The routines that make discipline automatic

Discipline is not willpower summoned in the moment; it is a set of routines that make the right actions the default. These pages give the concrete routines that structure a professional trading practice — a repeatable daily routine that separates preparation, execution and review; weekly and monthly reviews that turn data into lessons; disciplined trade preparation; dedicated performance, risk and journal reviews; habit tracking to make good behaviour stick; and a learning plan so improvement is deliberate. Together they build the scaffolding that keeps emotion and impulse from setting the day's agenda.

Trading Routines: Trading routines are the repeatable, scheduled practices that structure a trader's day, week and month so that disciplined behaviour happens by default rather than by effort. A daily routine separates preparation, execution and review; weekly and monthly reviews convert recorded data into specific lessons and adjustments; trade preparation, risk review and journal review each enforce a checkpoint; and habit tracking plus a learning plan make improvement deliberate and durable. Routines externalise discipline into a system, which is why they are more reliable than trying to summon self-control in the heat of a trade.

Daily Trading Routine

Routine

A daily trading routine is a fixed, repeatable sequence of pre-market preparation, in-session execution rules and post-market review that removes imp…

Weekly Review

Routine

A weekly review is a structured, recurring session, usually held after the Friday close or over the weekend, in which a trader examines the week's tr…

Monthly Review

Routine

A monthly review is a strategic, once-a-month session that evaluates a full month of trading at the level of distributions and strategies rather than…

Trade Preparation

Routine

Trade preparation is the deliberate work done before any position is entered, defining the exact setup, marking price levels, deciding the stop, sizi…

Performance Review

Routine

A performance review is the disciplined measurement of how you actually traded, using metrics such as expectancy, win rate, average win to loss and d…

Risk Review

Routine

A risk review is a regular, structured check that your position sizing, total exposure, correlation between positions and drawdown are all within pre…

Journal Review

Routine

A journal review is the regular practice of reading back through your trading journal, not just recording it, to identify recurring patterns in your …

Habit Tracking

Routine

Habit tracking is the practice of deliberately building and monitoring the specific behaviours that make up a disciplined trading process, using the …

Learning Plan

Routine

A learning plan is a structured, ongoing programme that applies deliberate practice to trading, isolating specific weaknesses, working on them with f…

Frequently asked questions

Why do traders need routines?
Because routines convert discipline from an act of willpower into a default behaviour. A fixed sequence — prepare, execute to plan, review — removes in-the-moment decisions where emotion does the most damage, ensures nothing important is skipped, and makes performance measurable and improvable. Professionals rely on routine precisely because self-control is unreliable under stress.
What should a daily trading routine include?
A pre-market phase (review the plan, mark levels, check risk limits and mindset), an execution phase (trade only pre-defined setups, follow the checklist, respect the daily loss limit), and a post-market phase (journal every trade with reasoning and emotion, note lessons). The point is a repeatable structure, adapted to your instruments and timeframe, not a specific rigid template.
How often should I review my trading?
Use nested cycles: journal every trade the same day, run a short weekly review to spot patterns and set one improvement focus, and a deeper monthly review of metrics, discipline and goals. Daily capture keeps the data honest; weekly and monthly reviews are where the actual learning and adjustment happen.
Educational content only — not investment advice. See our Risk Disclosure.