Your next move is to observe the play at Full Tilt's cash tables. Observe how the game's played at your current level(bottom right?). Then figure out a way to win.
I'd say the best thing about Full Tilt is how easy it is to find the pros. I mean, you can just spot them in red and watch them play for hours. You watch them win, watch them lose, and figure out how they do either. I'm just saying, you can learn a whole lot just from watching.
Poker on TV is hyper-edited. You're not seeing whole games or tournaments, just highlights. It's not like watching basketball or baseball where you see the whole game plus slow motion replays with everything explained. You get to see some hands and if you're lucky the commentator's smart and you learn from him or her(usually him).
But all in all I'd say just observe. Observe for awhile before you dive in, then observe once you do. Play the table you're at(or find one that suits your style, but good luck). Since it's all pretty situational there's no silver-bullet to make you win. Of course you can change the dynamic at your table, but that's tricky and can bite you on the bottom.
But another possibility is that you're trying too hard to play by the books. I read an article from Phil Ivey that pretty much said you should read as many books as you can then forget them at the table. I believe he means you should learn as much as you can from books but be yourself when you play. It makes sense in my head. I just can't articulate it clearly.
BTW I'm not really sure what good a consistent strategy would do. If I play the same no matter what I lose big time. I only win when I play to suit the table I'm at. Not the same way the table plays, but to take advantage of the way the table plays. Even then, it can be tough to get a read and just one new player can shift things around in a negative way.