To start, learn vertical debit spreads. Its the backbone of almost any advanced spread such as butterflies, condors, and backratios. A good starting strategy that's directional is trading an at the money 2-5 point wide spread at around 30 days out. The key is to make sure your risk to reward is favorable. You want to make sure your risk is less than half the width of the spread.
For example, if your bullish on TSLA, you could place a 440/445 call spread at 1.70. Max risk is the debit you're paying for the spread, here it would be $170. The most you could lose is $170, and if your right and TSLA expires above 445, your max win will be $500. You want to make sure you're paying $250 or less, which is the max reward divided by 2. The thought process here is its a 50/50 chance TSLA goes up or down. So with that you want to make sure you're paying less than 50% of the reward if your right. If you place the trade 1000 times (and direction is actually a 50/50 chance), you have positive expectancy.

This sounds right on a superficial view but then again, it's the 440 strike that's at 50% probability. The 445% one likely is two standard deviations away, thus 2%. Integrating (averaging), the whole strategy probably has far less than the 34% probability you're paying for it.
But don't take my words for granted. In a couple of months I'll release on GitHub the "Linux" of options trading strategy building. The rationale behind that, after almost 15 years in the field and still failing to make money is like Edison said: "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." In the primitive days of computing everyone had to make their "Linux" (operating system) and in the process, re-invent / re-discover all those 10,000 ways and more. That was around 1950 btw. Today's finance is 1970's computing: lots and lots of very expensive and wildly different (as in what set of 100-to-1000 of those 10,000 bugs you want) commercial solutions.
I tried (and failed, count it as my #10,001's) to make money getting a job doing what I do best but still I'd like to make a bit more money on my thing than Linus did on his thing when I'm gonna release it. But at this point I really don't give a fuck even if I don't.
In short: look forward, as in 1 to 6 months, for the 100% free and open source formal and practical proof that your strategy is bullshit. Or not!![]()
I admire your persistence and perseverance. I would have given up a long time ago and find something else to make money.The rationale behind that, after almost 15 years in the field and still failing to make money is like Edison said: "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work."
Easier said than done.The key is to not suck at picking direction.
Easier said than done.
Good luck, I am looking forward to test your system.
I admire your persistence and perseverance. I would have given up a long time ago and find something else to make money.
