Direct answer
A good prediction-market research workflow is Scanner → Market Detail → Watchlist or Alert → Daily Brief. The scanner ranks attention, the detail page explains structure and resolution rules, the alert keeps monitoring durable, and the brief summarizes what deserves verification each day.
The daily Orrery loop
The safest prediction-market workflow separates attention, evidence, source quality, and next action. A probability move can be important, but it is not useful until the market is liquid enough, the rule is clear enough, and the user knows what to verify next.
- Open the Scanner and filter to live, liquid markets.
- Inspect the top market's chart, liquidity, source status, and related markets.
- Add markets worth monitoring to a watchlist.
- Create alerts for price moves, expiry windows, or source-risk events.
- Use the Daily Brief to decide what to verify tomorrow morning.
What to verify before trusting the move
Good research tools keep the boring details visible. Expiry, resolution source, official status, spread, liquidity, and related markets often explain why a headline probability should be treated carefully.
- Whether a market is live research or resolution housekeeping.
- Whether movement is backed by volume and tight spread.
- Whether related markets agree with the move.
- Whether alerts are local-only or server-delivered.
How Orrery handles it
Orrery is organized around the same loop: Home Top Actions, Scanner, Market Detail, Watchlist, Alerts, and Daily Brief. The product pushes users toward durable monitoring rather than one-off chart watching.
Orrery is not a broker and does not provide trade recommendations. It ranks research work, explains market structure, and keeps resolution rules visible so humans and agents can make better verification decisions.
FAQ
What should I check first in a prediction market?
Check whether the market is live, liquid, and clearly resolved by the rule you think it uses.
When should I set an alert?
Set an alert when the market is important enough to monitor but not important enough to keep open all day.
What is the purpose of a Daily Brief?
A Daily Brief ranks what changed and what needs verification, so the user starts with a worklist instead of a wall of prices.