What are the people making money in the crypto world doing? The biggest difference isn't in prediction, but in execution.



Over the past few years, I've seen too many retail investors' accounts grow from a few thousand U to tens of thousands U and then fall back to a few thousand U, ultimately losing everything. They all die on the same problem: trading too fragmented, directions too chaotic, and positions too full.

What if we change our approach? Some have tripled their accounts in 30 days, and others have turned a 1500U small account into 5600U. What's the difference? It all comes down to doing four things right—

**Pace control**. Don't chase highs or sell lows; even during sideways markets, you can still make profits. The key is not to watch candlestick charts obsessively but to stay clear-headed.

**Position allocation**. Instead of going all-in at once, build positions gradually and exit in layers. Diversify risk, keep your mindset stable.

**Position adjustment**. Flexibly adjust your size based on market rhythm, rather than sticking to rigid fixed ratios.

**Exit plan**. Think through your exit strategy before entering—know when to take profits and when to cut losses.

Honestly, frequent trading, correctly predicting the direction but failing to hold onto positions, and poor stop-loss execution—these are the most common pitfalls for retail traders. Instead of stubbornly holding on, admit that the crypto market is a market, not a casino. Keep your rhythm steady, protect your accounts well, and in the long run, you'll outperform the market.
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MoonRocketmanvip
· 8h ago
Based on the overlay of multiple technical indicators, the core logic of this article is actually—calculate the launch window, control the fuel injection rhythm, and don't run around in the atmosphere. The real issue isn't predicting the direction, but the execution strength of orbital adjustments... Over the years, I've seen too many accounts drop straight down, all because RSI wasn't controlled properly, stop-loss levels were set absurdly high, and ultimately the entire upward trend collapsed. I agree with the idea of position allocation—like multi-stage rocket boosters—going all in at once either launches out of Earth's escape velocity or the gravity pull causes a complete collapse.
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TrustlessMaximalistvip
· 8h ago
Speaking of this theory, it sounds very clear, but 99% of people still get cut by their emotions when it comes to execution.
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ContractFreelancervip
· 8h ago
Honestly, frequent operations are really toxic. I've seen too many people around me get burned by this.
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GasFeeCriervip
· 8h ago
That's right, execution really determines everything. I used to be the kind of fool who watched the market every day, and the more I watched, the more itchy I got; the more I traded, the more I lost. Now I’ve actually put down my phone, and my account is actually increasing—what a irony.
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unrekt.ethvip
· 9h ago
That's a great point, the hardest part is execution.
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