Sharpe Ratio is a measure of risk adjusted return. It's based on annualized numbers, so if you are working with a daily returns, you need to annualize them,
Average Annual Return = Average Daily Return * 252 Days.
Average Annual Standard Deviation = Standard Deviation of Daily Returns * sqrt(252)
Sharpe Ratio = (Average Annual Return - Annualized Risk Free Rate) / Average Annual Standard Deviation.
Investors do look at Sharpe Ratio, because it's a way to normalize returns for easy comparison. One of the drawbacks of Sharpe ratio is that it penalizes you for large gains, since they will also show up in the denominator. A similar measure is the Sortino Ratio, which only looks at the negative deviations.
You can increase the Sharpe ratio by increasing the average return, or by decreasing the annualized standard deviation. Timothy Sykes has 2.08 times the risk as you, but more than 3.3 times the return, so he has a higher Sharpe ratio. Awesome Sharpe ratio by the way. Congrats! I hope you have size too...