Strategy & Planning Training Plan Template – Positional Understanding
This template gives you a practical framework for training strategy and planning in chess:
learning how to improve your pieces, use pawn structures, and make strong long-term decisions.
Where tactics decide the game in one blow, strategy decides
which positions you reach in the first place.
Use this plan if you often feel:
Unsure where to play (king-side, queen-side, or centre)
Unclear on which pawn breaks to aim for
That you are “drifting” without a real plan
Outplayed slowly in quiet positions
🎯 Core Objectives of Strategy & Planning Training
Understand pawn structures and typical plans
Improve piece activity and coordination
Create and exploit weaknesses (squares, pawns, files)
Know when to exchange pieces and when to keep tension
Build realistic plans based on the needs of the position
đź§± Structure of the Strategy Training Plan
2–3 strategy sessions per week (20–45 minutes each)
Mix of:
Model game study
Pawn structure themes
“Guess-the-move” exercises
Strategic review of your own games
Strategy training is most effective when done calmly and thoughtfully.
You are training judgement, not speed.
📌 Key Strategic Themes to Study
1. Pawn Structure & Weaknesses
Weak pawns (isolated, doubled, backward)
Open files and half-open files
Outposts for knights and strong squares for pieces
Pawn majorities and minority attacks
2. Piece Activity & Coordination
Improving your worst-placed piece
Rooks on open files and 7th rank
Good vs bad bishops
Knights on outposts vs passive knights
3. Exchanges & Imbalances
When to trade pieces (relieving pressure vs simplifying to a good endgame)
Keeping tension vs clarifying the position
Exchanging strong pieces vs weak pieces
4. Typical Plans from Common Structures
IQP (isolated queen’s pawn) positions
Hedgehog formations
Caro–Kann / French pawn chains
c3–d4 centre structures (e.g. Colle / London-type)
📚 Model Game Study Routine
Model games are one of the best tools for learning strategy.
Use this simple routine:
Choose a game with clear strategic themes (Capablanca, Karpov, Petrosian, Carlsen are great sources).
Play through the opening quickly until both sides are developed.
From there, go move by move and:
Pause at each move and ask: “What is the idea?”
Try to guess the next move for the winning side.
Note down key plans and pawn breaks.
At the end, write 2–3 bullet points describing the game’s main strategic lessons.
đź“… Example Weekly Strategy Schedule
Day 1: 20–30 minutes model game study (guess-the-move)
Day 3: 20–30 minutes pawn structure theme (e.g. IQP) + 1 example game
Day 5: 20–30 minutes review of your own games focusing on strategy
You can add more days or extend sessions as your energy and schedule allow.
The key is regular exposure to good strategic play.
🔍 Strategic Review of Your Own Games
Pick one of your recent games and ask:
Where did the pawn structure change and why?
Did I improve my worst-placed piece regularly?
Were my exchanges helping my position or my opponent’s?
Did I aim at clear targets (weak pawns, squares, king) or play “aimless” moves?
Write down recurring issues such as:
playing without a plan, exchanging the wrong pieces, or creating your own weaknesses.
These become your personal strategy themes to work on.
Strong strategic understanding lets you guide the game into positions that suit you,
create long-term advantages, and convert them with confidence.
This plan gives you a clear path to building that understanding over time.