1 Thing Every Trader Must Understand To Find Success

In his book “Outliers,” Malcolm Gladwell claimed that for a person to become an expert on any given topic or activity it requires 10,000 hours (or approximately 10 years) of deliberate practice. Deliberate practice is a specifically defined term. It involves…

goal setting, quick feedback, and countless drills to improve skills with an eye on mastery.

I don’t think Gladwell was truly proposing that crossing the 10,000 mark would lead to some magical ascension to expert level. I think the point is, to become an expert, or simply proficient at something, requires a commitment to hard work over a long period of time.

I’ve been trading, mentoring, and writing newsletters for over 30 years. I feel like I know a lot, however, also recognize there is always more to learn.

The Options360 community will help to guide your journey and accelerate the path to mastery!

Of course, this ignores the nuances. Not only between the level of difficulty between endeavors, but the natural ability each individual brings to the task, as well.

For example, I could work diligently for 20,000 hours on my jump shot, and with a fair bit of certainty, never be good enough for the NBA. And no matter how hard or long I train, I’ll most likely never break a 4-minute mile. However, a large part of this equation is my level of commitment to these tasks.

But the point is; anyone who has undergone any endeavor to master some skill, even taken up a new hobby, understands there is a learning curve. Even the most simple tasks from gardening to undertaking some self-directed investing can have a long curve, which can lead many to quit at the first sign of rough waters. Quitting something, especially something that could have become your passion, is simply sad.

Any worthwhile endeavor requires an early, uncomfortable learning curve before you become proficient enough to where the activity becomes ‘fun’. The irony is when someone is having fun doing something, it looks easy. It wasn’t, it is the culmination countless hours of commitment, hard work, and frustration learning the craft.

This reminds me of when my 16-year old son, Ethan, visited last April. I got to see the difference in outcomes between being enthusiastic and embracing an activity compared to being fearful and shying away because he didn’t have immediate success. 

He likes sports, is a decent athlete, and has become pretty good at both soccer and basketball, to which he made varsity team as Freshman. Even though he’s never really had a chance to play much tennis, he was enthusiastic to smack some balls with his old man. 

He was terrible. He pouted, blamed his racquet and basically said…

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