Good luck in Vegas when you get to go, Patrick!
mal, if it decreases your cashouts that means your bankroll would be increasing, meaning you could move up in stakes sooner (assuming you felt your game was ready).
Now, what you could do is put a "ceiling" on your bankroll if you were going to stay at the same level for a while, or its the level you are going to grind long-term. In that case, you'd make the cashouts as normal. After that, if your bankroll is above your "ceiling" you'd also cashout anything over that number.
So, say we grind SNGs and decide that we need to maintain a $5000 bankroll for the level of games we are grinding. In our first cashout period we turn a nice $500 profit and say our cashout would have been $150. Since we out performed our cashout we could take out the entire $500 and start with our $5000 bankroll again.
Now, if we only made $100 profit, we'd still take the $150 cashout but our BR would be at $4950. We'd "owe" our BR $50 to get it back to our ceiling but we'd do that with profit... we would always pay ourselves for volume. So, if the next cashout period showed a $250 profit for the same $150 cashout, we'd have a BR increase for $100, bringing us back over the ceiling at $5050. Then we'd pay ourselves $200 (the $150, plus $50 for being over our ceiling).
Just another way of using the plan.
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