Step 1 – Coin Selection
Choose coins that fit your rules (not every coin will work for you)
Step 2 – Liquidity and Volatility
For scalping and day trading → you need volatility. For long-term trades → you need liquidity. Low volatility = suitable for long-term positions. Select trades at levels where the coin is less volatile.
Step 3 – Chart Selection
Short trading (scalping): Choose volatile coins with high liquidity.
Step 4 – Time Frames
Use 15‑min chart to identify support and resistance areas. If a trade is consolidating in one zone, shift to 5‑min candles for trade entry. For even closer precision, use the 3‑min chart. This is considered a high‑quality setup.
Step 5 – Time Difference Rule
Very important for entries. Example: If you’re analyzing the 1‑hour chart for day trading → use 15‑min (1/4 rule) for entry. If entry is unclear on 15‑min, drop to 5‑min chart. If support/resistance is broken on 5‑min → take entry. After that, track with 15‑min again. At 1:1 Risk:Reward, close 50% of your position.
Step 6 – Bias
You should have a slight bias towards your trade setup. It shouldn’t come from ego — be flexible and adapt.
Step 7 – Mindset
Mindset is key. Don’t overtrade. If you’ve booked 40–60% profit or had 3–4 profitable trades, step away from the screen for the rest of the day.
Step 8 – Always choose high‑quality setups
Your experience is your best teacher — over time, build your own strategy. Focus only on recent support and resistance zones.
Step 9 – Order Blocks
Order blocks are areas where aggressive moves begin. Example: If the market pumps strongly from a low → that’s a bullish order block. If it dumps heavily from a high → that’s a bearish order block. Always choose order blocks according to overall market sentiment.
Final Step – Execution (Most Important)
Execution matters the most. Try trading across different time lags for better confirmation.

