The trader you copy matters less than the strategy you stick with.
Most portfolios don't fail because of bad entries.
They fail because people switch plans every time the market gets noisy.
How long have you followed the same strategy without changing it?
Totally fair question it can be confusing at first.
CopiDay is basically a copy trading platform.
That means:
* You don’t trade manually
* You choose a trader
* Their trades get copied automatically in your account
So if they buy or sell, your account does the same.
The idea is to let beginners follow more experienced traders instead of figuring everything out alone.
But important part:
You’re still exposed to their losses too so choosing the right trader matters a lot more than the platform itself.
Take your time exploring before jumping in.
A good strategy isn’t always comfortable to follow.
There are periods where nothing works.
Moments where it feels wrong.
That’s usually where most decisions get made.
And where most mistakes happen.
@eddymania01 It’s pretty simple.
You pick a trader, connect your account, and their trades get copied automatically.
Just take your time choosing who to follow.
More trades don’t mean better results.
In most cases, it means more mistakes.
Constantly opening positions, chasing every move…
That’s not strategy. That’s noise.
The best traders don’t trade more. They trade better.
@bseoli304 I get the logic, but it doesn’t remove the risk.
Copy trading can help, but your results still depend on the trader’s strategy and how they handle drawdowns.
Copy trading doesn’t reward impatience.
It rewards staying through the parts
that feel uncertain.
That’s where consistency is built.
And where most people walk away.
At what point do you stop following a trader?
After a loss?
After a bad week?
Or only when the strategy breaks?
Most exits don’t happen because the strategy failed.
They happen because patience did.
Curious how you decide.