Once you take the careful steps of learning your bag and how you're discs fly for you, you're ready to learn the next step to maximizing your skills:
Learning your game.
Because if you don't have a good understanding of what exactly you're good at, and what you're not so good at, how are you supposed to know what you need to work on the most?
And if you put in the work, how are you supposed to know if you've truly gotten better?
Generally speaking, there are 3 areas of the game that you should be concerned with when you being to evaluate your game and skillset.
Easily enough, these areas can be broken down by how you play nearly every hole:
Driving, Approach/Mid-Range, and Putting.
We're going to go out of order a little bit, but let's break these areas down even more and discuss how you can use this information to your knowledge and finish things up with what stats you should be tracking to help you study these different areas.
Putting
The first component of your game that will need assessed is your putting ability.
Despite being used last on each hole, your ability to putt, and your confidence in that ability sets up or should set up your entire strategy on how you play each hole.