I’m going to be taking a new approach. Now that my book is actually written, and should soon be published as an ebook, I’ll be blogging more aggressively about Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War” and try to clear up a large number of misconceptions about what he wrote and what he did not. These misconceptions are very widespread, but writing about them will enable me to demonstrate just how much richness exists in his writings, as humbly reflected in my own.
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Hi,
You seem to be respectable, you as a strategist, why because, few the best stategist are those, who realize to invent new strategy.
Cramming books, and finding how things worked in past, may be basic steps, to understand the abstraction of the word strategy.
But I hope you may agree/disaggree, I dont care infact, that but I know, u know, that any new situation, or times and places, will need a new exclusive stratagey to solve it.
Best Regards
Adapting to the situation is the very essence of strategy.
It took me a while to be able to boil things down like that, but I’m getting better.
Hey,
Sorry, about few lines in the earlier comment, I did not read your post completely, also I recalled, Sun Tzu’s basic introdcution in a book, to win war is to win it without waging a war.
something similar to -
a strategic approach were the opponent is not left with no option but to speak the truth and sing the glory of the strategist, accept defeat.
It looks like you have a good site on Sun Tzu. I look forward to reading more and making comments on your articles. I, too, am strategist. I apply a lot of the Art of War strategies in my life. My favorite is feigning weakness and surrendering to a more superior colleague or foe; it takes the attention and envy away from you and focuses it on the other person, giving you more time to figure them out–their strengths and weaknesses.
It looks like you have a good site on Sun Tzu. I look forward to reading more and making comments on your articles. I, too, am strategist. I apply a lot of the Art of War strategies in my life. My favorite is feigning weakness and surrendering to a more superior colleague or foe; it takes the attention and envy away from you and focuses it on the other person, giving you more time to figure them out–their strengths and weaknesses.
(Sorry. The first two comments had my wrong website address. Kindly delete if you would)
It looks like you have a good site on Sun Tzu. I look forward to reading more and making comments on your articles. I, too, am a strategist. I apply a lot of the Art of War strategies in my life. My favorite is feigning weakness and surrendering to a more superior colleague or foe; it takes the attention and envy away from you and focuses it on the other person, giving you more time to figure them out–their strengths and weaknesses–and plan your strategies against them. Friends today could be enemies tomorrow, and vice versa.