Entry and Execution
You are positioning as attention begins to form, participating briefly, and exiting without hesitation.
There is no room for uncertainty once a trade is taken.
What an entry looks like
Good entries usually happen when:
early attention begins to surface
volume enters quickly
price reacts immediately
participation accelerates fast
These entries often feel urgent.
Hesitation usually means missing the opportunity.

Timing matters more than precision
Trade entries are not about perfect levels.
They are about:
being early to attention
acting before momentum peaks
accepting imperfect fills
Waiting for confirmation often results in late entries.
Speed creates the edge.
Common entry triggers
Extraction traders often enter when:
a tweet or post begins gaining early traction
volume spikes aggressively
price breaks out with follow-through
multiple traders react at the same time
The window is short.
If the move is obvious, you are likely late.
Position sizing for extraction
Sizing must be smaller and tighter.
Good practice includes:
risking only a small portion per trade
assuming the trade can fail quickly
avoiding oversized positions
Large size increases hesitation.
Small size enables clean execution.
Execution discipline
Once you enter:
follow your plan
avoid second guessing
do not add impulsively
do not wait for validation
Short term trades are not debates.
They are decisions.
What to avoid
Common mistakes include:
chasing extended moves
entering without a clear exit plan
oversizing out of excitement
hesitating after committing
These mistakes turn your trades into gambling.
How execution fits the strategy
Execution defines success in short-term trading.
Good entries:
are early
are decisive
are sized correctly
If it feels stressful or chaotic, something is misaligned.

