Cryptocurrency is a zero-sum game, and you really need to fight for every advantage.
Written by: Miles Deutscher
Translated by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
I have been navigating the cryptocurrency market for over 6 years. I’ve made millions, lost millions, founded crypto projects, and to be honest, I’ve experienced every imaginable emotional rollercoaster in this field.
The goal of this article is simple: to break down 12 hard-earned lessons that cost me millions of dollars to learn. By reading this article and applying these lessons to your own crypto journey, I hope you can become a better trader, avoid massive drawdowns, and increase your chances of changing your life through cryptocurrency.
Lesson One: The Power of Focusing on a Niche
There are many ways to make money in the cryptocurrency market; your task is to find the one that suits you best and become an expert in that niche.
In 2020 and 2021, I delved deeply into DeFi. I mined on multiple chains, explored various DeFi ecosystems, and ran loop/governance strategies.
This gave me a lot of insight into the field: from risk management and position sizing to game theory and flywheel effects.
If I had been simultaneously doing contract trading, on-chain sniping, airdrop farming, and so on, I doubt I could have accumulated the knowledge I have now.
In crypto, being an expert in one area is better than being a jack of all trades.
Lesson Two: Edge Is Everything
The best crypto traders I know have clearly defined their edge and focus 99% of their energy on extracting the best results from it.
Your edge could be speed, precision, patience, risk management, your network, or a combination of these, but you need a differentiating factor.
Your market edge largely depends on your personality, existing skill set, time in the field, and other variables.
Define your edge, master it, then execute.
Lesson Three: Only Participate in What You Understand
If you don’t understand something, don’t buy it until you do.
Many people buy tokens because of hype or FOMO, but don’t truly understand the project or its business model.
Never invest in something you don’t truly understand.
In the crypto market, if you haven’t built a solid logic or strong underlying conviction, you’ll have a hard time enduring its volatility.
Lesson Four: Narrative > Fundamentals
Capital flow determines everything.
Narrative always leads fundamentals.
You might research a project with the best team, the best business model, etc., but if there’s no community, no narrative, and no capital flowing into the sector, none of that matters.
Conversely, there are plenty of tokens and sectors with “poor” fundamentals that have skyrocketed in price simply because they attracted attention.
Study the hype, study the community, study the narrative—this is an attention economy.

Lesson Five: The Market Punishes Traders Without a Plan
Always trade with a plan; never enter blindly.
Define whether this is a long-term hold or a short-term trade.
Before entering a trade, define your take-profit zones and invalidation points (both technical and fundamental).
Trading without a plan is planning to get liquidated.
In crypto, managing drawdowns is the key to long-term survival.
Lesson Six: Position Sizing Control
This is probably the number one issue retail traders mess up.
You might pick the right coin at the right time, but if you don’t size your entry correctly, it’s meaningless.
Conversely, you might pick the wrong coin at the wrong time, and if you’re overexposed, it could devastate your entire portfolio.
Based on your risk tolerance and portfolio size, you should set the proportion of capital at risk for each trade (and this proportion should be determined by preset criteria: e.g., conviction level, market conditions, market cap, liquidity, etc.).
Lesson Seven: Let Winners Run, Cut Losers Quickly
I see this mistake all the time.
People sell strong coins and switch to less mature ones, trying to catch up on laggards.
You should let winners run as long as possible and cut losers as quickly as possible.
Crypo trading is all about momentum; ride the wave for as long as you can and avoid getting wiped out.

Lesson Eight: Tool Selection
Depending on what stage of your journey you’re in, you’ll use different tools to achieve your goals.
The tools I used to make my first $10,000 in crypto are completely different from those I use now to manage millions of dollars.
Smaller capital can actually be an advantage, as it allows you to trade low-liquidity tokens. There are so many mispricing opportunities to exploit. For big whales, playing these games isn’t worth it, but you can.
Some examples include: airdrop farming, arbitrage, low market cap on-chain tokens, etc.
Lesson Nine: Concentrate, Don’t Over-Diversify
Diversification makes sense for wealth preservation.
But for success, over-diversification may do more harm than good.
I strongly recommend that most people hold only 5-10 positions as their core portfolio.
This will ensure you have enough time to manage these positions, stay up to date with news, and make regular adjustments. A bloated portfolio slows your response time.
During market bubbles, you can go beyond this range to seize opportunities, but what you really need is a core portfolio of 5-10 high-conviction assets.
I broke this rule with my “degen” portfolio, but it only accounts for 10-20% of my total portfolio. If you want to cast a wide net and try your luck, do it in an isolated environment and concentrate most of your funds on high-conviction plays.
Lesson Ten: From Altcoins to Bitcoin
Remember: your goal is to accumulate bitcoin.
Use altcoins as a source of profit, then accumulate bitcoin.
Then you’ll start treating your trades differently (e.g., charting against bitcoin, analyzing risk factors relative to bitcoin, analyzing macro trends affecting bitcoin, which in turn affect altcoins).
This is a very powerful mindset, and it alone can significantly improve your risk management.
Lesson Eleven: Sell During Rallies, Then Lock in Profits
In the last cycle, I re-gambled a lot of profits simply because I had stablecoins sitting on exchanges, and I kept gambling with them.
My framework should have been:

Lesson Twelve: Let AI Do the Heavy Lifting
You should document your entire crypto journey to collect data about yourself and improve.
You can do this by posting on X, integrating MCP with Notion databases, using private Google Docs, or whatever works for you.
After recording and collecting data, share it with AI to help uncover blind spots in your edge.
Not using a documentation + AI system puts you at a huge disadvantage, and since crypto is a zero-sum game, you really need to fight for every inch of advantage.