P
PropTally
LEARN
Sign inGet started
Free PreviewRead the full lesson below — no signup required.
📋Building a Trading PlanintermediateLesson 1 of 6

Create a complete, personalized trading plan from scratch. Define your style, rules, and strategy — then learn to test, refine, and improve it.

Why You Need a Trading Plan

5 min read · Free preview of the Building a Trading Plan course

Why You Need a Trading Plan

The Difference Between Trading and Gambling

The line between trading and gambling is simple: a plan. A trader with a plan has defined rules for when to enter, when to exit, how much to risk, and what to do when things go wrong. A gambler makes these decisions on the fly based on feeling.

What a Trading Plan Does

Removes Real-Time Decision Making

In the heat of the moment, with money on the line and prices moving fast, your ability to think rationally is compromised. A plan makes the hard decisions in advance, when you're calm and objective.

Without a plan: "The market is falling... should I sell? Should I buy the dip? How much? Where's my stop?"

With a plan: "My plan says to go long at the 20 EMA bounce with a stop below the swing low and target at the previous high. The setup is here. I execute."

Creates Measurable Performance

You can't improve what you can't measure. A trading plan gives you specific criteria to evaluate: "Did I follow rule X?" is a yes/no question. Without defined rules, you can't assess whether you're improving.

Eliminates Inconsistency

The number one problem for struggling traders is inconsistency — different sizing, different entries, different stops, different rules every day. A plan ensures you trade the same way whether you're up $500 or down $500.

What Happens Without a Plan

  • Overtrading: No clear criteria means every price movement looks like an opportunity
  • Random sizing: Without position sizing rules, size varies with emotion
  • No accountability: When there are no rules, there are no violations — so there's no way to learn from mistakes
  • Emotional spiral: Without a framework, every loss triggers an emotional response that affects the next trade

The Components of a Trading Plan

A complete plan covers:

  1. Trading style and goals — What are you trying to achieve? What timeframes?
  2. Market and instruments — What do you trade and when?
  3. Entry rules — Specific conditions that must be met to enter a trade
  4. Exit rules — Stop loss, take profit, and time-based exits
  5. Position sizing — How you calculate lot size or number of contracts
  6. Risk management — Daily limits, drawdown rules, correlation rules
  7. Routine — Pre-market, during session, and post-market activities

Over the next five lessons, we'll build each component of your plan from scratch.

The "One-Page" Test

A good trading plan passes the one-page test: you should be able to summarize the essential rules on a single page that you can reference during trading. Complex, multi-page documents look impressive but don't get used. Simple plans that fit on one page get followed.

Your detailed plan can be longer — but create a one-page summary of the key rules that you print and keep visible at your trading desk.

Key takeaways

  • A trading plan removes emotion-based decisions by pre-committing to specific rules
  • Without a plan, you are gambling — a plan transforms trading into a structured business
  • Plans create accountability and make it possible to measure and improve your process
  • The best plan is simple enough to follow under pressure but detailed enough to cover key scenarios
100% Free

Continue to lesson 2

Sign up free to unlock the remaining 5 lessons, earn XP, track your progress, and earn a PropTally certificate.

Create free accountView full course →

What's in the full course

  1. 1Why You Need a Trading PlanReading
  2. 2Defining Your Trading Style🔒
  3. 3Entry and Exit Rules🔒
  4. 4Backtesting Your Strategy🔒
  5. 5Forward Testing (Paper Trading)🔒
  6. 6Reviewing and Improving Your Plan🔒
Keep exploring: More free previews · All courses · Trading stats · Compare prop firms · Trading glossary