Forex Manual For Successful Trading – Just What You Need To Succeed In The Forex Business

There are entire library sections full of books that claim to offer a forex manual for successful trading. But truth be told, the only thing that’s really required is a little bit of first-hand exposure to the forex market. Of course, the books do help with clarifying basic concepts and giving new traders a sense of direction. So take a look at this basic information and guidelines.

Let’s start with the fact that the forex marketplace can’t be found located in the block around the corner, or around any corner. That’s because it is just a distributed global collection of large financial institutions who trade and set currency rates. Forex traders earn money by speculating on the relative values of specific currency pairs.

To be a forex trader, one has to open an account with a broker. This margin account usually needs a minimum opening deposit of $1000 or $2000. But unlike the stock market, forex traders have a massive leverage to play with. The amount available for trades on a new margin account with minimum deposit is usually one lot, which is $100,000.

These amounts may seem scary big for a new trader, but the risks are much lower than the stock market. Pick up any forex manual for successful trading, and it will say that all that’s required is to trade based on know-how and logic, instead of giving in to emotions. Even so, it’s better to keep the total amount of trades to less than 20% of the margin account. Individual trades should be no bigger than 5-10% of the account.

Even better to start off with a demo trading account and do paper trades instead of risking money for real. Choose a forex broker who offers a demo account. Use the account to clarify concepts like how to place a trade with the broker, how much of a spread the broker takes, and how many pips of gain that leaves for the trader.

This is also a good time to understand trading strategies, systems, signals and indicators, and forex derivatives and futures contracts. One very important thing which most forex training schools neglect is to teach traders to focus only on a few specific currency pairs. Good traders spend entire lifetimes tracking one or two currencies.

Given the complexities of currency variations and the large spreads charged by brokers for fringe currencies, it is better to focus on popular and stable pairs like USD/JPY, EUR/USD, USD/CHF and GBP/USD. This information can’t exactly be labeled as a full forex manual for successful trading. However, it is enough to get started in the right direction.

Mobile Oil Change Businesses Are Very Hard to Succeed In

There have been many people who have come and gone in the mobile oil change business. It always looks easy from the surface and is relatively inexpensive to start with minimum investment compared to most other businesses. But most mobile oil change operators rarely make it past the first year. In fact most do not make it past the first several months. One has to wonder why such a good idea ultimately ends in failure. Lets take a closer look.

First the profit generated from oil changes is not enough to sustain a healthy business. After you calculate the cost of goods from the total bill there is rarely is more than twenty five dollars net profit made from your typical oil change. And that figure does not include the gas used driving to the actual location. You have to be doing a lot of oil changes per day for you to make a decent profit to support your business and your personal expenses. Most quick lubes make even less due to their substantially higher overhead yet make up for it in large volume. Most successful fixed locations are doing 60 oil changes on a bad day. A mobile oil change company, with most of the time one or perhaps two people working it, does not have that luxury. The most your typical mobile oil change van can do is ten oil changes per day and after that the operator is exhausted. And even if a person could consistently do ten oil changes per day he still has to generate those oil changes from somewhere. They do not magically appear. Do you have a plan how to do that? Most start out thinking corporate campuses will provide tons of business especially if its marketed by the companies there. In reality that rarely works as advertised and you will be lucky if you get 10 customers in one year from a huge corporate campus. The end conclusion is that the net per oil change is just too low to make a viable business from it without a massive amount of volume.

Second, many mobile oil change operators are not very good salesmen. They are usually very honest people and ones who are very passionate about what they do and you gotta love that but I have found that most owners of mobile oil changes are terrible at the sales end. They are usually the type who try to charge way less than the going market rate and think they can tell a few people about their “awesome service” and wait by the phone. That never works. You have to go out and get them. You have to do a copious amount of cold calling. You have to talk to a lot of fleet managers and sale yourself first and then your service. Most in the mobile oil change business do not fully understand this or never really apply themselves to this side of business. Its probably the most important part not just in the mobile oil change business but any business for that matter. I will go out on a limb and say that if you are a great salesmen you will do well running a mobile oil change business or franchise. If you know about cars but not sales then I recommend working for a new or used car dealer for 2-3 months and get the experience. It will be tough and gruesome but that is the quickest way to get good a pure hard core sales without a lot of the “fluff.” Then open your mobile oil change company.

Third, the weather cannot be understated in limiting what mobile oil change operators can do. There are few states that have decent weather throughout the year. Half the states get really cold several months out of the years and the other half get really hot throughout 3/4 of the year. Both are equally discouraging. A fixed location can turn on the air or turn on the heat. Their operators work in a controlled environment. You do not have that luxury. You may have several fleets planned for one day and it can be pouring down rain that day. Have you thought about changing oil in 0 degrees. Your hands will not be able to grip that oil filter or wretch its as hard as a rock or you cannot feel them. Or changing hot 150 degree motor oil in 100 degree humid weather on a vehicle where it’s oil filter is in the middle of a hot engine manifold and you have to burn yourself to get to it? Do you clean it off and skip it or burn yourself to get to it? That will happen.

Having mentioned these three major hurdles, and there are more, I will say that it is not impossible. I have made a success of it. But I wish that someone would have been straightforward with me before me and my partner spent over $80,000 getting into the mobile oil change business. We were sold on a lot of unreal hopes and dreams from Jet Set Life Technologies about great wealth using a flawed model involving oil extreme. They set us up with a nice van and their product is good but their whole system is flawed from the bottom to the top. We found a way to make it work but sadly 90% of the mobile oil change business operators do not. The success rate is very small. Understand whats really involved and if you think you can grind it out and not make any money for 2-3 years, go for it.

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