Posts Tagged ‘dr doug’

Interview of a Trading Psychology Coach: Part 2

Friday, July 22nd, 2011

Question: Out of all the personality types that exist, do you think there is an ideal personality type for a trader?

Dr. Doug Hirschhorn: I do not believe the ideal personality type for a trader exists. I believe anyone can be successful in trading while the level of success, of course, will vary.

I think successful trading is about understanding your own personality and then developing a trading style or approach that matches your personality. For example, if you are an analytically minded person, then you should develop a longer-term, fundamental or technical approach. If you are an intuitive type person, then you will be successful with a shorter-term, price-action approach. Where I see traders get messed up is when they try to trade in a style that is in conflict with their personality or when the market is paying a specific style of trading and the trader loses patience and tries to change their natural trading approach.

Interview of a Trader Psychology Coach: From The Kirk Report (Part 1)

Friday, July 22nd, 2011

Question: Was there anyone who served as a helpful mentor to you?

Dr. Doug Hirschhorn:

Shane Murphy. He is among the most well-known sport psychologists in the country. When I was doing my masters degree, I met him and basically asked him if he ever needed an assistant to please keep me in mind. He called me up one day and asked me if I would teach his college level sport psychology class while he was traveling doing some consulting. For a split second, I thought to myself, “I am not qualified to do that” and then I thought, “Wait a second, if HE thinks I am, then why shouldn’t I think I am?” So I said, “Yes.” That was a HUGE turning point in my life and career.

Another key mentor to me is Robbie Vorhaus. He used to run his own major PR firm in New York  city and is now a top crises communications expert. I met him through a mutual friend because he liked trading and had read some of my articles from Trader Monthly Magazine. When I started to get calls to do media appearances, Robbie was there to coach me through the process. I consider him to be like my brother and, aside from my wife and family, I know he is one of the few people in this world who truly cares about what is best for me.

The Upside of Volatility

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Volatility does not just represent uncertainty, it creates opportunity for traders.

Getting comfortable with being uncomfortable (see Principle #7 in my book 8 Ways to Great) is what will enable you to filter through the noise so you can identify where the real opportunity exists.

As we are all waiting for the news catalysts to unfold in coming days, with next week’s Fed meeting and November’s mid-term elections, it is important to set up your game plans now while the bullets are not flying around. Be mentally prepared to want to second guess your game plans (because it will happen) - just remind yourself to stick with your plan because it was made when you had time to think through it.

It’s all about having a process and trusting it because winning and losing are not always defined by how much you made or lost because of the volatility.

Upcoming CNBC Spots

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Doug’s next CNBC video blog on Gender Equity and Wall Street will be coming out later this week. These are a couple of shots from yesterday’s shoot at CNBC.

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Doug Hirschhorn with CNBC's Tyler Mathisen

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Doug Hirschhorn taping this week's video blog at CNBC.

Trader Psychology Coaching and Money Goals

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Hi, I am Dr. Doug, CNBC’s trading psychology coach. As we all know, goal setting is an essential part of achieving greatness in any line of work. In chapter three of my new book 8 Ways to Great (Penguin/G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2010) I take the process of goal setting a step further by combining my PhD in Sport Psychology with my decade of applied work as a trading psychology coach to the elite.

We all grew up learning about S.M.A.R.T goals.

S stands for Specific.

M stands for Measurable.

A stands for Attainable.

R stands for Realistic/Relevant and

T stands for Timely.

In my work as a trading psychology coach, I learned that this model does not work for the financial industry. As a result, I created the C.H.A.M.P. Goal Setting process for my clients.

C stands for Controllable.

H stands for Hard.

A stands for Accountable.

M stands for Measurable and

P stands for Positive.

The single most important letter in C.H.A.M.P. that frequently gets over-looked is C (Controllable). This means that any goal you set must be entirely in YOUR control. Traders simply do not have control over how much they make. The market controls that. A trader’s job is to identify trades where they have edge and to execute those trades based on their game plan. My job as a trading psychology coach is to keep my clients accountable (that’s the A in C.H.A.M.P.) so they do this on a consistent basis.

By focusing on what they can control, it forces portfolio managers to focus on the process (meaning making high quality trades, doing the right research, sizing the positions properly, identifying risk levels) rather than worrying about the Outcome (how much they make on the trade).

In sports, as well as in trading, psychology is what separates the great from the elite.

Take your game to the next level by making sure all of your goals are entirely in your control so you can focus on the trade and not the money.

Trade well,

Dr. Doug