Building a Trading Routine
Overview
A structured daily routine transforms trading from gambling into a professional practice. Whether you focus on day trading or swing trading, a consistent workflow provides the framework for disciplined execution and continuous improvement. The ideal routine includes pre-market analysis, intra-session plan execution, and post-market review — each phase serving a distinct purpose. Charting your key levels and setups in TradingView during pre-market prep ensures you enter the session with a clear plan rather than reacting to price. Logging every trade in your trading journal during the post-market review closes the feedback loop and accelerates your growth.
Key Takeaways
- Pre-market prep (30-60 min) includes reviewing key levels, news, and watchlist.
- During the session, follow your plan — the routine removes decision-making overhead.
- Post-market review (15-30 min) logs trades, screenshots charts, and notes lessons.
- Consistency in routine builds consistency in results over time.
Practical Tips
- Set a fixed alarm for pre-market prep — treat it as non-negotiable.
- Use a template for post-trade journal entries to reduce friction.
- Include a 5-minute mindfulness exercise before the session begins.
More Discipline Guides
The Power of a Trading Journal
A <a href="/tools/trading-journal">trading journal</a> is the single most powerful tool for improvement. It transforms subjective feelings into objective data, reveals hidden patterns in your behaviour, and dramatically accelerates the learning curve. By tracking every entry, exit, position size, and emotional state, you build a personalised dataset that exposes which setups actually produce your edge and which <a href="/strategies/behavioral-finance/confirmation-bias">cognitive biases</a> are silently eroding your performance. Pairing journal data with chart analysis from <a href="/tools/platforms/tradingview">TradingView</a> allows you to visually review every setup and refine your pattern recognition over time. After 100 or more logged trades, your journal becomes an invaluable resource for optimising <a href="/strategies/risk-management/risk-reward-ratios">risk-reward ratios</a> and eliminating your most costly mistakes.
Sticking to Your Trading Plan
Having a trading plan is easy — following it under pressure is the real challenge. Plan deviation, not plan quality, is the root cause of most trading failures, often driven by emotional triggers like <a href="/strategies/behavioral-finance/fomo-herding-behaviour">FOMO</a> and <a href="/strategies/behavioral-finance/revenge-trading">revenge trading</a> impulses. The brain naturally seeks novelty and excitement, which means following the same disciplined process day after day feels boring by design — yet this boredom is the hallmark of a professional trader. Building accountability structures and tracking your plan adherence rate as a key performance indicator in your <a href="/tools/trading-journal">trading journal</a> is essential for sustained discipline. Combining a written plan with robust <a href="/strategies/risk-management/risk-reward-ratios">risk-reward parameters</a> makes it easier to stay the course when emotions run high.