Alan Rich

spc

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Anyone Done The Alan Rich Course?? (nasdaq Level 2 Or The Beginners)
Any Good??

Any Other's???
 
spc said:
Anyone Done The Alan Rich Course?? (nasdaq Level 2 Or The Beginners)
Any Good??

Any Other's???

I spent a day with Alan last year and have benefited as a result..
 
boy said:
I spent a day with Alan last year and have benefited as a result..

did u go in as a beginner or u had some prior knowledge/experience?
did u do the beginner course or nasdaq level 2?
and what exactly did u benefit from him or what exactly did he coach u in?
and is one day enough??
tks
 
spc said:
did u go in as a beginner or u had some prior knowledge/experience?
did u do the beginner course or nasdaq level 2?
and what exactly did u benefit from him or what exactly did he coach u in?
and is one day enough??
tks

I had been trading for a couple of years beforehand and wanted to see some of Alan's Level2 .
The day was a mixture of L2 entry and exit and some chart patterns.
As I have said earlier, I benefited from spending the day with the guy, I have noticed that other folk have different views and you will have to make your own mind up , but for me, It was money well spent.
 
I enjoyed the day a lot. He covered aspects of level 2 and TA. He showed, live, how he traded. I've read shelves of books and learned from T2W and thought I needed to see someone actually trading. He showed how he did it though this was, understandably when you think about it, paper trading, not real money and, of course, he could only cover a limited number of topics,. I thought it was worth while. It is unrealistic to expect to learn everything, or even a lot, in one day. The best thing might be to contact him and let him know what experience you have and if there are specific aspects of trading that you would like him to cover.

RobQ
 
I went on a Clickevents evening course (It cost £15)

Alan Rich & Aboudy Nasser were the speakers, they were both excellent.
They gave some useful tips it was a good evening (well worth £15)

Back to Alan he seemed a really nice & genuine man who knew his subject very well. If I was a more serious trader of Nasdaq stocks I would not hesitate to contact Alan.
 
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I went to see Alan last year and was very impressed - the man knows his stuff. We focused on pre-market action set ups and using L2. Many people hold back for the first 30 mins of the US open, but using Alan's set ups and his teachings of how to read Level2, the first 30 mins is now where a lot of my money is made.
 
I agree with Bouds
I have just returned from a couple of days with Alan and he teaches great setups and then gets you to stick to a plan .
Well worth a trip to see him as in my humble opinion he is a great teacher .
 
I have just returned from a couple of days with Alan and he teaches great setups and then gets you to stick to a plan .

You either caught him on a good day or he has made a radical improvement. When I spent 2 days with him he was all over the place, and as a consequence so was I. I reckon he set me back a long long way.
 
Salty Gibbon said:
You either caught him on a good day or he has made a radical improvement. When I spent 2 days with him he was all over the place, and as a consequence so was I. I reckon he set me back a long long way.

Did you tell the man to his face that you felt the 2 day's were not worthwhile?
 
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I spent a day with Alan (there was something I was interested in)...Alan Rich can show you what to do to trade the Nasdaq ,but the most important part IMO is not on the screen (that's just the mechanics) ..just bear in mind you are not 'Alan Rich' and won't be for a long time , if ever , make sure you get that firmly lodged in your expectations so you remember afterwards...

Other than that I can only say Alan you are welcome to come on my course "The fine Art of Tea Making" foc ..... ;)
 
salty
I can only speak from my own experience and give an honest opinion.
I have been to a few trading classes and Alans course has been far better than anything else that I have been on.
My own trading has improved no end and found the 2 days totally worthwhile
 
"Other than that I can only say Alan you are welcome to come on my course "The fine Art of Tea Making" "
Nearly forgot about that. Never drank so much tea.
 
A problem that besets all tutors and mentors in this topic is that the aspirant mispercieves his own readiness to be entrusted with certain knowledge. The other counterparty has no way of knowing this. it is only after the event that the reality makes itself manifest. As the aspirant is still not ready, but firmly believes so, according to his own frame of reference, the entrustment does not appear to be worthwhile. This is a huge botheration.
 
I will expand on the above. The tutor cannot fathom out whether the knowledge attached to the information given has landed. The aspirant may confirm that it has. The tutor, who has his own enriched frame of reference accepts the affirmation, assuming that this is as meaningful to him as it is to the aspirant. This can never be the case for the reason given above. Any subtle misapplication of the concept is enough to warp it, and warped it remains, either permanently or until the aspirant finally achieves his own enriched frame of reference compatible with the original under which it was delivered. The onus is upon the aspirant and not the tutor.
 
The onus is upon the aspirant and not the tutor.

Socrates, you talk nonsense and wrap it up in gobbledegook to try and sound intelligent.

What you appear to be saying is that the tutor / mentor can never be wrong. In my opinion the onus is firmly on the tutor to deliver the goods or service that he has advertised and for which a fee has been paid. The onus is upon him to justify his fee by providing value to the aspirant.

In my case this was sadly not the case and before you say anything, yes I am totally realistic about the time and effort that needs to be invested to even have a chance of success at trading.

Thanks to my own efforts and devotion to the subject I am getting there.
 
I am very pleased to hear of someone making progress by applying effort and devotion to the subject.
Value in this case is an intangible abstract. It has different connotations for different idividuals. What I am saying is that the tutor cannot look inside your head, because he isn't you. Therefore his evaluation of what he delivers to you as an abstract concept may differ to the perception you, as an individual, put upon it.
And if, there is something you do not understand or need to know in addition, you should open your beak, and speak, as he cannot open your head to examine your thoughts. These are yours, not his. You cannot blame him for your thoughts as well as his.
This is an axiom, and an axiom, is a fundamental truth.
 
Ah, and Salty, by the way, and the absolute proof that these are your thoughts is because "you" are making the progress by applying effort and devotion to the subject, and not him doing it for you, which he can't.
 
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