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Other Added - How Would Great Poker Players Do as Traders?... Great!
A Million Dollar Business from Humble Beginnings - The Perfect Business Model how do we explain the same handful of players consistently ending
up on top. Emotions. Mainly fear and greed. The fear of being knocked out of the game drive them
to bad decisions. Later for all those who are still in the game, greed takes over and the thought of
winning a bunch of money causes bad decisions. Poker is a game based on mathematical odds of
the various hands dealt. Based on that the player with the best math skills would win, but that is
often not the case. I'm sure that all the top players are good at math, but there are probabMany people slaving away in a reasonably paid job realize that they could be doing far better for themselves and will at this moment be thinking of breaking free of the corporate shackles and discovering the freedom of having their own business.Looking back now, I can categorically state that I owe my directors a huge debt of gratitude because it was due to their lack of urgency Get a Life and Maximize Your Marketing Professional traders of stocks or commodities bear striking resemblances to poker players. Now I know that some of you are already getting angry with this comparison, but please hear me out. As many people today, I have recently found myself quite interested in the WPC (World Poker Championship). I hear people talking about it all the time it seems that we can't get enough of it. This interest caused me to do some reading on
poker strategies. I was struck by the similarities to the many books I have read about trading strategies. If you boil both games down to their essence, both rely on money management, and controlling emotion. After years of trading I can tell you that money management can be taught to anyone with simple mathematics. Controlling emotion on the other hand
cannot. In trading as well as poker a person can calculate the odds of the next move to decide whether it makes sense. This is exactly what good players and traders do. Then you have to be able to control your emotions to follow through with your play. Ahh... this is where the good and the great players and traders part company.As business owners or managers, it is easy to become very task-oriented. When we own the business and are in the growth years, it’s easy to fall into the trap of not allowing ourselves to “waste” precious time and energy on projects that don’t seem to have an immediate, direct bottom-line impact. After all, there are only so many hours in a day and one person can only do so much—righ In trading I hear the same excuse alot. If I had $100,000 account I would be able to trade better. Believe me, nothing could be further from the truth. The difficulty of controlling your emotions grows right along with the size of your account. When I was new to trading I thought this same way. I had to change this type of thinking myself to grow as a trader. I think that poker provides an excellent opportunity to explain why this logic is not correct. I made a list of the names of the 15 best players on the WPC tour. I watched the tour on T.V. for several weeks. I noticed that the same 15 people always seem to rotate at the final table of 8 players. Sure there would be the occasional lucky unknown player that would be there at the last table, but names from my list always popped up. In these tournaments you don't bring your own money, everyone just pays an entry fee. All of the players have an equal stake in the game. With the popularity of this game today many tournaments start out with several hundred if not thousands of players With all things being equal how do we explain the same handful of players consistently ending up on top. Emotions. Mainly fear and greed. The fear of being knocked out of the game drive them to bad decisions. Later for all those who are still in the game, greed takes over and the thought of winning a bunch of money causes bad decisions. Poker is a game based on mathematical odds of the various hands dealt. Based on that the player with the best math skills would win, but that is often not the case. I'm sure that all the top players are good at math, but there are probab Selling More With A Two-Step Approach mes down to their essence, both rely on money management, and controlling emotion. After years of trading I can tell you that money management can be taught to anyone with simple mathematics. Controlling emotion on the other hand
cannot. In trading as well as poker a person can calculate the odds of the next move to decide whether it makes sense. This is exactly what good players and traders do. Then you have to be able to control your emotions to follow through with your play. Ahh... this is where the good and the great players and traders part company.In today’s competitive business world where consumers are being hit with literally hundreds of sales messages every day the hit and run or one shot sales approach doesn’t work. Because of the Internet consumers have more choices than ever before. Consumers today want more information. They want to be educated about your product or service. They want to be consulted not sold. You have t In trading I hear the same excuse alot. If I had $100,000 account I would be able to trade better. Believe me, nothing could be further from the truth. The difficulty of controlling your emotions grows right along with the size of your account. When I was new to trading I thought this same way. I had to change this type of thinking myself to grow as a trader. I think that poker provides an excellent opportunity to explain why this logic is not correct. I made a list of the names of the 15 best players on the WPC tour. I watched the tour on T.V. for several weeks. I noticed that the same 15 people always seem to rotate at the final table of 8 players. Sure there would be the occasional lucky unknown player that would be there at the last table, but names from my list always popped up. In these tournaments you don't bring your own money, everyone just pays an entry fee. All of the players have an equal stake in the game. With the popularity of this game today many tournaments start out with several hundred if not thousands of players With all things being equal how do we explain the same handful of players consistently ending up on top. Emotions. Mainly fear and greed. The fear of being knocked out of the game drive them to bad decisions. Later for all those who are still in the game, greed takes over and the thought of winning a bunch of money causes bad decisions. Poker is a game based on mathematical odds of the various hands dealt. Based on that the player with the best math skills would win, but that is often not the case. I'm sure that all the top players are good at math, but there are probab An Honest Days Work ompany.‘An honest days work for an honest days pay’ a saying that no doubt we’ve all heard countless times before in one form or another, yet it seems to mean a lot less now than what it ever has in the past. With so many people striving to earn enough money to meet the ever increasing cost of living, it’s only natural that a majority of them turn to the internet for help.For some reas In trading I hear the same excuse alot. If I had $100,000 account I would be able to trade better. Believe me, nothing could be further from the truth. The difficulty of controlling your emotions grows right along with the size of your account. When I was new to trading I thought this same way. I had to change this type of thinking myself to grow as a trader. I think that poker provides an excellent opportunity to explain why this logic is not correct. I made a list of the names of the 15 best players on the WPC tour. I watched the tour on T.V. for several weeks. I noticed that the same 15 people always seem to rotate at the final table of 8 players. Sure there would be the occasional lucky unknown player that would be there at the last table, but names from my list always popped up. In these tournaments you don't bring your own money, everyone just pays an entry fee. All of the players have an equal stake in the game. With the popularity of this game today many tournaments start out with several hundred if not thousands of players With all things being equal how do we explain the same handful of players consistently ending up on top. Emotions. Mainly fear and greed. The fear of being knocked out of the game drive them to bad decisions. Later for all those who are still in the game, greed takes over and the thought of winning a bunch of money causes bad decisions. Poker is a game based on mathematical odds of the various hands dealt. Based on that the player with the best math skills would win, but that is often not the case. I'm sure that all the top players are good at math, but there are probab Affiliate Marketing Makes Money! ed the tour on T.V. for several weeks.
I noticed that the same 15 people always seem to rotate at the final table of 8 players. Sure there
would be the occasional lucky unknown player that would be there at the last table, but names
from my list always popped up. In these tournaments you don't bring your own money, everyone
just pays an entry fee. All of the players have an equal stake in the game.Ever since the Internet arrived, everything became so easy. It really accumulates your time and effort. With a couple of clicks from the Internet, you will gather information about anything, buy a product, and even make money. No need for office space and practically zero expenses. Don't be contented with the classic ways of making money. Why not make money online? Try joining an affil With the popularity of this game today many tournaments start out with several hundred if not thousands of players With all things being equal how do we explain the same handful of players consistently ending up on top. Emotions. Mainly fear and greed. The fear of being knocked out of the game drive them to bad decisions. Later for all those who are still in the game, greed takes over and the thought of winning a bunch of money causes bad decisions. Poker is a game based on mathematical odds of the various hands dealt. Based on that the player with the best math skills would win, but that is often not the case. I'm sure that all the top players are good at math, but there are probab Seven Secrets to Making a Killing on Ebay how do we explain the same handful of players consistently ending
up on top. Emotions. Mainly fear and greed. The fear of being knocked out of the game drive them
to bad decisions. Later for all those who are still in the game, greed takes over and the thought of
winning a bunch of money causes bad decisions. Poker is a game based on mathematical odds of
the various hands dealt. Based on that the player with the best math skills would win, but that is
often not the case. I'm sure that all the top players are good at math, but there are probably many
new players at every tournament that have better math skills. Especially now that poker is the new
hot thing to do for a living. No, you can plan things out with perfect math skills but without the
emotional control to follow through with your plan it will not succeed.The world's biggest marketplace is the Internet, and its biggest bargain and auction store is Ebay. Here, sellers put their items up for bid with a starting price of their choosing. Buyers bid for a limited amount of time, while sellers wait until their desired price appears before terminating the bidding. Buyer and seller then agree on how the product will be shipped and paid for. This is equally true in trading.
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