Quote from k p:
Do you think that rules have to be this stringent? I know you followed geez quite closely, so do you think he was thinking through his trades in this much detail?
No, trading can be extremely simple. The original price action idea that led to my (now) very detailed trading plan was so simple I'd be able to teach an average 10-year-old the concept in about 5 minutes. Your double bottom idea is also very simple and powerful and I would imagine that if you implemented it with no filters at all and double reward to risk, you'd end up net profitable assuming you took every trade in your preferred time frame
To compare what I do to what Geez did: Geez had a regular IT job and traded from a laptop. Because he was an independent contractor his work hours were flexible enough for him to trade, but he was still frequently interrupted by calls he had to take or make, etc.
His day trading was part of a bet with his old boss who owed him money (as described in the intro to his journal), and the guy didn't believe such a large return (50%) was possible. (The final ROI by year end was over 100% as I recall and that included a $22K loss due to an accidentally uncancelled order that filled on an earnings call after hours - I remember that nasty surprise he got the next morning).
Since Geez had a job already and was only trading to prove a point and win a bet, he had nothing to lose and therefore didn't have to (and wouldn't have been able to) worry about a lot of detail. His point was that by buying strength and selling weakness you're on the same side as the big money that moves price, and by placing the R:R squarely in your favor, you more than cover the cost of slippage and commissions, leaving a solid profit behind.
I on the other hand am trading for a living. I have an average minimum daily profit goal to meet and as I spent more time studying and trading my simple core plan I discovered ways to improve my overall results. For nearly a year I spent at least 2 hours each day reviewing the days price action and keeping stats and notes on a spreadsheet.
My detailed plan evolved out of patterns I noticed during my years of screen time.
Quote from k p:
May I ask what your win rate is and what risk:reward ratio you use?
PS. On a side note... given so much info back and forth about Al Brooks, seeing as you started with his methodology from what I recall, how much of it do you use for your trading today? Are there things you would say about his methods that don't work?
My core trading plan is based on the price action concepts I learned from Brooks. The setup I trade off one of his core concepts doesn't have a huge win rate because it often results in break even exits, but it has a very low loss rate. My favorite setup (win rate of 80%+ with 1:1) came from a few "asides" in his book, not even something he describes as a setup.
Again, my advanced trading and trade management tactics came from countless hours of real time observation and detailed after-market analysis. The core ideas though are the stuff found in Brooks' and Volman's books.