Home Blog Contact
THE KPI PERFORMANCE SERIES · PART 4 OF 4

The KPI
Performance
System

The first three parts of this series established what KPIs are, which ones matter for volleyball and basketball, and the gold-standard methods for improving them.

Part 4 is about putting it all together into a system — one that removes guessing and replaces it with a repeatable process.

"Exercises are tools. KPIs are targets. Performance is measurable. A system connects all three."

The Performance Hierarchy

Physical qualities are not equal. Some are foundations that everything else is built on. Others can only be expressed when the foundation is in place. Training without understanding this hierarchy leads to programs that develop the wrong quality at the wrong time.

1
StrengthThe foundation. Force production capacity underpins every other physical quality.
2
PowerStrength expressed at speed. Cannot be developed effectively without a strength base.
3
Speed & AccelerationPower applied to sprint mechanics. Requires both force capacity and technical efficiency.
4
RepeatabilityThe ability to maintain quality across multiple efforts. Built on top of the aerobic and neuromuscular base.
5
Tactical IntegrationPhysical qualities expressed within the actual demands of the sport. Practice, game situations, position-specific conditioning.

This hierarchy is not rigid — all qualities are trained simultaneously in a well-designed program. But the emphasis shifts across a season based on where the athlete is in their development and the competition calendar.

The System: Test → Train → Re-Test → Adjust

The KPI Performance System has four phases that repeat across the training year. Each phase has a clear purpose and a clear output.

The four-phase cycle:

The Filter Question: Every Exercise

There is one question that every exercise in a KPI-based program must be able to answer:

"What KPI does this exercise improve?"

If the answer is unclear — remove it.

This sounds harsh. In practice, it is liberating. It removes the noise from training. It eliminates exercises that are included out of habit, tradition, or because they look impressive. What remains is a program where every session has a purpose and every exercise earns its place.

What This Means For You

If you are a volleyball or basketball athlete reading this, the practical takeaway is straightforward: you need to know your KPI numbers.

Not how heavy you squat. Not how many push-ups you can do. Your approach jump height. Your 0–5m time. Your RSI. Your COD score. These are the numbers that decide your performance on the court — and they are the numbers that a KPI-based training program is built to improve.

The athletes who train without these numbers are training in the dark. The athletes who know their numbers train with direction. The difference compounds over a season.

"The scoreboard doesn't care how you trained. It only cares what you can do. KPIs are the bridge between the two."

End of the Series

This is the final part of the KPI Performance Series. If you have read all four parts, you now have a complete framework: what KPIs are, which ones matter for your sport, how to improve them, and how to build a system around them.

The next step is measurement. You cannot manage what you cannot measure — and you cannot improve what you have not tested.

← Part 3: Gold-Standard Methods All Articles →

FIND YOUR KPIs

Get a professional assessment of your sport-specific performance indicators.

Book KPI Assessment