Skip to main content

Follow your one-fix plan

Take the single highest-impact change SwingVantage found and turn it into a focused, doable plan.

  • Type: Walkthrough
  • Sport: All sports
  • Level: Intermediate
  • Area: Practice & Improve
  • Watch: 0:30
  • Read: 1 min
  • Updated: Jun 2026

What you'll learn

  • Why one fix at a time beats chasing everything
  • How your plan is built from your own diagnosis
  • What to do after you have worked the fix

Before you start

  • One clear priority to work on (run a swing analysis first if you have not).
  • A little space to move and, ideally, a way to film a rep.

Try it now

Put this into practice in SwingVantage — free to start, no account needed.

Try it now

Common mistakes

  • Trying to change everything at once.

    Follow the one-fix idea: work a single priority, then retest before moving on.

  • Skipping the retest, so you never confirm the change stuck.

    Re-record the same way after practicing and compare against where you started.

What happens next

Practice with drills

Work the fix with targeted drills built around what your swing actually needs.

The next lessons that build on this one.

Trust & accuracy

SwingVantage is honest about certainty: findings are labeled by how they were produced and how confident they are. Treat them as a strong starting point you confirm with your own retest, not a final verdict.

Frequently asked

What does the "Today’s Fix" video cover?

The one thing to work on today — a tiny, doable next step.

How do I get started?

The Fix Stack gives you one clear thing to work on right now — no overwhelm.

What's the key thing to remember?

Perfect for busy days or younger athletes who do best with a single focus.

Full transcript
  1. The Fix Stack gives you one clear thing to work on right now — no overwhelm.
  2. It’s drawn from your most recent analysis and stacked in priority order.
  3. Do the fix, mark it done, and the next one moves up. Small steps, stacked daily, add up fast.
  4. Perfect for busy days or younger athletes who do best with a single focus.
Was this helpful?