But during the learning process one major thing that you should know is to be careful comparing your trades, that is comparing your trades with someone who is already successful in trading or even comparing your trades amongst yourself. While it may sound like a good thing to do, the danger is that even if you are doing the work to learn, it can build up a lot of doubts about your strategy and your learning pattern, you may begin to think that because you are not seeing results currently, the strategy line that you're learning is not functional when in fact it is.
Without having to think at the same frequency that you would be seeing this, I would say, the idea of having to compare is drastically wrong. It might lead to some realization of what steps one might be taking that lead them to not have profitable trades to learning other strategies used by friends and colleagues to archive some good success rate in trading.
Comparing could create a tensed environment which could lead to competition and that could result in traders not having to do detail analysis before taking trades which and have failed results more often. Seeing it for a learning curve would be much better.