In my opinion, trading strategies are never just a single indicator or a single pattern, but a combination of multiple market advantage conditions.
Only when the market simultaneously meets conditions A, B, C, and D will I consider taking action; this is called trading by strategy, not making orders based on feelings.
So the question arises, how should a strategy be constructed?
The first step is not to rush into inventing your own, but to learn to 'follow the path'.
The fastest way to build a strategy is definitely not to reinvent the wheel behind closed doors, but to directly learn a complete trading system that has already been validated.
There are many channels to learn trading now, including books, courses, mentors, and communities, but there is one premise that must be clarified:
What you learn must be systematic, not scattered techniques.
I often use a metaphor—
A complete trading system is like a hamburger: bread, patty, bacon, eggs, each has its position, working together.
However, many people learn trading by studying one pattern today, copying an indicator tomorrow, and adding some emotional analysis the day after, ending up with just a pile of parts, with no assembly instructions.
What really makes a difference in the market is not 'how much you know,' but how deeply you understand a particular method.
The second step is to refine someone else's strategy into your own tool.
Having a trading strategy does not mean you can achieve stable profits.
This is the trap that many beginners easily fall into.
The same strategy, when in the hands of different people, yields completely different results.
The reason is simple: different experiences, different understandings, different execution abilities.
Your first impression of a strategy is almost certainly not its final profitable form.
There is only one truly effective process—repeated execution + detailed records + continuous correction.
Record every transaction: why you entered, why you exited, where you hesitated, where you acted emotionally.
Slowly, you will find that the problem often lies not in the strategy itself, but in your deviation in understanding the strategy.
To be honest, this process is very long.
Even for high-frequency day traders, running a complete strategy smoothly usually takes more than a year;
If it’s medium to long-term trading, the polishing cycle will only be longer due to fewer opportunities.
Finally, let me say one truth.
There are no shortcuts on the path of trading.
Methods can help you avoid detours, but 'jumping levels' basically does not exist in the market.
The only thing you can do is to choose the right direction and then proceed step by step.
Time is the final threshold that helps you filter out true stable profit-makers.$SOL #交易训练
