One of the most important decisions a trader makes is when to commit capital. Acting too early turns preparation into speculation. Acting with confirmation turns analysis into execution.

Brian’s process is simple, repeatable, and disciplined: anticipate scenarios, wait for price confirmation, then manage risk.

Preparation comes before participation

Good trading begins long before money is on the line. Preparation means thinking through outcomes without emotional attachment.

• Identify multiple possible scenarios, not just the one you hope for
• Define what confirmation would actually look like
• Decide in advance how risk will be managed

This work removes urgency and replaces it with clarity.

Price confirmation is the trigger

Confirmation is what separates opinions from trades. Until price confirms, nothing is owed.

• Ideas are not trades until price agrees
• Confirmation reduces guesswork and emotion
• Waiting filters out low-quality setups

Patience is part of the strategy.

Important note

Committing capital before confirmation often forces traders to rationalize risk after the fact.

Risk should be planned before entry, not justified afterward.

Managing risk after entry

Once confirmation occurs and capital is committed, the job isn’t done. Risk management takes over.

• Define invalidation points clearly
• Size positions appropriately
• Stay objective as price evolves

Risk management protects capital so opportunities can be taken again.

Did you know?

Many traders focus heavily on entries but neglect preparation and confirmation. Over time, that imbalance leads to inconsistent results, even with good analysis.

The takeaway

• Anticipate multiple scenarios
• Wait for price confirmation
• Commit capital only after confirmation
• Manage risk without emotion

Preparation plus confirmation is when hard-earned money belongs in the market.