Ben Stoeger and Joel Park have just put out another book called "Practical Shooting Training," and I've finished reading my copy so I figured I'd bring it up here.
The book contains some general concepts re: training that I think most people would benefit from, and then goes into detail on drills and par times for 4 different levels of shooters.
Level 1: Goal is to complete a club match without penalties
Level 2: Goal is to get to B class
Level 3: Goal is to get to Master/GM
Level 4: Goal is to achieve competitive excellence (i.e. win major matches like Area matches or Nationals)
In each level, there is a series of standard exercises with appropriate par times for various distances, and with varying par times for live and dry fire, as well as adjustments to make if you're shooting major power factor or a red dot gun. These standards are all shot on the same standard target array for consistent performance measurement. There are also specific drills that aren't shot on the standard setup, with detailed instructions on what to do, and what to look out for to improve. The instructions given and the focus of each drill varies from level to level. The descriptions for these drills are written for live-fire practice but it is easy to adapt them to dry fire where applicable. Most of these will be familiar to people who follow Ben's recent material on PSTG, with a few minor improvements (movement drills have been reorganized so that there aren't separate drills for position entries and for position exits, instead the distinction between drills is based on the amount of distance covered in the movement). Some of the stuff from previous books is not mentioned at all, like the idea of dryfiring draws, reloads, and transitions without pulling the trigger.
Some minor gripes: There are some typos and other mistakes in the text, and a few of the par times are kind of fucked up (i.e. breakdowns for drills not adding up to total par time, a couple of the par times for level 3 are actually harder than the ones for level 4, etc.), but you can generally figure out what Ben and Joel meant. One general criticism is that it is pretty hard to look at this book and concretely figure out a training plan if you do not already know how to train. The sample plans in Dryfire Reloaded had their limitations but I think some example plans would have been useful in this book.
Overall, highly recommended if you care about shooting a pistol and are willing to read a book. For better or for worse this is the only book of its kind, so you'd have to be stupid not to read this one. Furthermore, I have become a big believer in the efficacy of Stoeger's material. When I first read his books a few years ago I was not impressed, thinking that his way of describing everything sounded too simple to be true. However, over the course of a year, following his training methods has taken me from finishing around 70-80% at my club match to 98% at my most recent match, so I can't argue with results.