The Fastest Way to Build Endurance Without Getting Injured
So, Does Running Form Really Make You Faster?
Before we talk about how to fix your form, we need to answer one big question: does it even matter?
Research looking at running biomechanics shows that form can explain roughly 4–12% differences in running economy
Running economy is simply how much energy it costs you to run at a given pace
That means posture, stride, coordination, and movement efficiency can make you noticeably faster without extra fitness
But here’s the catch — form work only helps when it’s done intentionally and progressively
In other words, randomly copying elite runners or forcing changes usually backfires. The goal is smarter movement, not perfect-looking movement.
Stage 1 is all about Being Aware Before you make Changes
If you’re newer to running, or you’ve never worked on form before, this first stage is critical.
Don’t try to fix everything at once - that’s how frustration and injuries happen
Start by filming yourself running - from the side and from behind for 20–30 seconds
Watch without judgment - just notice posture, stride length, rhythm, and movement patterns
Compare yourself - to smooth, efficient runners rather than forcing imitation
Awareness comes first. If you can’t see what you’re doing, you can’t change it intelligently.
Here are The 3 Biggest Form Fixes That Help Most Runners
After years of watching runners move, three patterns show up again and again — and fixing these delivers the biggest return.
1. Relax the Toes
Many runners lift their toes while the foot is in the air
This wastes energy and overloads the lower leg
Practice lifting your foot while keeping the toes relaxed for a few minutes a day
Over time, this becomes automatic and carries over into running
2. Improve Cadence Slightly
Slower runners often overstride and land in front of their body
This creates braking forces with every step
Increasing cadence by just 10–20 steps per minute shortens the stride naturally
The result is smoother forward motion and often fewer lower-leg issues
3. Stabilise the Hips
Efficient runners keep stable, open hips
Excessive sway or collapse wastes energy
Film yourself from behind to spot hip drop
Strength work like split squats helps support better posture when running
These three fixes alone help more runners than almost anything else.
So, How can you Change your running Form Without Getting Injured?
This is where most runners get it wrong — they change everything overnight.
your body is currently adapted to how you run now
Sudden changes overload tissues that aren’t ready
Treat form changes like interval training
Introduce new mechanics in short blocks within easy runs
For example, add two short sections focusing on cadence or posture, then gradually extend them over weeks. Patience here prevents setbacks.