Goal Setting
Goal setting for traders is the practice of defining controllable, process-based objectives, following your checklist, sizing correctly, completing your routine, rather than outcome targets like a fixed profit, because you control your behaviour but not the market's results.
Quick answer: Goal setting for traders is the practice of defining controllable, process-based objectives, following your checklist, sizing correctly, completing your routine, rather than outcome targets like a fixed profit, because you control your behaviour but not the market's results.
In simple words
Most traders set the wrong goals. They aim to make a certain amount of money, which they cannot directly control, and then break their rules trying to force it. Better goals target what you actually control: following your checklist on every trade, sizing correctly, doing your review, sticking to your risk limit. If you hit those process goals, good outcomes become more likely over time, but you are never pushed to trade badly to reach a number. Money is the by-product of a good process, not a target to chase.
Purpose
This page explains why profit targets can be counterproductive and how to set process goals that are controllable, specific and behaviour-focused, so goals improve execution instead of pressuring you into breaking your rules.
Visual explanation
Goal Setting
Goal hierarchy: controllable process goals drive daily behaviour, which over time influences uncontrollable outcome goals, with review adjusting the process goals.
Professional explanation
Outcome goals versus process goals
A profit target is an outcome goal: it specifies a result you do not control, because the market decides outcomes. Setting rupees per day or a monthly return as the objective creates a dangerous incentive, since the only way to chase it when the market does not cooperate is to break your process, oversize to catch up, force trades that are not there, or hold losers hoping to hit the number. A process goal instead specifies controllable behaviour: take only checklist setups, risk no more than 1 percent per trade, complete the daily review. Because you fully control these, they are always achievable regardless of market conditions, and hitting them is what makes good outcomes likelier over time.
Why profit targets backfire
Profit targets distort behaviour in both directions. When you are below target, they pressure overtrading and oversizing to catch up, exactly when discipline should hold. When you have hit a daily target, they encourage stopping even though valid setups remain, capping the winners that pay for losers. A fixed daily target also ignores that market opportunity is not uniform: some days offer little and forcing a number then is pure risk, while some days offer much and quitting early leaves edge on the table. By anchoring on a result the market controls, profit targets repeatedly push the trader to act against their own process at precisely the wrong moments.
SMART criteria applied to process goals
The SMART framework, specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound, sharpens process goals. Vague aims like trade better become specific and measurable: this month, at least 90 percent of my trades will follow every checklist step, and I will complete a daily review on every trading day. Achievable keeps goals within reach given your current level, relevant ties them to your actual weaknesses, and time-bound sets a review point. A well-formed process goal reads as a testable behavioural target you can score yes or no, which is what makes it trackable in the journal and reviewable at period end, unlike a vague resolution that cannot be measured and so cannot be improved.
Goals as implementation intentions
Process goals work best expressed as implementation intentions, the if-then plans shown to raise follow-through. Rather than a standalone aim to be more disciplined, a process goal becomes a set of situation-action rules: if a setup appears, then I run the full checklist; if I have lost twice today, then I stop; if the market is quiet, then I do not force a trade to hit a number. This links the goal to the concrete moments where behaviour is decided, converting an abstract objective into automatic action. Goals framed this way are far more likely to change behaviour than aspirational targets, because they pre-decide the response at the point of temptation.
Realistic goals and the survival horizon
Goal setting must respect the uncertainty and asymmetry of trading. Unrealistic outcome goals, doubling capital in a month, implicitly require reckless risk and set you up to break your process chasing them, while ignoring that a large drawdown is far harder to recover from than an equal gain. Sensible goals therefore emphasise capital preservation and survival alongside improvement: keep drawdown below a threshold, avoid rule violations, build the process that can compound over years rather than force returns in weeks. Goals should extend the survival horizon, keeping you in the game long enough for a genuine edge to matter, rather than compressing risk into a short window in pursuit of a headline number.
Reviewing and adjusting goals over time
Goals are not set once but revised through the review cycle, forming a ladder from daily to long-term. Daily goals are behavioural, follow the process today; weekly and monthly goals track adherence rates and specific improvements, such as raising checklist compliance from 75 to 90 percent; longer-term goals concern skill development and consistency rather than a profit figure. Each review scores progress on the current goals and sets the next, so goals evolve with your level and focus on your current weakness. This ties goal setting directly to continuous improvement: a goal is a hypothesis about what to work on next, and the review is the test that decides whether it worked and what to target after.
Practical example
Illustrative example (Indian market)
A trader on Rs 5,00,000 who set a goal of Rs 5,000 profit per day found themselves overtrading Nifty on slow days to hit the number and stopping early on strong days once they reached it, a pattern their journal exposed. They replace it with process goals for the month: at least 90 percent of trades follow the full checklist, no trade risks more than 1 percent, a daily review is completed every session, and no trading after two losses in a day. These are scored yes or no in the journal. At month end, checklist compliance is 88 percent and they never breached the risk rule; profit varied with the market, but the forced, rule-breaking trades disappeared and their worst days shrank.
An NSE options trader who targets a fixed weekly premium from selling Bank Nifty options is tempted to add risk near expiry when premiums thin, chasing the number into exactly the theta and gap risk that produces large losses. Reframing the goal as follow my defined risk-per-trade and setup rules every session removes the pressure to force size when the market is not offering the premium safely.
Advantages
- Targets controllable behaviour, so goals are always achievable regardless of the market
- Removes the pressure to break rules chasing an outcome the market controls
- Makes goals specific and measurable via SMART, so they are trackable and reviewable
- Expressed as if-then intentions, they change behaviour at the point of temptation
- Emphasises survival and skill over headline returns, extending the trading horizon
Limitations
- Process goals feel less motivating than exciting profit targets for some traders
- They require honest journal tracking to score, or they become aspirational only
- Hitting process goals does not guarantee profit, since outcomes remain uncertain
- Poorly chosen process goals can entrench a process that lacks an edge
- Goals must be revised as you improve, or they stop matching your real weakness
Why it matters in practice
- Process goals align daily behaviour with long-term skill-building instead of short-term outcome chasing
- They defuse the single most common goal-driven failure, breaking rules to hit a profit number
Common mistakes
- Setting profit targets you cannot control instead of process goals you can
- Overtrading or oversizing to catch up to a daily profit number
- Stopping early once a daily target is hit, capping winners that pay for losers
- Framing goals vaguely, like trade better, so they cannot be measured
- Setting unrealistic return goals that implicitly demand reckless risk
- Never revising goals, so they stop matching your current level and weakness
Professional usage
Professional performance environments set goals around process and risk, not around a required profit. Traders and desks target adherence, risk-limit compliance, execution quality and skill development, and treat returns as the by-product of a sound, repeated process rather than a quota to hit. Coaches use SMART, behaviour-focused goals scored against journal data and revised each review cycle, and explicitly reject fixed profit targets that pressure rule-breaking. The professional framing is that you manage the process and accept that outcomes are uncertain, so goals exist to improve controllable behaviour, never to promise a result.
Key takeaways
- Set process goals you control, not profit targets the market controls
- Profit targets backfire, pushing overtrading below them and early stops above them
- Use SMART criteria so goals are specific, measurable and reviewable
- Express goals as if-then intentions to change behaviour at the moment of choice
- Revise goals each review cycle so they track your current weakness
Frequently asked questions
What kind of goals should traders set?
Why are profit targets bad goals for traders?
What is a process goal in trading?
How do SMART goals apply to trading?
Should I set a daily profit target?
How do I set goals I can actually control?
Why do profit goals make me overtrade?
Can process goals guarantee profit?
How are goals linked to implementation intentions?
What is a realistic trading goal?
Should my goals change over time?
What is the difference between outcome and process goals?
How do I measure whether I hit a process goal?
Is it wrong to want to make money from trading?
How do goals relate to discipline?
What long-term goals should a trader have?
Can a goal be too ambitious?
How many goals should I focus on at once?
How does goal setting connect to my review process?
What is the first goal a new trader should set?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Goal Setting.
What goals should I set for trading?
Why is a daily profit target a bad idea?
What is a process goal?
Can process goals make me profitable?
How do I set a good trading goal?
Should my goals change over time?
Sources & references
- Zerodha Varsity — Trading psychology
- SEBI — Investor education and F&O studies
- Charles Duhigg — The Power of Habit
Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.