Quote from Thunderdog:
Actually, if he was a decent, profitable trader, then his P&L would reflect that fact. Further, seeing a trader's P&L over time is not unlike seeing a market's price chart. Useful info. Why would any legitimate seminar promoter who actually trades deprive potential clients from assessing such useful information? Why would he not assist them in arriving at an informed decision?
I agree, but the P&L is only part of the decision making process.
When taking culinary courses, one particular chef hated fish but what he taught me gave me the skills to cook a killer sea bass or salmon.
When taking my IT courses, my logic professor never worked in a problem solving position but what he taught me gave me the skills to be one of the best problem solvers in my industry at the time.
If someone can teach an individual solid basic trading habits and skills then hopefully they can take that information to the next level. The problem then reverts back to what Brandon said earlier, most students can't take specific instruction. This is due to a lack of patience as much as anything.
Bad habits are the killer of most traders and if one can learn to avoid, if not eliminate most of those pitfalls; it will go a long way to at least allow them the potential to succeed. Bad trading habits are created from unstructured beginnings into trading and that is not addressed or adamantly stressed in most instructional books out there.
It just wouldn't be cool.
