Last 30 days: futures execution board
12 widgets · auto-refresh
size doubled after 2 losses · 2x
- NQ#1247
- ES#1244
- CL#1241
- +4
- breakout+$2,140
- pullback+$1,420
- failed-h&l−$370
- overnight+$940
- 14:21NQL+$320✓
- 11:08ESS−$140!
- 10:14NQL+$215✓
- 09:42CLL+$80·
A dashboard should not be a scoreboard you glance at after the damage is done. Tradeways dashboards bring trades, executions, fees, rules, journals, reviews, strategies, goals, and Score into one surface, so the next decision starts from evidence instead of memory.
Start with the record, then build the questions you actually review.
Last 30 days: futures execution board
12 widgets · auto-refresh
size doubled after 2 losses · 2x
The problem is rarely that the trader has no metrics. The problem is that P&L lives in one place, rules in another, journals somewhere else, screenshots in folders, and risk decisions in memory.
A scalping account, a swing portfolio, a funded challenge, and a mentor review do not need the same evidence. Tradeways lets each review job have its own room.
Daily review · this morning
apex · 50k · 06:42
"Plan was a single A+ continuation. Took the B-setup at 09:51 — fees only saved the day."
1 entry · 2 attachmentsPut the same checks in front of yourself every day: equity, open risk, reviewed trades, today's mistakes, active goals, journal entries, and the Score pillar that needs attention.
Good dashboards are not decorated reports. They are repeatable questions against the record, arranged so the answer can change what you do next.
Break performance down by strategy, symbol, direction, session, weekday, distribution, holding time, and recent trade sequence until the source is visible.
Put Tradeways Score beside risk sizing, drawdown, rule breaks, journal coverage, review completion, and execution charts to catch process drift before P&L is the only proof.
Use review queues, aging lists, recent trades, strategy compliance, goals, and journal widgets to keep the next correction on the same screen as the evidence.
The problem is rarely that the trader has no metrics. The problem is that P&L lives in one place, rules in another, journals somewhere else, screenshots in folders, and risk decisions in memory.
The dashboard becomes the repeatable review ritual: same questions, same record, same account context. You do not spend the first twenty minutes reconstructing what happened before you can start learning from it.
Winning and losing are only the outer layer. Place P&L next to rule breaks, review status, journal coverage, risk sizing, strategy compliance, and recent trades, and the result starts to explain itself.
A funded challenge, a personal account, a swing book, and a futures scalping account each deserve their own review view. Tradeways is designed for that instead of forcing every trader into one generic analytics page.
When a mentor or reviewer opens a shared dashboard, they do not need a tour through your whole workspace. The relevant account, widgets, filters, and review questions are already assembled.
The strongest dashboard is not the one with the most widgets. It is the one that makes a specific problem obvious enough to act on.
Put drawdown, daily P&L, risk sizing, losing streaks, Score, recent trades, and open goals together. The board is not asking whether you are talented. It is asking whether the account is still protected.
Prop risk · apex 50k
firm rules · auto-watch
Compare strategy compliance, rule impact, top broken rules, reviewed-vs-unreviewed performance, expectancy, and recent examples. If a setup is only profitable when you ignore execution quality, the board should make that uncomfortable.
Strategy audit · breakout vs pullback
90d · reviewed only
Share a selected account and the exact dashboard that matters: review queue, recent mistakes, journal notes, strategy rules, and Score movement. Feedback starts with the same evidence instead of another screen-share explanation.
Mentor review · shared board
view-only · scoped to apex
A dashboard is what it asks, not what it shows. The library spans every angle a trader reviews — performance, behaviour, risk, strategy, journal, accounts, mentor — and grows with your record. Here's a snapshot.
Import the trades, choose the questions, and build the surface that tells you where the next serious review should start.
Build the first dashboard from your live trading record.