A journey of 1,000 miles begins with the first step. Your journey to becoming a successful trader begins with your next trade, asserts Dave Landry, founder and president of DaveLandry.com. More Trading Lessons every Friday on MoneyShow.com. Get our free newsletters here.

I challenge you to do the following 5 things on your next trade, and only your next trade. If you can’t do that for just once, then you might need to rethink your trading career. After all, it’s just one trade. However, if you can—and, seriously, we’re only talking one trade—then you have proven (in my best Bella voice) that “you can do it!”

Einstein once defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different outcome. I receive emails from people who repeatedly make the same mistakes and continue to do so for five and even 10 years or more. And, what’s worse is that they make these mistakes and they know they are making them.

The following assumes you have studied a methodology carefully and know the good, the bad, and most importantly, the ugly but are still struggling.

If you’re new to trading, no worries! It’s much easier to start with a blank canvas than with someone who should know better. Just take your time.

I’m also assuming that you are adequately capitalized and that you are not trading with the rent and grocery money. If you can’t afford to trade, then use what money you do have to get educated. Trust me, trying to trade while being undercapitalized is far more expensive than getting educated. Legally, I can’t guarantee much in this business, but I can all but guarantee that the cost to get educated will be far less than the money thrown at the markets. Bok said it the best, “If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.”

In keeping with the theme of my commentary Random Thoughts, I’ve been working my way through Tribe Of Mentors by Tim Ferriss for a while now. The reason it’s taking me so long is that I often stop to research (and often buy) books and products mentioned, take notes, and sometimes I just start writing.

In the book, he asked everyone about their favorite failure--something that may have seemed like a failure at the time, but ultimately, helped to make them successful and who they are. Last night, I began writing about my failures. After about three pages in, I started to get concerned, but I then realized that I needed those failures to grow. When I woke up this morning, I began thinking about even more failures. I had neglected to add in my trading failures--and there have been a lot!  

Yes, I have failed a lot in trading. As soon as I thought I had something, I’d go straight to the markets, get my butt handed to me, and then would quickly jump right back in with my next Holy Grail. Even worse was sometimes I’d hit it just right, finding something that printed money--until it didn’t.

True, eventually you have to have skin in the game, but you don’t have to put capital into harm’s way until you fully understand your system: the good, the bad, and most importantly, the ugly. I’ve seen things work for a long time and then fail miserably (e.g., wave/bar counting, naked option selling, pure reversion to the mean trading).

Anyway, the point is to get educated. Again, the money spent learning about the markets will be far less than paying the market’s tuition. I have purchased plenty over the years that turned out to be totally worthless. That’s okay, I’ve also found a lot of great things along the way too. Let’s get to those five things that you need to do.

On your next trade, and only that one trade, agree to do these 5 things:

1. I will pick the best and leave the rest.

Just for the next trade, and only that one trade, I will pick the best and leave the rest. For a trend resumption pattern (i.e. pullback), this means that the stock will be in an obvious trend.

I will only pick stocks that trade cleanly and do not look like an electrocardiogram. Ideally, it will be in a persistent and accelerating trend and will have trend qualifiers such as strong closes/gaps/laps/wide range bars in the direction of the trend. Regardless of how great the setup looks, I will not take the trade if there is overhead supply that could cap my gains.

The pullback will be significant enough to have knocked out some of the participants, allowing for a possible reversion to the mean move (i.e. a bounce) back in the intended direction. For emerging trend patterns, I will resist the urge to pick bottoms and only look to trade stocks that are obviously in developing trends--such as those with Landry Bowties. On a smaller scale, they will also have many of the above characteristics. 

2. I will plan my next trade.

Plan Your Trade

I know that as soon as the market opens, things will begin to change. Prices will move up, down, or maybe just sideways. I know that when information is uncertain or changing stress will rise (Montier).

I know that this stress of making decisions on the fly will cause me to make emotionally charged decisions. Therefore, on my next trade, and only that one next trade, I will plan while things are static. I know where I will get in, where I will place my protective stop, and where I will take partial profits. I know how I will trail my stop both before the initial profit goal is achieved and then afterwards. I will leave no guesswork.

The reason people don’t plan is that the moment that you put a plan in place is the same moment that you have to admit that you could be wrong. And, if you do turn out to be right, you also have to admit that you’re going to take partial profits which might limit your gains if you are right big. 

You must accept the fact that the future is uncertain and you must plan accordingly. Write that down. Your plan must have a stop in case you are dead wrong, an initial profit target just in case you are right but not right big and have a trailing stop just in case you just got aboard the mother-of-all trends.

Every day in my Core Trading Service I lay out the plan. True, occasionally a little discretion can and is used to make things work even better, but that’s mostly just a small tweak (and only for the more advanced who have proven that they can follow the plan to begin with).

Now, assuming that the trade triggers and subsequently turns into a stinker (i.e. hits the stop), there’s nothing to do but take your lumps and get out at a small loss. Again, follow the plan. It’s much easier to exit at a small loss now then to deal with both the monetary and psychological problems of a growing loss down the road. Write that down too. 

Hoping that a bad trade will come back is an innate flaw within us. We just have to deal with it. What about a good trade?  Well, quite often, the plan still isn’t followed.

3. I will not try to beat the system by getting in early.

Just for the next trade, and only the next trade, I will not try to outsmart the system by getting in early. I will wait for a trigger. This means that the stock has turned back into the intended direction. True, I will not be getting a bargain on price but this confirmation will help me to avoid a potential losing trade. I will let the market tell me what to do.

No trigger, no trade. Unless we are in the mother of all rip-roaring trends (and the last one was 1999 btw), I will not “front run” setups.

4. I will see the next position to its fruition.

Just for the next trade, and only the next trade, I will see the position to its fruition. I know that as soon as I enter a trade, things begin to change. The trade may go in my favor--or not.

I will not get out at the first signs of adversity because I know that the market might just be trying to shake me out. I know that if it is truly a reversal, my stop will take me out. I will not watch every tick and live and die by the ups and downs.

If the position goes flat, I will not see it as dead money. I will not micromanage and take myself out early. I know that maybe the stock is just resting, allowing players to position before it makes its next move. Rather than boring myself by watching the stock trade sideways, I will use my idle time to find the next potential big winner.

I will let the market make decisions for me. Stops will take me out of losers and keep me in my winners. Other than taking partial profits if blessed and trailing a stop higher, there really isn’t much to do once in a position other than letting it unfold. As I preach, trading, done properly, can be quite boring.

If I had a choice for a protégé, I’d choose someone who is patient over someone who is smart any day. The patient one waits for an opportunity. And, once the patient trader finds that opportunity, they let things unfold. The “smart trader” will try to force something to happen and will reason why a position should not be seen to its fruition.

5. I will do an honest post-mortem.

Just for the next trade, and only the next trade, I will do a post-mortem. I will go back to the original chart and honestly ask myself, if I saw this trade today, forgetting about the end result, would I take it again? This so-called deliberate practice will make you a much better trader. Every now and then I look back at a trade and think “what in the hell was I thinking?” The good news is that now happens less and less. And, I promise that if you are brutally honest, you’ll soon experience the same thing.
I will be process-oriented vs. end-result oriented. I will congratulate myself, regardless of the outcome, if and only if, I followed the process. I will recognize that if I did not follow a prudent process and was successful then I just got lucky. And, eventually, that bad behavior will catch up with me because the market can often be a bad teacher.

Note: As mentioned recently in my Now column, I have been reading Annie Duke’s Thinking In Bets. In it, she talks a lot about outcome biases. This dovetails in nicely with the work of Terrence Odean, mentioned in my Trading Full Circle. I think the secret to trading may be through careful post-mortems, figuring out the difference between good luck on bad decisions and bad luck on good decisions. It’s a lofty goal, but I think honest post-mortems will go a long way. 

So, you want to become a successful trader?

On the next trade, and just that one trade, do the five things listed above. Did you do it? If not, keep working at it until you do. Then, congratulations! You’ve proven that you’ve got what it takes. Now, rinse and repeat on your next 10,000 trades! 

May the trend be with you! 

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