Research library
Private operating brief

Discipline is too vague to trade. Score the behavior or stop claiming it.

This scorecard turns discipline into visible categories so you know whether today's trading deserves to be repeated with more capital.

97%

day-trader loss-risk estimate

A cited day-trading study estimates most day traders are likely to lose money. That is the baseline this protocol is built against.

3x

low-end payout benchmark

Against low-end public prop-firm payout estimates, DTF's launch-to-date approved-or-better payout account rate is roughly three times higher.

1 reset

included with coached evals

The offer is not just another account. It gives traders one structured second attempt after the first evaluation exposes the leak.

The reframe

The account does not care whether you meant well. It records whether the behavior was repeatable.

The common mistake is treating the symptom as the problem. The DTR standard is to find the behavior, name the trigger, write the rule, and test it under live account pressure. Kahneman and Tversky showed that losses hit behavior harder than equivalent gains. Steenbarger and Tendler both point to the same practical truth: performance improves when behavior is observed, scored, and corrected. Jared Tendler's mental-game work points to the same standard: name the pattern before it hijacks the next decision.

Interactive assessment

Score Today's Discipline

Answer against your most recent account, not the ideal version of your trading. This only works if the evidence is honest.

90 seconds left
Quiz progress8%
Keyboard shortcuts: A/B/C/D, Enter, Backspace0/6 signals captured

Question 1

When does your discipline scorecard problem usually show up?

Pick the moment that most often changes your decision quality.

Why discipline needs a score

Discipline is too vague until it is measured. The scorecard turns it into five visible behaviors.

The goal is not perfection. The goal is to know whether today's behavior should be repeated.

Discipline becomes useful only when it becomes measurable.

The five categories

Setup: did you trade defined setups or feelings?

Risk: was risk defined before entry?

Stop: did the stop match invalidation?

Recovery: did first loss change behavior?

Review: did you review behavior and process?

Score interpretation

0-4 means process risk is high.

5-7 means one behavior is leaking.

8-10 means you are building evidence.

Worked example

A trader makes money but scores 5 because risk and recovery were weak.

The next session starts with smaller size and a written first-loss rule.

Operating note

A brief only matters if it changes the next decision under pressure.

Keep this document close enough to use before the trade, not after the damage is already visible in the account.

The standard is simple: fewer explanations, cleaner rules, and written evidence that your behavior is becoming more repeatable.

Apply this live

Choose the coached evaluation that matches your discipline.

Coached evals are for traders who want structure around the process. You get the evaluation account, live DTR access tied to the coached eval, and one free reset if the first attempt does not click.

COACHED4040% off coached evaluations is automatically applied at checkout.

FAQ

Is this a strategy?

No. It is an operating document for the behavior that decides whether a prop account survives.

Why does this matter for prop accounts?

Because the account usually fails when the trader changes size, timing, stop logic, or review behavior under pressure.

Should I buy another evaluation if I score poorly?

Only if the score produces a rule first. A new login does not fix the same reaction pattern.

Why DTF instead of a cheaper eval?

Because the coached path gives you an account plus a process environment: live trading, rules, review, and a reset structure.