HI,
These are my tips for beginners:
*Dont risk any money until you have proven yourself on the demo
*Dont spend needless amounts of time playing around with entry systems, the money is in the exit. Provided your enty technique (i hate the word "system") provides more winners than losers thats a good start.
*Spend lots of time learning about money management. The best piece of advice i could give is never risk more than 1-2% of your capital on a trade. This remains constant whether you have a 10 pip stop loss or a 200 pip stoploss (adjust the size of your position to accomodate), your stops should be placed where it makes trading sense, not where you end up losing more than you want to.
* Be careful who you take advice from, there are plenty of bitter newbies out there that will tell you trading is impossible/ the markets are random- cant be predicted, indicators dont work/ its all run by corrupt traders with inside knowledge etc etc RUBBISH! Dont listen to them, they will make you question your trading, if markets were impossible to trade people wouldnt trade them, with good money management and pyschology it is not particularly hard
*Start by trading longer time frames, dont be drawn to the fantasy of short term buying and selling, if you are experienced fine but to a newbie chances are the market will chew you up and expose your flaws before you even know you have them.
*Dont become obsessed with technical indicators, they are only effective if you understand them inside out, i recommend specialising in learning how to use 1 or 2, having 15 indicators up doesnt make you a good trader.
*Never buy any systems! Like indicators they only work in the right hands understand every single element of it, you need to build your own approach
*The more simple the approach, usually the better it is. Trading isn't particularly hard, but people want to make it hard for some reason, i could show a child a price chart and they could tell me if its going up or down, dont start second guessing yourself.
*Respect support and resistance levels, out of every pattern/indicator/trading approach traders use, these levels usually will draw most pivotal trading decisions
*Money management is the most important factor in trading, the second most is psychology, greed and fear make people lose more than getting in at a bad price. My advice to combat this is decide on your stop loss and profit target before you get in, open your trade then walk away, have confidence in why you opened your trade, watching it move tick by tick will play tricks on your mind.
Hope these help, there is so much more to learn but unfortunately you can only learn the others from experience. I dont know how much you know about trading but i think these tips apply to everyone