Bet tracker vs spreadsheet
A spreadsheet can work for simple bet logs, but a structured bet tracker is easier when records need accounts, tags, CLV, reports, and bankroll review.
Insights
Articles, guides, and product notes for AI Coach, Smart Stake, bankroll discipline, and better betting records.
Showing 1-6 of 11 articles
A spreadsheet can work for simple bet logs, but a structured bet tracker is easier when records need accounts, tags, CLV, reports, and bankroll review.
A useful betting portfolio review checks bankroll movement, sportsbook balances, open risk, ROI, CLV, stake discipline, tags, and notes without chasing noise.
Multi-book bet tracking should connect bets, sportsbook balances, deposits, withdrawals, bonuses, open risk, ROI, CLV, and account-level review.
A sports betting portfolio tracker keeps bets, sportsbook balances, bankroll movement, ROI, CLV, open risk, and review habits in one record.
A sportsbook balance only shows money inside one account. A bankroll tracker should show deposits, withdrawals, bonuses, open risk, and total betting performance across books.
A betting bankroll tracker should separate betting performance from deposits, withdrawals, bonuses, book balances, and stake discipline.