Hypertrophy and strength aren't mutually exclusive. Heavy or light, taking all sets to near failure will get essentially equivalent hypertrophy outcomes but there are other considerations that come in to play. With volume and intensity you are going to have different strength outcomes, fatigue generation and ability to recover. Stopping a couple reps short of failure or near failure has a larger impact on hypertrophy than weight, rep, or exercise selection.
There is always a HUGE individual difference response to training stress so you need to monitor numbers and how you feel things are progressing. It's nothing that's going to be noticeable in a couple training sessions.
The purpose of this paper was to systematically review the current literature and elucidate the effects of total weekly resistance training (RT) volume on changes in measures of muscle mass via meta-regression. The final analysis comprised 34 treatment groups from 15 studies. Outcomes for weekly...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Generally when training for hypertrophy I use the same lifts, or variations of the lifts but use rep ranges that when weighted can be safely performed to failure 8-12 for compound lifts, 12-15 for things like arms, rows, calfs etc.. Trying to target specific muscles is silly and a waste of time unless you are a competitive bodybuilder and they use synthol for that anyway. At the end of the day your training needs to be individualized and if something is working, carry on until it doesn't...then. make small incremental changes so you can track what drives the response you are looking for and what doesn't.
My personal recovery from some serious injuries is what got me down this road. I was lucky enough to partner up with some trainers and a physician on a business in Texas that specialized in strength training and rehab for athletes. I also spent a lot of time at seminars, conferences, auditing classes when possible at local universities in areas I thought would interest me or give me some knowledge that I would find helpful. I'm currently in the process of opening a new facility in the Westlake-Calabasas area that will expand us into sport specific practice facilities. Many of our trainees came to Texas from California. Hopefully it results in a financial return doing something I enjoy or that is fulfilling.