Welcome to NexusFi: the best trading community on the planet, with over 150,000 members Sign Up Now for Free
Genuine reviews from real traders, not fake reviews from stealth vendors
Quality education from leading professional traders
We are a friendly, helpful, and positive community
We do not tolerate rude behavior, trolling, or vendors advertising in posts
We are here to help, just let us know what you need
You'll need to register in order to view the content of the threads and start contributing to our community. It's free for basic access, or support us by becoming an Elite Member -- see if you qualify for a discount below.
-- Big Mike, Site Administrator
(If you already have an account, login at the top of the page)
I disagree with your analogy and your belief, but that is what makes us all great.
As a new parent, there is so much in which a child is 'impacted' by daily, but the thing I realize more than ever is how deeply good parenting can in fact affect the perception of that 'collision' and how they interpret and mold future response to these events.
Parents COULD BE MENTORS, but most choose to not apply themselves and to me, a parent's #1 roll is as MENTOR, ROLE MODEL, etc..
You can take any other profession and you see them have success:
Pizza Rest. = Pappa Johns, Domino's dude's
Oil = Lamar Hunt, J. Paul Getty
Dresses = Vera Wang
etc..
etc...
etc....
Trading is the only business I know that you never meet or see or rub elbows with guys that you actually KNOW made those results. I have met PRO NFL players, MLB, NBA, BJJ/MMA, etc..
Sooooo...... Having a mentor can be a great addition to someone who may doubt their own success or path. Modeling in my opinion is the quickest way to stand on the shoulders of giants and skip a lot of bullshit.
I am sure I most likely will get some 'bravado' back, "What, doubts.. I never had those, I am one badass dude, didn't I tell you that..."
I have been working on the problem of how I can get educated/trained as a trader and in the process of doing research for that, I have stumbled upon this great website. Much appreciation to Mike for a great undertaking.
Question: What is it that most successful sports figures and business people have had?
Answer: Some sort of formal, structured, intensive, long term education.
Question: What is the difference between a mentor and a coach?
Answer: I don't want to and won't get into a debate on the semantics of these two words. It should be sufficient to say that the words don't mean the same thing although there may be similarities. To make this easier I will not provide a definition for mentor. I will however provide a working definition for the concept of a coach. I use the term working definition because this is not an 'absolute' definition but simply this is what I mean.
The best way for me to convey the first part of this is to refer simply to what I think most people will understand when they think of a coach in the professional sports environment, whether that be for a team (e.g. football) or for an individual (e.g. golf). I have not (yet) found anyone in trading who would measure up to that. Just take a few minutes to think what such a coach does and has his students do.
The second part relates to a more formal environment like university. If you have read many books on trading you will have probably seen it said that you would never have surgery by or go on a plane piloted by someone that has read some books and had a mentor. Yet that is what most of us traders do.
So here's the challenge. How do I, how do we get ourselves trained/educated in a way similar to a professional sports person or business professional?
I am looking to find out if there are many people who see this the way I do. Who knows where it might go from there?
I agree that coaches and mentors are two different things, although, a coach
can be a mentor at the same time. Not all coaches are mentors, but the ones
that bring out talent that the individual might not have believed he had would
be considered mentors in my book.
To me, Mentor is someone who walks the walk and guides that person to creating those habits within themselves.
A coach is someone who rah rah rah, you are supposed to do this, you are supposed to do that, but do not do it themselves or would fail to achieve those results.
mentor = modelling via attached direction (replicating, copying, wanna be like Mike...)
coach = guidance through unattached direction (person who brings the best out, those who can't do, teach...)
What we find is 'coaches' pretending to be 'mentors'.
I think if you are a good trader, coaches are probably what you need for mental game.
If you are not yet successful, a mentor can be a great gap leap.
I think it is sufficient to agree that there is some fundamental difference between a coach and a mentor. After that we can argue definition until .....
The way I like to think of a coach is exactly the way we think of a coach in professional sports. Their job is to make you do what you have to do to perform. Can you imagine how a professional sports team would do with a mentor?
My point is this and I hope it is simple. If you can't do it yourself then you can try a mentor and if that doesn't work you probably need a coach - to tell you what to do, when to do it, how to do it, etc. Changing your behavior requires (seemingly) endless repetition of the basic activies/skills that eventually will make you a success - whether that is football, baseball, golf, playing piano, surgery or trading. Sure not everyone needs a coach but for those that do, I don't see any out there.
No a mentor (or a coach) is not necessary to be successful. The key word is necessary.
It should be rephrased as "A mentor is not necessary for everyone to be successful". However, since 95% of traders are not successful might that be a clue that something else is necessary?
I would think that is not necessary for everyone to have a mentor/coach/teacher etc. to be a successful surgeon but I should would hate to go under the knife with those 19 out of 20 who didn't go through the rigor of medical training. Every profession I can think of needs formal, long term training. Why is that traders think they don't?