If doing full dead-hang pullups, or as a whole, the official Armstrong Pullup Program is too difficult for you, we recommend trying the following workout until your max set is 7-10 controlled, full dead-hang pullups. Best of luck!
When required, simply pick any bicep curl type exercises (barbell, dumbbell, alternating, , kettlebells) or row exercise (machine row, barbell row, single arm bicep curl, etc). Whichever exercise your ability and equipment availability allows will work, just stick with only one or two exercises per requirement and ensure you continually challenge yourself with the weights and repetitions.
This workout makes use of pullup substitutes. Based on your own ability and the availability of equipment, consider any (or a combination) of the following exercises:
Loop an over your , door, or tall piece of furniture. Kneel down or back up to increase resistance. Simulate the pullup movement as much as possible.
Most gyms will have some sort of pull-down machine. The closer the movement is to a pullup, the better.
Hop or step up to the top of the pullup position, and lower yourself to a hanging position as slowly as your strength will allow. This is the full downward “half” of the pullup.
Use a partner, a chair, an assisted pullup machine–it doesn’t matter. Taking off a little weight will often make the difference for beginners who struggle with full dead-hang pullups.
While not a complete pullup substitute, grip hangs are extremely useful and an important part of this workout. Simply hang from the bar with a nice tight grip for as long as possible. Building grip strength can be the difference between 18 pullups and the perfect score of 20 pullups.