Investing

From Price Obsession to Dividend Discipline: A practical workflow to track dividends (not just prices)

Tired of refreshing stock prices? Learn a repeatable, privacy-first workflow to track dividend income, measure portfolio yield, and keep allocation in check — with step‑by‑step templates and how to do it in TrackIt Portfolio.

TrackIt Team 7 min read29.6.2026

Key takeaways

  • Did Anyone Else Become Addicted To Tracking Dividends More Than Stock Prices works best as a repeatable system, not a one-off habit.
  • The strongest content captures context, plan, risk, execution, outcome, and the lesson for next time.
  • Regular review matters because patterns only become visible across multiple data points.
  • This article also answers common questions such as If you're not buying MSFT/MSFU at these prices what are you even doing? and Why did GOOG stock fall so much?.

When you first open a brokerage app, the instinct is natural: watch prices move. But price movements are noise for long‑term objectives. Dividends are different — they’re scheduled cash returns, a measurable stream of income that ties directly to portfolio objectives like income, rebalancing, and compounding.

A Reddit thread recently summed it up: people who refreshed prices nonstop discovered a quieter habit — checking projected dividends and upcoming payouts instead. That shift is more than psychology; it’s a process change you can design and repeat.

This guide turns that moment of insight into a repeatable workflow: what to record, how often to review, what metrics matter, a template you can copy, and exactly how to implement each step in TrackIt Portfolio — a privacy‑first portfolio tracker that stores your data locally and supports dividends, buys/sells, and exports.

The practical why: three concrete benefits of dividend tracking

1. Predictable cash flow: Dividends give you scheduled cash events. That helps with short‑term needs and reinvestment planning.

2. Outcome‑oriented measurement: Instead of obsessing over intraday P&L, you can measure yield, dividend growth, and contribution to total return.

3. Better rebalancing signals: Comparing dividend income across buckets exposes overweight/underweight sectors and lets you rebalance by cash flow, not price panic.

The workflow: how to turn dividend tracking into a habit (weekly → monthly → quarterly)

Overview: define a cadence, record every dividend/payment event, compute the forward yield and rolling income, and use that to act (reinvest, rebalance, take cash).

1) Set a cadence

  • Daily: quick glance at upcoming ex‑dates or payouts only if you expect a specific event.
  • Weekly (recommended): update new dividend entries and review projected cash flow for the next 12 months.
  • Monthly: review yield, dividend growth vs prior months, and allocation drift.
  • Quarterly: deeper review — update goals, reallocate if income concentration is too high.
  • 2) Record every incoming and expected dividend

  • For each position, log the ex‑date, payment date, per‑share amount and number of shares held on the ex‑date.
  • Include bonus events like rights issues (bedelli/bedelsiz) and corporate actions that affect holdings.
  • 3) Compute these core metrics

  • Trailing 12‑month dividend income and forward 12‑month projected income.
  • Dividend yield (projected annual dividend / current portfolio value or per security yield).
  • Dividend contribution by asset class (BIST, US stocks/ETFs, crypto staking if applicable, funds).
  • 4) Decide rules for action

  • Reinvest small payouts into the same or a diversified ETF.
  • If a security contributes >X% of income, trim to Y% to lower concentration.
  • If your forward yield falls below target, prioritize high‑quality dividend growers rather than chasing yield traps.
  • 5) Record the decision and outcome

  • Log the trade (buy/sell) and the rationale. Track the result in the next monthly review.
  • A simple template you can copy

    Columns for a single spreadsheet or CSV export from your tracker:

  • Ticker / Asset name
  • Asset class (BIST, US stock, ETF, crypto, altın, döviz, TEFAS fonu)
  • Shares owned
  • Average cost
  • Latest closing price (kapanış fiyatı)
  • Per‑share dividend (next scheduled)
  • Ex‑date
  • Payment date
  • Expected payout (shares × per‑share dividend)
  • Trailing 12M dividends
  • Forward 12M projected dividends
  • Forward yield (Forward 12M / market value)
  • Allocation % of portfolio
  • Notes / action (reinvest / hold / trim)
  • Use this template to generate your weekly and monthly summaries.

    Example: 4‑step weekly routine (15–30 minutes)

    1) Add new dividend entries (5–10 min)

  • Enter each dividend you received or learned about. Record ex‑date and payment date.
  • 2) Update projected income (5 min)

  • Recalculate forward 12M dividend totals and forward yield.
  • 3) Check allocation drift by income (5–10 min)

  • Which assets are providing most income this month? Is income concentrated by issuer or sector?
  • 4) Log planned action (5 min)

  • Buy small reinvestments, or mark an asset to trim during the next rebalance.
  • Repeat every week; your monthly review becomes quick because the data is already organized.

    How to do this in TrackIt Portfolio (step‑by‑step)

    TrackIt Portfolio is designed for exactly this workflow: it supports dividend entries, corporate actions, and export, and it keeps your data private on your device.

    1) Record transactions and dividends

  • Use the "Portföy ve İşlemler" feature to add buys and sells and to log temettü (dividends). For bedelli, bedelsiz or hak kullanımı events, use the corresponding transaction types so your average cost and share counts stay accurate.
  • 2) See your performance at a glance

  • The "Performans özeti" shows average cost, getiri yüzdesi and total P&L — helpful to check whether dividend income is improving relative to cost.
  • 3) Group and monitor across asset types

  • TrackIt supports BIST, US stocks/ETFs, crypto, altın, döviz, and TEFAS funds. Use asset classification to view dividend contribution by class.
  • 4) Use favorites & fast search

  • Add dividend‑paying securities to "Favoriler" so you can update them quickly during your weekly routine.
  • 5) Back up and analyze further

  • Use "Dışa aktarma" (PDF/CSV) to pull your transaction history into a spreadsheet for the template above or to create custom charts.
  • 6) Privacy‑first

  • TrackIt stores data locally ("Hesap yok, üyelik yok"). Your portfolio and transaction details aren’t uploaded to developer servers — important if you prefer privacy while tracking sensitive financial information.
  • For more details and to try the app, visit TrackIt Portfolio.

    Common traps and how to avoid them

  • Obsessing over short‑term yield swings: focus on forward 12M and the trend, not day‑to‑day changes.
  • Chasing headline yields: very high yield often signals risk. Check dividend sustainability and payout ratios.
  • Forgetting corporate actions: bedelli/bedelsiz can change share counts and effective dividends — log these events carefully.
  • Not backing up: even with local storage, export your data periodically (TrackIt’s Dışa aktarma) so you have a backup.
  • Quick checklist: what to track each week/month

  • Weekly: new dividends, ex‑dates, expected payouts, and forward 12M total — update in TrackIt via temettü entries.
  • Monthly: forward and trailing yield, allocation by income, top 5 contributors, and any corporate actions.
  • Quarterly: policy decisions — target yield band, rebalancing rules, and tax considerations.
  • Example scenarios (how the workflow helps)

    Scenario A — You’re building an income portfolio:

  • Use the weekly routine to harvest dividends and automatically funnel small payouts into a diversified ETF. TrackIt lets you record each dividend and then log the reinvestment trade.
  • Scenario B — You want to reduce concentration:

  • Your monthly report shows one stock provides 40% of income. Create an action in TrackIt to trim at next rebalancing, and log the sell transaction when it happens.
  • Scenario C — You want privacy and simplicity:

  • TrackIt stores everything on your device without an account. Add dividend and corporate action entries and export CSVs for tax time.
  • Automation and tools (realistic expectations)

    You can streamline this routine but be realistic: TrackIt Portfolio provides fast data entry, favorites for quick access, and export for downstream analysis. If you use the app’s "Favoriler ve Hızlı Arama" to jump to your key dividend payers, weekly updates become very quick. Use CSV export to build custom spreadsheets or visualizations if you want deeper automation outside the app.

    Wrap up and next steps

    If price‑watching has been your default, try this: commit to the 4‑step weekly routine for one month. Track dividends, use the forward yield to guide allocation decisions, and let cash flow be the signal for action. You’ll likely find, as many others did, that your portfolio feels calmer and more purposeful.

    TrackIt Portfolio is a natural way to put this into practice: add transactions and temettü in "Portföy ve İşlemler", watch performance in "Performans özeti", mark favorite dividend payers with "Favoriler" and back up using "Dışa aktarma". The app’s no‑account, device‑first design keeps your data private while you build a sustainable dividend tracking habit. Learn more at TrackIt Portfolio.

    If you want to try the app, download it from the App Store or Google Play to test the free version and see how weekly dividend tracking fits your routine.

    Many users praise how the app brings multiple investment channels under one roof and the simple interface — which makes a weekly dividend habit easy to maintain. Use the template above and the TrackIt features to make dividend discipline your new default.

    If you’d like, I can convert the template into a CSV you can import or give you a printable checklist to keep on your desk.