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The 5 Questions Pre-Click

Execution Precision

8 min read

Answer five critical questions before every trade to ensure alignment between setup, risk, and execution plan.

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Before every single entry, ask five questions. If you cannot answer all five clearly and immediately, you are not ready to trade -- you are ready to gamble.


Why Five Questions

The greenlight checklist tells you whether the environment and setup warrant a trade. These five questions go one step further. They force you to articulate the specific parameters of this trade, right now, before you commit capital.

Every unanswered question is an open variable. Open variables become improvised decisions under pressure, and improvised decisions under pressure are where execution breaks down. Five questions, answered before the click, close every variable that matters.


Question 1: Where Is My Edge

Before entering any trade, you must be able to state what gives this particular setup a positive expected value. Not "I think it's going up." Not "the chart looks bullish." A specific, identifiable market condition that your data shows produces a statistical edge.

Your edge might be a liquidity sweep at a daily level with order flow confirmation. It might be a delta divergence at a key support zone during a trending session. Whatever it is, you need to name it.

If you cannot name the edge, you are not trading a system. You are trading a feeling.

LONGExample Tradewin
Entry
$96,200
Stop Loss
$95,750
Take Profit
$97,550
R:R
3:1

Edge identified: price swept the $96,100 daily low and reclaimed it with aggressive buying on the tape. This liquidity sweep pattern has a 61% win rate in my journal across 83 instances with an average R of 0.47.

The edge was specific, historically validated, and articulated before entry. The trader knew exactly why this trade had positive expectancy.


Question 2: Where Is My Stop

Your stop-loss is not optional and it is not approximate. Before clicking the entry button, you must know the exact price at which this trade is invalidated.

The stop must be placed at a level that makes structural sense -- below a swing low for longs, above a swing high for shorts. It should represent the point where your trade thesis is objectively wrong, not an arbitrary dollar amount or percentage distance.

SHORTExample Tradeloss
Entry
$98,750
Stop Loss
$99,100
Take Profit
$97,700
R:R
3:1

Stop placed above the 4H supply zone at $99,100 -- the level where the bearish thesis would be structurally invalidated. Price ran the stop by 15 ticks before reversing. The stop was correct; the outcome was a normal cost of business.

A properly placed stop that gets hit is not a failure. A stop you moved, forgot to place, or set at an arbitrary level is a systemic problem.

No Mental Stops

A mental stop is not a stop. It is a suggestion you will negotiate with yourself when price reaches it. Place the order in the exchange before or immediately after entry. No exceptions.


Question 3: Where Is My Target

You need a defined exit target before entry. The target should be based on the next significant structural level, not a round number or a gut feeling about "how far it can go."

Without a target, you have no way to calculate risk-reward. Without risk-reward, you cannot determine if the trade meets your minimum threshold. And without a minimum threshold, you are accepting every trade regardless of its expected value.

LONGExample Tradewin
Entry
$96,200
Stop Loss
$95,750
Take Profit
$97,550
R:R
3:1

Target placed at $97,550 -- the underside of the prior 4H consolidation range where sell-side liquidity was likely stacked. This structural target gave a 3:1 R:R and represented a level where natural profit-taking would occur.

The target was derived from structure, not hope. Price reached the level and was met by selling. The exit was planned before the entry.

Partial Targets

If you use a scaling exit strategy, define each partial exit level in advance:

PortionExit LevelLogic
50%$97,000 (1.8R)Prior session high -- first resistance
30%$97,550 (3R)4H consolidation base -- primary target
20%Trail stopLet remainder run with breakeven stop

The specific percentages and levels are yours to define. The requirement is that they are defined before you enter.


Question 4: How Much Am I Risking

Position sizing is the mechanism that converts your stop distance into a dollar risk. Before entry, calculate the exact position size that limits your loss to your predefined per-trade risk.

Position Sizing Formula

Position Size = Account Risk / (Entry Price - Stop Price)

Example: Account: $50,000 Risk per trade: 1% = $500 Entry: $96,200 Stop: $95,750 Distance: $450

Position Size = $500 / $450 = 1.11 BTC

This is not negotiable. Do not round up because the setup "looks really good." Do not increase size because your last three trades won. The sizing formula exists to ensure that no single trade can materially damage your account, regardless of outcome.

Account for Fees and Slippage

On a BTC/USDT perpetual contract, taker fees on Binance are 0.04% per side. For a $96,200 entry on 1.11 BTC, round-trip fees are approximately $85. Add estimated slippage of $20-50. Your effective risk is closer to $600-635, not $500. Factor this into your sizing or accept the overshoot.


Question 5: What Invalidates This Trade

This question is different from "where is my stop." Your stop is a price level. Invalidation is a market condition. Sometimes a trade is invalidated before price reaches your stop.

Invalidation conditions include:

  • Context shift: The higher-timeframe structure you based your bias on breaks while you are in the trade.
  • Failed confirmation: You entered on a delta divergence at support, but the divergence was immediately negated by aggressive selling.
  • Time decay: Your scalp setup is designed to resolve within 15-30 minutes. Forty-five minutes have passed and price is flat. The thesis has expired.
  • Correlated move: You are long BTC, and ETH and SOL both break key support levels. The broader market context no longer supports your thesis.
LONGExample Tradebreakeven
Entry
$96,200
Stop Loss
$95,750
Take Profit
$97,550
R:R
3:1

Entered on support reclaim. Within 10 minutes, ETH broke below its daily support and BTC funding rate spiked sharply positive. Market context shifted. Exited at $96,220 for breakeven rather than waiting for either stop or target.

The stop at $95,750 was never hit. But the invalidation conditions were met: correlated weakness and a funding rate shift signaled a changed environment. Exiting early was the correct decision.

Define your invalidation conditions before entry, alongside your stop. They are your secondary defense -- a logical override that can get you out of a trade that is technically alive but practically dead.


The Pre-Click Protocol

Combine all five answers into a single pre-trade statement. This takes 15-30 seconds and should become automatic.

Pre-Click Statement Template

"My edge is [specific edge]. My stop is at [price] because [structural reason]. My target is [price] because [structural reason]. I am risking [amount] which is [X%] of my account. This trade is invalid if [specific conditions]."

Write it in your journal. Say it out loud. Put it in a text field on your trading screen. The format does not matter. What matters is that you answer all five questions explicitly, every single time, without exception.


When You Cannot Answer

If you sit down to answer these five questions and find yourself struggling with even one of them, that is the checklist working. It just saved you from a trade you were not prepared for.

The most common gaps:

  • Cannot name the edge: You are entering based on FOMO or pattern-matching without a validated setup.
  • Stop is vague: You are hoping you will "figure it out" once you are in the trade.
  • No target: You are planning to "see how it goes" -- which means you have no exit plan.
  • Size not calculated: You are guessing, which means you are either over-risking or under-utilizing capital.
  • No invalidation criteria: You will hold losing trades too long because you have no logical reason to exit early.

Each gap is a specific, fixable problem. Fix it before you trade, not during.


Key Takeaways

  • Five questions close every open variable before you commit capital. Unanswered questions become improvised decisions under pressure.
  • Where is my edge ensures you are trading a system, not a feeling.
  • Where is my stop defines your maximum loss and must be an actual order, not a mental note.
  • Where is my target enables risk-reward calculation and gives you a planned exit.
  • How much am I risking ensures no single trade can damage your account beyond your predefined limit.
  • What invalidates this trade provides a logical override beyond the mechanical stop, protecting you when conditions shift.