1 The core idea
A playbook is a collection of "plays"
A playbook is exactly what it sounds like: a written collection of specific plays — individual setups you have studied, tested, and decided are worth your money. Each play is a single, repeatable situation described in enough detail that you'd recognize it instantly and trade it the same way every time.
The word comes from sports, and the analogy is exact: a team doesn't improvise every snap, it runs plays it has practiced until they're automatic. A trading playbook does the same job — it converts "I think I'm good at breakouts" into a precise, testable, repeatable procedure. The term was popularized in trading by Mike Bellafiore of SMB Capital, whose book The PlayBook argues that developing traders grow fastest by documenting and reviewing their best setups one at a time.
2 Three things people confuse
Play vs. strategy vs. indicator
- ·An indicator — like a moving average or VWAP — is raw material. On its own it tells you nothing about when to risk money.
- ·A strategy or style — like momentum or mean reversion — is a broad family. Useful for orientation, but far too vague to execute the same way twice.
- ✓A play is the unit that belongs in a playbook: one specific, fully-specified setup. The Opening-Range Breakout and the Volatility-Contraction Pattern are plays — each could be a single page in your book.
3 Why bother
What a playbook actually buys you
Writing it down feels like busywork until you see what it prevents and what it compounds:
- ✓It makes an edge measurable. You can't compute the expected value of "I trade breakouts." You can for a precisely defined play — which means you can prove it works, or prove it doesn't.
- ✓It removes in-the-moment improvisation. The decisions are made in advance, while calm. In the heat of the session you're matching the screen to a written play, not inventing a thesis under pressure.
- ✓It turns trading into deliberate practice. A defined play is something you can review, score, and improve rep by rep — the engine behind the daily report card.
- ✓It tells you when not to trade. If what's in front of you doesn't match a play in your book, you pass. Most of a trader's damage comes from trading situations they have no documented edge in.
4 Start small
One good play beats ten vague ones
A beginner's instinct is to fill a binder with twenty setups. Don't. A real playbook starts with one play you can describe precisely and have actually seen work — then a second, once the first is proven. Professionals often make most of their money from a small number of plays they know cold. Depth beats breadth: it's better to own one A+ play than to dabble in ten you can't size with conviction.
Your task
Name one setup you believe you have some edge in — the situation you'd most want to trade again. Don't define it yet; just name it. The next lesson gives you the exact components to turn that name into a real, testable play.