For Traders Ready to Share
Publish Your Trading Strategy Online
Publish your trading strategy online to document your rules, track your strategy history, collect feedback from other traders, and build a public trader profile over time.
Turn ideas into structured strategy pages
StrategyArchive helps traders turn trading ideas into structured, reviewable strategy pages. Instead of keeping your rules scattered across notes, screenshots, spreadsheets, or memory, you can create a clear strategy with market conditions, entry rules, exit rules, risk management, trade review notes, and updates.
Publishing a strategy does not mean giving financial advice. It means documenting your own process in a way that can be reviewed, improved, and discussed.
This page is for educational purposes only. StrategyArchive does not provide financial advice, investment advice, or recommendations to buy or sell any financial instrument. Trading forex, crypto, stocks, futures, and other markets involves risk.
Why Publish Your Trading Strategy?
Writing your strategy down forces clarity. Publishing it adds another layer: accountability.
When a trading strategy is only in your head, it is easy to change the rules after every trade. You may enter early, move your stop loss, take profit too soon, or convince yourself that a weak setup still matches your plan.
When your strategy is published, your rules become easier to review.
Other traders can read your setup, ask questions, challenge unclear assumptions, and help you notice gaps in your logic. A public strategy also gives you a record of how your thinking develops over time.
Publishing your trading strategy can help you:
- Turn vague trading ideas into written rules
- Create a clear record of your strategy
- Improve accountability
- Collect feedback from other traders
- Connect your strategy to your trading journal
- Track how your rules change over time
- Build a public trader profile
- Review mistakes and improve your process
A published strategy is not about proving that you are right. It is about making your process clear enough to test, follow, review, and improve.
Document Your Trading Rules
A trading strategy lives in its rules.
Before publishing, describe the exact conditions that make the strategy valid. The more specific the rules are, the easier it becomes to follow the strategy and review it later.
Your strategy should explain:
- Market or asset traded
- Timeframe used
- Strategy type
- Market condition required
- Setup conditions
- Entry trigger
- Stop loss logic
- Take profit logic
- Risk management rules
- Trade management rules
- No-trade conditions
- Review process
For example, “I trade breakouts” is not enough.
A clearer version would explain what type of breakout, which market, which timeframe, what confirms the breakout, where the stop loss goes, how profit is taken, and when the setup should be avoided.
Specific trading rules reduce confusion. They also make it easier for other traders to understand your approach and give useful feedback.
Build Accountability
Publishing your trading strategy can create accountability.
When your rules are public, it becomes easier to see whether your trades match the plan you wrote. If your journal shows repeated trades outside the rules, the problem becomes visible.
Accountability does not mean every trade must win. A trade can lose and still be valid if it followed the strategy. A trade can win and still be a mistake if it ignored the rules.
A public strategy helps you ask better questions:
- Did I follow the plan?
- Did I enter too early?
- Did I change the rules after the trade opened?
- Did I take a setup that was not part of the strategy?
- Did I manage risk correctly?
- Did I journal the result honestly?
This kind of accountability is useful for forex traders, crypto traders, stock traders, futures traders, and anyone trying to build a more consistent process.
Track Your Strategy History
Trading strategies evolve.
A strategy may start simple and become more precise after backtesting, live trading, review, and feedback. You may change the entry confirmation, adjust the stop loss logic, add a news filter, remove weak setups, or define better no-trade rules.
StrategyArchive helps you keep your strategy history organized so you can understand what changed and why.
When updating a strategy, document:
- What rule changed
- Why the rule changed
- When the update happened
- Whether the change came from backtesting, journal review, or feedback
- What problem the change is trying to solve
Tracking history matters because strategy changes can affect your results. If you change five rules at once and performance changes, it becomes harder to understand what caused the difference.
A clear update history helps you improve your strategy more carefully.
Receive Feedback From Other Traders
Feedback can help you find blind spots.
Other traders may notice unclear rules, weak stop placement, unrealistic targets, missing no-trade conditions, or risk management issues you did not see.
Useful feedback may include questions like:
- What makes this setup valid?
- Why is the stop loss placed there?
- Is the take profit realistic based on the chart structure?
- What happens during high-impact news?
- Does this strategy work better in trends or ranges?
- How do you avoid false breakouts?
- What is the minimum risk-to-reward required?
- How do you review losing trades?
A second opinion does not mean you should change every rule. It gives you more information to review your strategy with a clearer mind.
The best feedback does not promise profits. It helps you improve the structure, logic, and review process of the strategy.
Build Your Public Trader Profile
Each strategy you publish adds to your trader profile.
Over time, your profile can show how you think about markets, risk, rules, and trade review. Instead of only showing random posts or screenshots, your profile becomes a structured record of your trading process.
A public trader profile can include:
- Published trading strategies
- Strategy descriptions
- Markets and timeframes you focus on
- Trading style
- Journal activity
- Strategy updates
- Community discussions
- Feedback received
- Lessons learned
This can be useful if you want to build credibility around your process, share educational ideas, or simply keep a public archive of your trading work.
Improve Your Strategy Over Time
Publishing is only the beginning.
A strategy becomes more useful when you compare the written rules with your trading journal. The combination of documented rules and journaled trades helps you understand whether the strategy is being followed properly.
When reviewing your strategy, ask:
- Are my rules clear enough?
- Which setups do I follow best?
- Which mistakes repeat most often?
- Do I enter too early?
- Do I move stops without a rule?
- Do I close trades emotionally?
- Are the targets realistic?
- Are my no-trade rules strong enough?
- What feedback should I test before changing the strategy?
Improvement should come from data, review, and repeated patterns — not from one emotional trade.
The goal is to build a strategy that becomes clearer and more disciplined over time.
What to Include Before Publishing
Before you publish a trading strategy online, make sure it includes the most important information.
Use this checklist:
- Strategy name
- Short strategy description
- Market or asset traded
- Timeframe used
- Trading session, if relevant
- Strategy type: breakout, pullback, trend, reversal, range, support and resistance, etc.
- Market conditions required
- Setup rules
- Entry trigger
- Stop loss logic
- Take profit logic
- Risk per trade
- Position sizing approach
- Trade management rules
- No-trade conditions
- Backtesting notes, if available
- Trading journal review questions
- Update history, if the strategy changes
You do not need to make the strategy complicated. You need to make it clear.
A simple strategy with specific rules is more useful than a complex strategy that nobody can understand or review.
Copyable Strategy Publishing Checklist
Use this checklist before publishing your strategy:
[ ] Strategy name is clear [ ] Short description explains the strategy idea [ ] Market or asset is defined [ ] Timeframe is defined [ ] Strategy type is explained [ ] Market conditions are described [ ] Setup rules are specific [ ] Entry trigger is clear [ ] Stop loss logic is written [ ] Take profit logic is written [ ] Risk per trade is defined [ ] Position sizing approach is explained [ ] No-trade conditions are included [ ] Trade management rules are written [ ] Backtesting notes are added if available [ ] Journal review questions are included [ ] Disclaimer is clear: this is not financial advice
How StrategyArchive Helps You Publish Trading Strategies
StrategyArchive is built for traders who want to document, share, review, and improve their strategies.
You can use StrategyArchive to:
- Publish your trading strategy online
- Organize your rules in one place
- Track strategy history
- Connect trades to your personal trading journal
- Build a public trader profile
- Receive comments and feedback
- Compare different strategies
- Review your process over time
Instead of only posting trade screenshots, StrategyArchive helps you show the logic behind the trade: the rules, the risk, the setup, the review, and the improvement process.
Publish your strategy on StrategyArchive
Create a strategy page with clear rules, then track every trade against it.
Useful templates and guides
Document rules, entries, exits and risk.
Pairs, sessions, timeframes and risk rules.
Setup, sizing and review for crypto markets.
Track each trade with strategy context.
Test strategy rules before going live.
A simple step-by-step approach.
A pre-trade quality check.
Educational strategy example.
Educational strategy example.