Most early losses don’t come from “bad charts”—they come from not understanding the rules, picking a poor-fit venue, and ignoring fees. Fix these three, and your learning curve becomes predictable.
Step 1: Turn “jargon” into plain English—learn before you act

Spend one focused hour skimming core concepts: Maker/Taker, leverage & funding, limit vs. market orders, slippage & depth, on-chain vs. off-chain, KYC/AML, and more.
Use this free A–Z glossary: Crypto 100 Terms Encyclopedia.
How to use it: create a mini checklist of terms you’re unsure about. Before placing any order, confirm you can explain each term in one sentence.
Step 2: Choose an exchange that matches your needs—not the crowd’s
Exchanges differ in fees, liquidity, listings, fiat on-ramps, and UX. Blind signups = tuition paid via slippage and friction.
Start with a guided Q&A to generate a short list tailored to your goals: Crypto Exchange Recommender Tool.
How to use it:
- Tick your must-haves (e.g., spot first, VND or your local fiat on-ramp, mobile app quality).
- Keep the top 2–3 candidates as your shortlist.
- Inspect order-book depth/spread and withdrawal networks before committing: one primary venue + one backup.
Step 3: Make the money math explicit—don’t let fees eat your edge
A “+10%” move can shrink to +4–6% after maker/taker, funding, and network fees.
Before any order, run a sample trade basket (e.g., buy $500 in stablecoins + a small overnight futures position + one withdrawal) with Crypto Trading Fee Calculator to see total cost.
How to use it:
- Predefine three targets (e.g., +12% / +24% / +40%) and a “sell-to-principal” action at Target 1.
- If Target 1 is shallow (+8–10%), either push it to +12–15% or switch to a deeper, lower-friction venue.
- Withdraw on cheaper networks, and test with a small transfer first—avoid moving size during congestion.
The 5-Minute “Order Card” (copy to notes)
- Objective: □ DCA □ Swing □ Event trade
- Key terms confirmed (from the glossary): KYC / leverage & funding / slippage & depth / limit vs. market
- Venue source: from the recommender shortlist (1 primary, 1 backup)
- Targets: +12 / +24 / +40 | Stop: structure break or −8%
- Sell-to-principal at T1 (quantity): ______
- Total cost estimate (from the fee calculator): ______%
- Withdrawal network + small test transfer: done □
Two real-world examples (steal this workflow)
Scenario A: Starting with $300
- Use the glossary to clarify limit/market order and slippage.
- Run the recommender to find an exchange with VND (or your fiat) on-ramp + strong spot liquidity.
- Use the fee calculator for “buy $300 → one withdrawal”; if total cost > 1.2%, try your backup venue.
- Set +12/+24/+40 targets; at T1, sell back principal and let the rest run.
Scenario B: Trading during an event week
- Review “funding rate,” “gap,” and “false breakout” in the glossary.
- Use the recommender to favor deeper books / tighter spreads for event weeks.
- Run the fee calculator for “half-size pre-event → post-event add,” ensuring funding doesn’t erase edge.
- Cut to ~50% position 48–72h before the event; add back only after structural confirmation.
A weekly rhythm you can maintain
- Monday (15 min): Learn 5–10 new terms; update your personal checklist.
- Tue/Thu (10 min each): Re-run the recommender for any venue changes (new fiat rails, fee promos).
- Before every order (5 min): Fee calculator on your sample basket; confirm targets and sell-to-principal.
- Weekend (15 min): Review one decision: “Would a different venue/Target 1 have improved results?”
Six common pitfalls (and quick fixes)
- Trading without understanding the terms → glossary first, then action.
- Comparing headline fees only → include spread, funding, and network fees: optimize total cost.
- Choosing by hype → use the recommender to match features to your needs.
- Not selling at target → precompute sell-to-principal and execute it mechanically at T1.
- Going max size in event weeks → halve exposure 48–72h pre-event; add back on confirmation.
- No review loop → every weekend, re-run the calculator for “what if” (different venue or Target 1).
Bottom line
Learning terms is how you read the rules. Choosing venues is how you reduce friction. Calculating costs is how you protect your edge.
Run the loop—Understand → Choose → Calculate—before every trade:
Start with Crypto 100 Terms Encyclopedia → shortlist via Crypto Exchange Recommender Tool → price it with Crypto Trading Fee Calculator.
When knowledge, venue, and math line up, you stop guessing—and start executing.


