder exercises into their routine and call it a day. Unfortunately, the shoulder group is just that, a GROUP of muscles, all working together to move your arms around. Depending on the direction of the movement, some of these muscles work more, work less or don’t work at all. Some do a lot of the pushing and pulling and others will just do stabilization so your arms go in the direction you intend. The important lesson is that they all need to be exercised. That means a good shoulder workout is one which incorporates a variety of movements, each working out different muscles in the shoulders in different ways. Let’s take a look at a workout like that.
Front Raises
Lateral Raise
This guy has amazing form by the way! Look at how steady he is as he raises the weights.
Shoulder Press
Pushups
Pull Ups
Compound Exercises
By the way, if you look at all of these exercises, you’ll see that none of them are machine ones. I’m not a big fan of various exercise machines because I feel that they isolate muscles too much. That is, you only work one muscle at a time. I’m a much bigger fan of these free and body weight exercises which workout multiple muscle groups at a time. For example, push ups workout the shoulder, the chest and even the abs and back. Pulls ups work the shoulders and the upper arms and so on. Plus when you do free and body weight exercises, you recruit a lot of other muscles to stabalize you even if they’re not doing the actual lifting work.
Still, even if you’re a big fan of machine exercises, make sure to workout your muscles in a variety of different ways. Take a look at these exercises that I listed here. Each is different even though they all work out the shoulder. If you only did one of them you’d be doing yourself a disservice. Now granted, a lot of you are like me and don’t have an unlimited time in the gym to do a dozen different types of exercises, but you do have enough time to do 5 or 6 different ones for each muscle group. If you manage your time well, you shouldn’t be spending more than 10 minutes on each muscle group.
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Think about your day to day use of your shoulder. Are you only using your shoulders to move your arms one way? Are you always moving your arms forward? Of course not. So make sure your workout accounts for all the ways in which you use your shoulder!
And remember, this doesn’t just apply to shoulders. The only reason I picked shoulders is that, due to their flexibility of motion, shoulders are the best example for this. The same lesson applies to all your muscle groups.

I completely agree with this article. You need to train your body so that it works well from all angles and all directions. For myself, I really like bodyweight exercises of various kinds, but the exercises you’ve posted here look great too.
Best,
Dave
Thanks for posting these! I would love to see exercises for other muscles too!
Actually, I have always enjoyed and benefited from supersetting my shoulder presses (of any kind) with pull-ups of hand grip stance. After, I enjoy supersetting later and rear dumbbell raises, with push-ups of any hand stance. One could actually live and die on these movements alone for upper body work, and I will suggest that done in this fashion, they can offer more to changing the aesthetic of the upper body than any others. Good show Gal, and good video choices!
I always love looking at workout routines, and yes, I’ve noticed that there are more than a few sets of muscles up there… trying to get all my upper body work balanced so I don’t end up lopsided.
(Speaking of lopsided, is there any way you can add some margin of space to the left side of this blog? the words start right at the veryvery edge of the browser, which makes it the tiniest bit hard to read…)
Lynn C,
Can you tell me which type and version of browser you’re using? I can’t recreate the problem you’re talking about.
Thank you,
Gal
Your films are blocked. It says that embedding was disabled. Too bad – I wanted to see them :/
@Mieszkania Gryfino
These are normal Youtube videos and are showing up fine on my screen and on other machines that I’ve tested. Is it possible that your office or whereever you are viewing this post from blocks Youtube?
Gal