Most traders lose because they never review properly.
Spreadsheets don't give feedback. Other journals just show charts.
SureInsight is different — Enki AI analyses 14 signals from your trades, detects patterns you can't see, and builds a coaching plan from YOUR data.
Auto broker sync. Free core features.
https://t.co/o8OFMFi429
5 things we shipped at SureInsight this week:
— Shareable monthly calendar. One click, branded PNG, ready
for X / Reddit / Discord
��� Slide-out trade preview from the Trade View
— Sample data for new users (try it before signing up)
— Mobile account filter, finally
— Fixed: day-win % now calculates in your local timezone, notUTC
Free trial: https://t.co/o8OFMFi429
What should we build next?
Heading into the weekend — what's the one trading habit you're actually committing to next week?
🔘 Stick to my journal every day
🔘 Smaller position sizes
🔘 Backtest before any live entry
🔘 Take fewer setups
Reply with the one you struggle with most. Always curious what other traders are working on.
@LandenTrades "Journal everything" is the underrated one on this list. Most traders skip it because it feels tedious, but it's the only way to turn losses into lessons. Your plan means nothing if you can't review whether you actually followed it.
@emaxlord Respect for the honesty. Most traders hide the bad weeks. The fact you can break it down like this — missed entries, FOMO, overtrading — means you already know what to fix. Writing it out is half the battle. Next week's a clean slate.
This is so important and most beginners get it backwards. They chase a high win rate with tight targets and wide stops — which feels good emotionally but bleeds the account. A 40% win rate with 1:3 R:R is far more profitable than 70% wins at 1:0.5. The data always tells the truth.
@collinscallio25 It feels like that at first but stick with it. The trick is keeping it simple — just log the pair, direction, entry reason, and how you felt. Don't overthink it. After 2-3 weeks you'll start seeing patterns you never noticed live. That's when it pays off.
@stockmarketbiz The 15-minute pause is underrated. We've seen data from thousands of trades showing that entries made within 4 minutes of a loss average significantly worse P&L than those with a 15+ minute gap. Logging the emotion is the key — once you see the pattern in your data, it clicks.
This is exactly the kind of insight that separates improving traders from stagnant ones. Number 5 is brutal — 61% of second trades hitting SL is basically your journal telling you to stop at one. This is what we're building @trysureinsight to surface automatically with AI — patterns like these that you'd never spot manually.
Clean results. Love seeing traders actually track their performance like this — most people just guess how their quarter went. We're building an AI-powered journal at @trysureinsight that makes this kind of breakdown automatic. Would love your feedback if you ever want to try it out.
@juandotrades The hardest part is most overtraders don't even realize they're doing it until they look back at the week. When you actually log every trade and see 30 entries in 3 days you can't lie to yourself anymore. The data forces the discipline.
@Lucid_AMG This is the mindset shift most traders never make. A losing trade on plan is data you can learn from. A winning trade off plan is just gambling that happened to pay out. One builds consistency, the other builds overconfidence.
@TheH0n3stTrader The scariest part is he probably still thinks the strategy worked. One good month doesn't prove anything — it just hides the holes. You don't actually know if you have an edge until you've tracked enough trades to separate skill from luck. Most people never do that part.
@TheDisruptorX Exit criteria. Everyone obsesses over entries but the real edge is knowing exactly when you're getting out — both profit and loss — before you even place the trade. If you're deciding exits while the candle is moving, your emotions are making the call, not your plan.
@IManghaila Number 3 is the silent killer. Most traders know they've married a position but keep widening stops anyway. The ones who break the cycle are usually the ones who've logged it enough times to see the pattern in black and white.
@preshbae_forex The FOMO one is brutal because it feels completely logical in the moment. You don't realize you forced a trade until you're reviewing it later and can't explain why you actually took it.
@IManghaila Rule 11: Review everything. Most traders know these rules. The ones who actually follow them are the ones who've seen the exact moment they broke each one — in their own data.
@TraderDiegoX Spot on. The traders who beat revenge trading aren't the ones with more willpower — they're the ones who reframed what a loss actually means. Once you see a stop loss as the cost of doing business, the urge to "get it back" just fades.
@MarkDouglasBot This is why journaling changes everything. When you review your trades, you start to see that your biggest losses weren't bad setups — they were bad mental states. The data doesn't lie about who you were in that moment.