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Sun THE

TZU’s ART
OF
WAR
Tr a nslation, Introduction, Explanations,
a n d Adaptations of Concepts
b y Gary Gagliardi

A G ift to You From


S c i ence of Strategy Institute
T h e world’s leading membership organiza-
t i o n for strategy.
w w w.ScienceOfStrategy.com
How This Book Can Save Your Life
I le a rn e d the tr u e p o we r of S u n Tzu ’s s ys te m afte r I w a s dia g n ose d with c a n ce r. A s
I we nt thro u g h tre a tm e nt, I s a w th a t m a n y of my fello w p a tie nts we re lite r all y d yin g
be ca u se the y h a d n’t be e n tr ain e d ho w to m a ke g o od s tr a te gic d e cisio n s. M os t sim pl y
s u rre n de re d their fa te to their d oc to rs. In ta kin g a b ack se a t in their o w n live s, the y
sim pl y r a n a w a y fro m the ch alle n g e . It w a s th a t e x p e rie n ce th a t le a d m e to s ta r t the
Scie n ce of Str a te g y In s titu te invitin g o u r m e mbe rs to wo rk to g ethe r to le a rn s tr a te g y.

Whe n yo u a re fo rce d to m a ke life’s to u g h d e cisio n s, yo u w a nt to thin k to yo u rself,


“I h a ve p re p a re d fo r this a n d I k n o w e xac tl y wh a t to d o.” In my o w n c a n ce r tre a tm e nt,
I fo u n d myself u sin g the s a m e d e cisio n - m a kin g to ols th a t we e n co u r a g e o u r m e mbe rs
to le a rn a n d discu s s in their loc al ch a pte rs. T ho u g h c a n ce r, like life, is n ot so m ethin g
th a t we ca n control, by m a kin g the rig ht d e cisio n s q u ickl y we c a n im p rove o u r odd s, ta ke
ch a r g e of o u r fa te, a n d, p e rh a ps ju s t a s im p o r ta nt to o u r s u r vival, m aintain o u r se n se of
dire ction a n d p u rp ose r a the r th a n s u rre n d e rin g it.

D u rin g my re cove r y, I re solve d to cre a te a n o r g a n iza tio n th a t co u ld b rin g to g ethe r


p e ople who w a nt to s tu d y s tr a te g y. Sin ce my o w n jo u rn e y s ta r te d with re a din g S u n Tzu,
I hop e th a t by m a kin g it a vail a ble, I will e n co u r a g e yo u a s well to w a nt to le a rn m o re . I
hop e th a t it will in s pire yo u to join with othe rs in le a rn in g m o re of its se crets, id e all y a s
a m e mbe r a n d contrib u to r to o u r co m m u n it y.

We a re all p u t on this wo rld fo r a p u rp ose . T he mis sio n of the Scie n ce of Str a te g y


In situ te is in helpin g o u r m e mbe rs le a rn ho w the y c a n win a n d re d u ce the co nflic t in
their live s.

Sin ce rel y,
Award Recognition for Strategy Books by Gary Gagliardi
(Click on the book title to read more about it on the web.)
The Art of War Plus Making Money by Speaking: The Ancient Bing-fa:
The Golden Key to Strategy The Ancient Chinese Revealed The Spokesperson Strategy Warrior Marketing Martial Arts Strategy

Psychology/Self-Help Multicultural Nonfiction Career Business Sports


Ben Franklin Independent Publishers Foreword Magazine Ben Franklin Foreword Magazine
Book Award Book Award Book of the Year Book Award Book of the Year
2006 - Winner 2003 - Winner 2007 - Finalist 2004 - Finalist 2007 - Finalist

The Warrior Class: The Art of War


Strategy for Sales Managers 306 Lessons in Strategy Strategy Against Terror The Warrior’s Apprentice Plus Its Amazing Secrets

Business Self-Help Philosophy Youth Nonfiction Multicultural Nonfiction


Independent Publishers Foreword Magazine Foreword Magazine Independent Publishers Independent Publishers
Book Award Book of the Year Book of the Year Book Award Book Award
2006 - Semifinalist 2005 - Finalist 2005 - Finalist 2006 - Semifinalist 2005 - Finalist
The Science of Strategy Institute
Clearbridge Publishing
Seattle, WA, USA

ScienceOfStrategy.com
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Dedicated to my wife, Rebecca,


who makes it all wonderful!

Published by Clearbridge Publishing, a division of the Science of Strategy Institute.


All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any part or by any means, electronic or mechani-
cal, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the
Publisher, except where permitted by law.
Contents
What Mastering The Art of War’s Secrets Will Do For You....... 6
Introduction: How to Understand Sun Tzu More Easily......... 9
Sun Tzu’s The Art of War
1 Analysis . ............................................................................12
2 Going to War.......................................................................20
3 Planning an Attack...............................................................27
4 Positioning...........................................................................35
5 Momentum ........................................................................ 42
6 Weakness and Strength....................................................... 51
7 Armed Conflict.....................................................................61
8 Adaptability . ...................................................................... 70
9 Armed March...................................................................... 76
10 Field Position...................................................................... 89
11 Types of Terrain................................................................. 100
12 Attacking With Fire............................................................ 118
13 Using Spies.....................................................................................125

What Mastering The Art of War’s Secrets Will Do For You
by Gary Gagliard i
Our world is getting more challenging, but it is also bursting with new opportunities. One of
those opportunities is joining with other people who are studying the strategic principles in this
book. To be successful, we all need to use better strategy, but not just in the sense of long-term
planning, which works less and less well in our dynamic age. We need to make our everyday deci-
sions from a stronger strategic perspective. Our information age is defined by interconnected
organizations and adaptive processes, but we grew up in an education system that taught us only
how to work in hierarchical organizations and pre-planned processes. We need new strategic skills
for the decision-rich environment in which we now live. Read most about these challenges here.
The heart of Sun Tzu’s strategic system is the idea of “winning without conflict.” We were all
put on Earth to accomplish something. Ordinary people see successful people as gifted, special,
and different, but successful people are ordinary people who saw their opportunity and acted on
it. You cannot predict or plan the path that will take you to your goals. You can only discover that
path. You can see that path more clearly working with other people. Others can see your position in
ways that you cannot. Perspective is always easier if you are working with others rather than fight-
ing them. Fighting is costly. We all have limited resources. We must use those resources to make
progress in ways that leverage the support of others while avoiding their opposition.
As you will learn in going through this book, from the beginning the task of improving posi-
tions while avoiding conflict requires a lot of knowledge. As a science, adaptive strategy combines

concepts from physics, psychology, and economics. In the science known as cognitive engineer-
ing, it is known as “rapid cognition” and “recognition-primed decision-making.” The most recent
scientific research documents the reality of the “super powers” of rapid recognition including the
ability to see what is invisible. To learn more about the science behind adaptive strategy, click here.
This book is for and about people who are in the game, who want to fulfill their potential and
become their true selves. It is for people who want to join with others in learning strategy. Sun
Tzu’s science of strategy has a long history of creating winners but that list has mushroomed with
the advent of our membership program. Sun Tzu’s methods have been proven to work on the
battlefields, in business, politics, sports, and many other areas as well, but it works best when we
build our knowledge and share our perspective with others. You can read more about the success
of those using our materials, including this free book, here.
Sun Tzu’s classical strategy provides a clear framework for understanding complex and fast-
changing situations. Your success requires understanding your position, leveraging your opportu-
nities in the environment, and responding properly to specific situations. In the institute’s training
programs for our members, these three areas of study are called position awareness, opportunity
development, and situational response. Instead of expecting a specific result, these methods work
to advance your position by exploring situations to uncover the opportunities hidden within them.
You cannot know ahead of time what opportunities will come in the course of a day, much less in
the course of your lifetime.
Read this book now and re-read it again a few months from now. On your second reading, you

will discover that, as your situation changes, different lessons become more important. When
I first started studying Sun Tzu, after reading the book several times, I realized that I was miss-
ing the greater part of Sun Tzu’s system because they didn’t apply to my immediate situation. My
day-to-day decisions were based on my old habits, not Sun Tzu’s principles. I only discovered my
mistakes after the fact when I re-read the book. It was at that point, I decided to get serious about
learning Sun Tzu’s system instead of just reading and re-reading the book. After I began carefully
studying Sun Tzu and actively using his ideas every day, , my life began to change, getting better
and better in every way.
Most people go through four stages of knowledge that we call the Four “E’s.” At the Explora-
tion Stage, they get an overview of the system. In the Education Stage, they start really learning its
elements. At the Exercise Stage, the begin to practice these methods in exercises, planning, and
every day decision-making,. At the Expertise State, you internalize this system, and find yourself
making dramatically better decisions instantly and effortlessly. To learn more about the stages of
learning Sun Tzu’s strategy, click here.
The Science of Strategy Institute was created as a home for those who are interested in devel-
oping their strategic skills and promoting “winning without conflict,” making the world a more
successful and less destructive place. We encourage our members to reach out to others, form their
own local chapters for meetings and events, and to form on-line special interests groups discuss-
ing the application of these principles to specific areas from selling to sports. Apply for member-
ship today!

I n t r o d u c t i o n : Understanding Sun Tzu’s Strategy
by Gary Gagliard i
In English translation, much of Sun Tzu’s The Art of War sounds like vague aphorisms, espe-
cially when you don’t see how they apply to your immediate situation. However, in the original
Chinese, the work is a series of very specific strategic formulas that can be applied to may different
situations. We can translate these formulas only approximately into English sentences. To make
understanding more challenging, many of these concepts are expressed in the rich cultural tradi-
tion of ancient Chinese science. To appreciate what this means, you may want to read the Chinese
Science Overview, which explains a little of the framework around which Sun Tzu’s work is built.
We describe Sun Tzu’s work as the “science of strategy” because there is a huge difference
between a scientific work and a self-help book. When reading science you have to read every word
carefully to master the terminology. Each concept is built on the foundation of previous ideas. You
can open a self-help book to any chapter and understand the basic ideas without studying the pre-
ceding chapters carefully. The authors include examples, illustrations, exercises, and practice drills
to help you master key concepts. Sun Tzu’s work lacks all these features.
In Sun Tzu’s work, the difference between “fight,” “conflict,” “battle,” and “attack” is as great as
the difference between “rational numbers,” “irrational numbers,” “real numbers,” and “imaginary
numbers” in mathematics. As in mathematics, we can understand what the words “rational” “irra-
tional,” “real,” and “imaginary” mean and still have no idea about how those terms define different


types of numbers. The same is true in Sun Tzu’s work. When we read “fight,” “conflict,” “battle,”
and “attack” we assume we know what is being said. We quickly forget—and often do not even
notice—Sun Tzu’s very specific definitions of terms.
My notes in this edition exist to call attention to what you are missing and how easy it is to
forget the defined terms and their real meaning. As the work goes on, Sun Tzu uses his specialized
vocabulary to express more complex ideas. Most of these ideas are difficult to explain without this
specialized vocabulary. However, since casual readers do not master the vocabulary, they cannot
see the points that are being made. People can see fine distinctions in strategic situations when
they are trained. That training strategy with learning a precise vocabulary.
The book defines a complex array of relationships among the concepts defining a strate-
gic position and how it is advanced in a competitive environment. Chinese scientific tradition
taught—as modern science does—that most concepts are beyond words. They are best expressed
in formal relationships of formulas. A good example is E=MC2, which can be generally described
as the relationship between energy and matter. See this web page for a short explanation of the
specific meaning in what seems on the surface like a very general statement in Sun Tzu’s work.
Because of depth of meaning in each character and every line has a wealth of useful applica-
tions. This however, does not mean that you can make up your own interpretation. The concepts
and their connections are rigorous. The only real secret to Sun Tzu is that it takes time and effort
to learn his system just like it takes time to master any mathematical or scientific skills. This is
why we invite people to join our organization, set up their own local chapters and on-line groups,
10
meet to discuss our books, and join on-line courses, and live training.
Sun Tzu discusses three aspects of strategy in his work. The first two chapters and the final
one concentrate on positioning. The middle chapters concentrate on identifying and exploring
opportunities to advance and build up positions. The penultimate and largest section of the book
explores the responses required to address a specific competitive situations. Since you retain only
5 percent of what you read, the chances that you will remember the right prescriptions for a specific
situation when that situation arises in your life are small after only reading the book.
We hope that reading the book will interest you further in joining our organizations and
understanding and using these techniques. We designed the our membership on-line training
to make mastering these ideas quick, easy, and even fun. Of course, we also offer membership
for organizations and schools. Every organization in the world can profit from its people making
better front-line decisions. In our training, we provide the examples, illustrations, exercises,
and activities, and that you would expect in learning a science, but we do it in an adult learning
environment where our attendees draw from their real-life experiences to illustration Sun Tzu’s
methods. We have Institute trainers all over the world training individuals within organizations
in these techniques. For more information about our live training, visit our training site where we
explain our program. If you are a trainer or consultant yourself (or want to become one, visit our
trainers site, where we explain our licensing program.

11
Chapter 1: Analysis

Sun Tzu said:

1 This is war.
It is the most important skill in the nation.
It is the basis of life and death.
It is the philosophy of survival or destruction.
You must know it well.
Many of our members find the cultural aspects
of the work fascinating. The original Chinese is
6Your skill comes from five factors. much more like formulas than sentences. For
example: Competition = survival + destruction
Study these factors when you plan war. Position = philosophy + climate + ground +
leadership + method
You must insist on knowing your situation.
Sun Tzu’s system is the interaction of all these
1. Discuss philosophy. formulas together. You can use the same
2. Discuss the climate. formulas to analyze any challenging situation.
Sun Tzu’s system is the interaction of all these
3. Discuss the ground. formulas together. The five elements described
here are based on the five classical elements
4. Discuss leadership. in Chinese science and philosophy.
5. Discuss military methods.

The Art of War 1 2


14It starts with your military philosophy.

Command your people in a way that gives them a higher shared purpose.
You can lead them to death.
You can lead them to life.
They must never fear danger or dishonesty.

19Next, you have the climate.

It can be sunny or overcast.


It can be hot or cold.
It includes the timing of the seasons. Like any work of science or mathematics, the
goal of strategy is to simplify complex situa-
tions with methodology. To this end, a large
23Next is the terrain. portion of Sun Tzu’s work is spent defining
terms clearly. Much of what Sun Tzu writes
It can be distant or near. may seem vague, but it is very specific if you
It can be difficult or easy. keep track of all his formulas.

It can be open or narrow. Our members discuss our books on strategy


based on Sun Tzu, we include a glossary
It also determines your life or death. explaining the key concepts Sun Tzu used
and their relationships within his strategic ap-

1 3  Chapter 1: Analysis
BONUS MATERIAL: General is,
The Chinese Revealed Intelligence, trust, love, bravery, strict also.
For our members who are
interested in the original Method is,
Chinese, we offer a Chinese
transliteration in The Art of Bend system,
War Plus The Ancient Chinese Government official philosophy,
Revealed. This book is the
only book that shows English Ruler use also.
readers what Sun Tzu actu-
ally wrote. It was also the first
book to use our “side-by-side” All here five are,
system, showing the Chinese
with our English translation. General not no hear,
By letting you see the original
text, you can compare differ- Knowledge of is victory,
ent translations of The Art of
War to see for yourself what
No knowledge of is no victory.

2
is gained and often lost in
translation. All of our books
on Sun Tzu are based on the Make school by plans,
Chinese formulas, not our
English translation. And yet demand this situation.

Says:
Ruler that has philosophy,
General that has ability,
The Art of War 1 4
28Next is the commander.

He must be smart, trustworthy, caring, brave, and strict.

30Finally, you have your military methods.

They shape your organization.


They come from your management philosophy.
You must master their use.

34All five of these factors are critical. Sun Tzu’s Adaptive Response Strategy
(STARS) teaches pattern recognition. These
As a commander, you must pay attention to them. five elements are the foundation for the other
Understanding them brings victory. eight key formulas in the system. In training
our members, we organize Sun Tzu’s les-
Ignoring them means defeat. sons into nine areas of skill, position aware-
ness, perspective development, opportunity

2 You must learn through planning.


You must question the situation.
recognition, opportunity evaluation, minimizing
mistakes, rapid response, creative response,
claiming positions, and securing positions.

3You must ask:

Which government has the right philosophy?


Which commander has the skill?
1 5  Chapter 1: Analysis
Heaven ground that obtain,
The Art of War Plus The Ancient
Chinese Revealed took years of Method command that moves,
research to develop, but this Army crowd that strong,
work was critical in creating
a deep understanding of Sun Officer soldier that train,
Tzu’s formulas. Today, this
work is used as a standard Reward penalize that bright,
for translation worldwide. It
is easier for most countries, We by this know victory defeat will be;
even countries in Asia such
as Thailand, to develop their
translation of Sun Tzu from General listen our plan,
the work we have done in this
translation . Uses it must win,
Remain it;
General no listen our plan,
Uses it must defeat,
Remove it.

Plan advantage by means of listening,


Therefore become of situation
3
By means of assist this outside,
Influence one,
Reason advantage and system
The Art of War 1 6
Which season and place have the advantage?
Which method of command works?
Which group of forces has the strength?
Which officers and men have the training?
Which rewards and punishments make sense?
This tells when you will win and when you will lose.

12Some commanders perform this analysis.


Are you frustrated because planning doesn’t
If you use these commanders, you will win. work in many situations? In competitive situ-
ations, you must make instant adaptive deci-
Keep them. sions. Most situations are not planned, but the
Some commanders ignore this analysis. analysis that Sun Tzu teaches is an on-going
process of developing your thinking about your
If you use these commanders, you will lose. competitive situation.
Get rid of them. Training your strategic cognition start with

3 Plan an advantage by listening.


Adjust to the situation.
identifying the five factors introduced in this
chapters how they affect your situation.

Get assistance from the outside.


Influence events.
Then planning can find opportunities and give you control.
17  Chapter 1: Analysis
4 Warfare is one thing.
It is a philosophy of deception.
Developing strong strategic instincts requires
questioning the quality of our information.

You don’t need perfect information to make


good decisions. All information is inherently
flawed because people disguise their true
3When you are ready, you try to appear incapacitated. intentions. Sun Tzu’s methods factor this fact
in. Unlike planning, your strategic cognition still
When active, you pretend inactivity. works where key information is unknown.
When you are close to the enemy, you appear distant.
When far away, you pretend you are near.

7You can have an advantage and still entice an opponent.

You can be disorganized and still be decisive.


You can be ready and still be preparing.
You can be strong and still avoid battle.
You can be angry and still stop yourself.
You can humble yourself and still be confident.
You can be relaxed and still be working.
You can be close to an ally and still part ways.

The Art of War 1 8


You can attack a place without planning to do so.
You can leave a place without giving away your plan.

17You will find a place where you can win.

You cannot first signal your intentions.

5 Manage to avoid battle until your organization can count on certain victory.
You must calculate many advantages.
Before you go to battle, your organization's analysis may indicate that you might not win.
You can count few advantages. Don’t be misled when Sun Tzu’s
Many advantages add up to victory. stanzas seem like vague aphorisms.
The problem is that many ideas are
Few advantages add up to defeat. difficult to translate and require the
next step, education, which teaches
How can you know your advantages without analyzing them? you all the elements of strategy and
We can see where we are by means of our observations. their interconnections. This verse,
for example, describes “counting,”
We can foresee our victory or defeat by planning. but once you master Sun Tzu’s sys-
tem, you know instantly when the
elements in a situation don’t add up
in your favor. This is how you make
better decisions quickly.

19  Chapter 1: Analysis


Chapter 2: Going to War

Sun Tzu said:

1 Everything depends on your use of military philosophy.


Moving the army requires thousands of vehicles. Membership in the Institute helps you internal-
ize the skills taught by Sun Tzu, using them
These vehicles must be loaded thousands of times. automatically to improve your position.
The army must carry a huge supply of arms.
The concept of “an invader” described here
You need ten thousand acres of grain. is based on the idea that all positions must
be advanced into new areas over time. Most
This results in internal and external shortages. people’s progress in life slows down because
they stop learning and growing.
Any army consumes resources like an invader.
It uses up glue and paint for wood. You must “invade” new areas to make prog-
ress in advancing your position.
It requires armor for its vehicles.
People complain about the waste of a vast amount of metal.
It will set you back when you attempt to raise tens of thousands of troops.

The Art of War 2 0


12Using a huge army in battle makes success very expensive .

Long delays create a dull army and sharp defeats.


Attacking enemy cities drains your forces.
Long, violent campaigns that exhaust the nation’s resources are wrong.

16Manage a dull army.

You will suffer sharp defeats.


Drain your forces.
Your money will be used up.
Your rivals will multiply as your army collapses and they will begin against you.
It doesn’t matter how smart you are. When people stop learning and growing,
You cannot get ahead by taking losses! their progress slows down and they start
making costly mistakes. Continuing your
education requires time, effort, and even
money, but it is easier and cheaper in an as-
23You hear of people going to war too quickly. sociation with others. If you want to continue
to improve your position for the rest of your
Still, you won’t see a skilled war that lasts a long time. life, you need to work with others and learn
how to overcome obstacles quickly.

25You can fight a war for a long time or you can make your nation strong.

You can’t do both.


2 1  Chapter 2: Going to War
Make no assumptions about all the dangers in using military force.
Then you won't make assumptions about the benefits of using arms either.
2
Sun Tzu clarifies what you can and cannot 3You want to make good use of war.
know about the future. You increase your
changes of success by testing each opportu- Do not raise troops repeatedly.
nity with a minimum of risk.
Do not carry too many supplies.
People value their membership in the
Institute because they want to make good Choose to be useful to your nation.
decisions in unpredictable conditions. You
can advance your position with your current Feed off the enemy.
resources if you have the necessary com- Make your army carry only the provisions it needs.
petitive skills and join with others.

The nation impoverishes itself shipping to troops that are far away. 3
Distant transportation is costly for hundreds of families.
Buying goods with the army nearby is also expensive.
High prices also exhaust wealth.
If you exhaust your wealth, you then quickly hollow out your military.
Military forces consume a nation’s wealth entirely.
War leaves households in the former heart of the nation with nothing.

The Art of War 2 2


2 Warriors never pretend that they know all the risks in choosing a course of action.
Because you cannot know all the costs in advance, you cannot know your eventual rewards either.
BONUS MATERIAL:
You must invest your efforts wisely. The Warrior’s Apprentice
You cannot afford to constantly correct your mistakes. The Warrior’s Apprentice, Your First Guide to
Plan to use small steps forward. Strategy is another of our award-winning
books. It explains and adapts Sun Tzu’s
Pick projects that are certain to improve your position. ideas to make them easier to understand
and use in your everyday life. As shown
Use everything others give you. here, its side-by-side format shows the
complete text of The Art of War on the
Plan your progress to maintain the resources you need. left-hand pages and the “apprentice” ad-

3 Warriors who move too far from what they know find that they are poorer for it.
Distance is another form of cost that makes success unlikely.
The further you go, the higher the price you must pay.
You cannot afford the cost of far-flung projects.
The efforts you put into traveling cannot also be used to build up your position.
Moving too far afield can destroy your position completely.
Long-distance campaigns erode dependable forms of support and erode your position.
2 3  Chapter 2: Going to War
8War destroys hundreds of families.
The tangible resources of war—horses,
armor, helmets, etc.—are also a meta- Out of every ten families, war leaves only seven.
phor for all the resources that you can-
not afford to lose, especially your time. War empties the government’s storehouses.
All resources are limited
Broken armies will get rid of their horses.
The point here is that conflict is costly.
You cannot predict its outcome. Every
They will throw down their armor, helmets, and arrows.
move is an experiment. We master Sun They will lose their swords and shields.
Tzu’s system so that you can learn how
to experiment safely. They will leave their wagons without oxen.
War will consume 60 percent of everything you have.

Because of this, it is the intelligent commander’s duty to feed off the enemy. 4
2Use a cup of the enemy’s food.

It is worth twenty of your own.


Win a bushel of the enemy’s feed.
It is worth twenty of your own.

6You can kill the enemy and frustrate him as well.

Take the enemy’s strength from him by stealing away his money.

The Art of War 2 4


The life of the warrior is inherently dangerous.
The Warrior’s Apprentice is espe-
Many attempts at advancing your position are doomed to fail. cially popular among young
Every attempt at moving forward is costly. adults who want to live the
warrior way. It was written to
Don't risk your future mobility on the possibility of failure. apply to anyone’s life, but the
way we express these ideas
You must maintain sources of support to defend your position. are particularly chosen for the
types of challenges young
Warriors always know how to hold onto their assets. adults face.
Warriors always protect their ability to move.
Warriors keep advances small, quick, and local to minimize costs.

4 Warriors maintain their resources through campaigns that return more than they consume.

You can win more time.


An hour spent today can save twenty hours in the future.
You can leverage your finances.
Invest a dollar today to save twenty dollars in the future.

You can improve your situation and gain resources as well.


Address the difficulties that steal away your resources and weaken your position.
2 5  Chapter 2: Going to War
8Fight for the enemy’s supply wagons.

Capture his supplies by using overwhelming force.


Reward the first who capture them.
Then change their banners and flags.
Mix them in with your own wagons to increase your supply line.
Keep your soldiers strong by providing for them.
This is what it means to beat the enemy while you grow more powerful.

5 Make victory in war pay for itself.


Avoid expensive, long campaigns.
The military commander’s knowledge is the key.
It determines whether the civilian officials can govern.
It determines whether the nation’s households are peaceful or a danger to the state.
This page contains one of the key
formulas for strategic understanding. It
is the basis for much of the framework
for understanding opportunities. Can
you spot it? You cannot advance your
position unless you realize that your
successes must pay for themselves.
The Art of War 2 6
Chapter 3: Planning an Attack

Sun Tzu said:

1 Everyone relies on the arts of war.


A united nation is strong.
A divided nation is weak.
Sun Tzu lays out the whole need for a mem-
A united army is strong. bership organization here. The relationships of
A divided army is weak. “united” versus “divided” is well defined in Sun
Tzu’s strategy as complementary opposites.
A united force is strong.
The last verse here is critical. Unity helps you
A divided force is weak. win not only in a fight but primarily by helping
United men are strong. you see ways to avoid unnecessary battles.
The question is how our reflexes are trained.
Divided men are weak. Most of us have been trained to struggle
A united unit is strong. through life instead of win easily. This is easier
working with a group of like-minded people.
A divided unit is weak.

12Unity works because it enables you to win every battle you fight.
Still, this is the foolish goal of a weak leader.
Avoid battle and make the enemy’s men surrender.
This is the right goal for a superior leader.
2 7  Chapter 3: Planning an Attack
2 The best policy is to attack while the enemy is still planning.
The next best is to disrupt alliances.
The next best is to attack the opposing army.
The worst is to attack the enemy’s cities. Institute members get the opportunity to learn
about these concepts in depth. For example,
these four policies connect to the four steps in
5This is what happens when you attack a city. advancing a position, Learn-Aim-Move-Claim.
There are many such numbered cross refer-
You can attempt it, but you can’t finish it. ences in this work. “Five” connects to the five
key factors. “Six” connects to the six dimen-
First you must make siege engines. sions of an opportunity, and so on. This tradi-
You need the right equipment and machinery. tion goes back to the I Ching and the bagua
as we explain in this article on the sources of
It takes three months and still you cannot win. Sun Tzu.
Then you try to encircle the area.
You use three more months without making progress.
Your command still doesn’t succeed and this angers you.
You then try to swarm the city.
This kills a third of your officers and men.
You are still unable to draw the enemy out of the city.
This attack is a disaster.
The Art of War   28
3 Make good use of war.
Make the enemy’s troops surrender.
Strategic awareness not only wins advances.
You use its leverage to prevent opponents
from contesting your advances.

Chinese is a more precise language for strate-


You can do this fighting only minor battles. gy, largely because Sun Tzu defined his terms.
You can draw their men out of their cities. Our terms “fight,” “battle,” and “attack” all sug-
gest conflict. As you master strategy, you learn
You can do it with small attacks. how to use all these different methods while
You can destroy the men of a nation. avoiding conflict. You will automatically recog-
nized the critical differences if you are able to
You must keep your campaign short. spend enough time studying the text.

8You must use total war, fighting with everything you have.

Never stop fighting when at war.


You can gain complete advantage.
To do this, you must plan your strategy of attack.

Have you noticed how our sections and


lines are numbered? Our translation retains
the chapter/block/line context of the original
Chinese. As with a mathematical proof, context
is everything in ancient Chinese, which was
as you saw in our earlier example, a highly
conceptual language.
2 9  Chapter 3: Planning an Attack
12The rules for making war are:

If you outnumber enemy forces ten to one, surround them.


If you outnumber them five to one, attack them.
If you outnumber them two to one, divide them.
Sun Tzu teaches only the math you can do in If you are equal, then find an advantageous battle.
your head to pick the right response. Here, the
issue is relative local strength, but situations If you are fewer, defend against them.
get more complicated when you add relative If you are much weaker, evade them.
size to other factors such as your field position,
the type of terrain, and so on.
19Small forces are not powerful.
The methods described here—”surround,”
“attack,” “divide,” “battle,” “defend,” and However, large forces cannot catch them.
“evade”—are very specific and are covered
in several different parts of this book, not just
in this one passage. Of course, the real chal-
lenge is instantly recognizing these situations
and responses in your real life experiences.
You must master command.
The nation must support you.
4
3Supporting the military makes the nation powerful.

Not supporting the military makes the nation weak.

5The army's position is made more difficult by politicians in three different ways.

The Art of War   3 0


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Small companies cannot sell to broad markets.


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4 As a salesperson, you control your territory.


Your territory must support you.

You are strong when your territory is well managed.


Your position is weak when your territory is poorly managed.

Poor territory management creates problems for salespeople in three ways.


3 1  Chapter 3: Planning an Attack
Ignorant of the whole army’s inability to advance, they order an advance.
Ignorant of the whole army’s inability to withdraw, they order a withdrawal.
There were no politicians, as we know We call this tying up the army.
them today, in Sun Tzu’s era, but there Politicians don’t understand the army’s business.
were decision-makers and decision-
influencers who played political roles Still, they think they can run an army.
within organizations.
This confuses the army’s officers.
Classical strategy divides “competi-
tion” (the army) and “production” (the
12Politicians don’t know the army’s chain of command.
nation). Planning works for internal
production, but strategic awareness
is requires in external competitive
They give the army too much freedom.
situations. This will create distrust among the army’s officers.

15The entire army becomes confused and distrusting.

This invites invasion by many different rivals.


We say correctly that disorder in an army kills victory.

The Art of War   3 2


Ignorant of which prospects are the best, you try to contact everyone.
Ignorant of which prospects are bad, you are discouraged from selling to anyone.
You tie yourself up in knots.
Ignorant of management, you want different prospects.
The Art of War for the Sales
You think you are in the wrong market. Warrior is so important because
This undermines the effectiveness of your efforts. salespeople are on the front
lines of business competition.
Unlike those on the inside of a
company who have the luxury of
You must understand your priorities in selling. a controlled work environment,
You cannot sell whenever and to whomever you want. salespeople have to deal with
the challenge of competitors
This creates weak customer relationships. directly. Every situation that they
face requires an understanding
of strategic positions. They need
Unfocused selling confuses your prospects and creates distrust. a strategy for their territory as a
whole, for each account, and for
This invites the competition to win away your customers. each sales call.
A unfocused sales process destroys your chances of success.

3 3  Chapter 3: Planning an Attack


5 You must know five things to win:
Victory comes from knowing when to attack and when to avoid battle.
Victory comes from correctly using both large and small forces.
Victory comes from everyone sharing the same goals.
Victory comes from finding opportunities in problems.
Victory comes from having a capable commander and the government leaving him alone.
You must know these five things. The pattern of the five requirements for
You then know the theory of victory. victory ties closely to the five factors in
analysis, which, in turn, tie to the five

6 We say:
“Know yourself and know your enemy.
elements in classical Chinese science.
These interconnections make it easier
to internalize all the moving parts of
Sun Tzu’s system. As you integrate
this system into your thinking, it auto-
You will be safe in every battle. matically pops out the right decisions
You may know yourself but not know the enemy. just when you need them.

You will then lose one battle for every one you win. The real wisdom isn’t in using the sys-
tem, which becomes almost automatic,
You may not know yourself or the enemy. but in taking the time to master it.
You will then lose every battle.”

The Art of War   3 4


Chapter 4: Positioning

Sun Tzu said:

1 Learn from the history of successful battles.


Your first actions should deny victory to the enemy.
As you develop skills as a member of
You pay attention to your enemy to find the way to win. the Institute, you naturally see every-
thing as a matter of positioning. You
You alone can deny victory to the enemy. recognize your current position and
Only your enemy can allow you to win. quickly see your best possible choices.
You establish future positions with the
intention of opening up better choices.
6You must fight well.
As in chess, you need to understand
You can prevent the enemy’s victory. how the pieces can move to under-
stand your position. Strategic cognition
You cannot win unless the enemy enables your victory. is the ability to immediately recognize
the critical elements of positions.
9We say:

You see the opportunity for victory; you don’t create it.

3 5  Chapter 4: Positioning
Sun Tzu teaches you how to make much
better decisions. This starts by putting your
You are sometimes unable to win.
You must then defend.
2
decisions into the framework of advanc- You will eventually be able to win.
ing or defending positions. When do you
defend your position? When do you try to You must then attack.
advance it? Do you ever abandon it?
Defend when you have insufficient strength.
Much of strategic cognition is based Attack when you have a surplus of strength.
instantly choosing between two opposite
courses—here, attacking (advancing) and
defending. In classical strategy, we call 7You must defend yourself well.
these elements complementary opposites:
two sides of the same situation. Save your forces and dig in.
You must attack well.
Move your forces when you have a clear advantage.

11You must always protect yourself until you can completely triumph.

Some may see how to win. 3


However, they cannot position their forces where they must.
This demonstrates limited ability.
The Art of War   3 6
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2 Decisions about attacking and defending are automatic. We initially


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The Art of War
Plus Its Amazing Secrets
is our award-winning
book that provides
a stanza-by-stanza
unless we have more resources than we need to defend. Then, if we see a explanation of Sun
clear opportunity—one in which we cannot lose—then we must attack. Tzu’s concepts. This
format allows us to
Attacking here implies advancing, moving forward, moving into new terri- explain the intercon-
tory, or expanding. nections among vari-
ous parts of the text
and its relationships
to traditional Chinese
In the original Chinese, defense is associated with staying in place while science.
improving a position out of basic weakness. Attack, in contrast, implies
movement or action while using an opportunity from a position of strength.

Success depends totally upon our ability to protect ourselves and survive
long enough for an opportunity to present itself.

3 When an opportunity presents itself, we must first recognize it. This


requires vision. Then we must move a lot of resources to the right place to
take advantage of the opportunity.

3 7  Chapter 4: Positioning
4Some can struggle to a victory and the whole world may praise their winning.

This also demonstrates a limited ability.


Though translated here in terms of “effort,” it
is often easier to explain strategic cognition 6Win as easily as picking up a fallen hair.
in terms of “leverage.” Certain specific types
of decisions are triggered in the presence Don’t use all of your forces.
of leverage. When leverage is missing, the
opposite course must be chosen. See the time to move.
Leverage requires recognizing and using
Don’t try to find something clever.
the natural forces and cycles of change to Hear the clap of thunder.
your advantage. The competitive environ-
ment is more powerful than you are. Sun Don’t try to hear something subtle.
Tzu teaches you how use the forces in
environment instead of fighting them.
12Learn from the history of successful battles.

Victory goes to those who make winning easy.


A good battle is one that you will obviously win.
It doesn’t take intelligence to win a reputation.
It doesn’t take courage to achieve success.

17You must win your battles without effort.

Avoid difficult struggles.


The Art of War   38
The failure here is in picking difficult—that is, costly—conflicts. Success under The Art of War
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Secrets is the ONLY
that are easily and inexpensively obtained. book to explain in
detail the system of
diagramming used in
Sun Tzu taught that the world is full of opportunities. We must choose only traditional Chinese
the easiest contests most certain of success. The “time to move” is when the science to explain
the interconnections
trends are in our favor. The “clap of thunder” means a clear, obvious sign. Sun between various
key elements. In the
Tzu used the metaphor of sight for vision and sound for knowledge. We must beginning of each
be careful not to imagine opportunities where they don't exist. chapter, we show and
explain the diagrams
for the ideas in that
When Sun Tzu refers to “history,” he means the past, but he also means the chapter.

statistical probability of success. When it is a question of survival, we must ng) Fin d


o Op
(G
always bet on certainties. If we don’t, we will eventually have a run of bad luck p

ck

o rt
that will cost us everything. Bing-fa is a patient, careful philosophy that doesn't

Atta

u n it
force success.

rces y
The two key ideas—winning without effort and attacking only when you

Defe

sou
will win—are intimately connected. We always win by preventing our defeat (S

nd

Re
h te
because good defense allows us to be extremely particular about picking our ou) Genera
3 9  Chapter 4: Positioning
Fight when your position must win. In Sun Tzu’s usage, “fight” specifically
You always win by preventing your defeat. means using all your resources. Did you
notice that definition earlier in the text? Did
you remember it when reading this sec-
21You must engage only in winning battles. tion? Again, the specific way Sun Tzu uses
language is different from the more general
Position yourself where you cannot lose. usage in English. In Chinese, characters
are not verbs, nouns, or adjectives. They
Never waste an opportunity to defeat your enemy. are concepts that we have to translate into
verbs, nouns, and adjectives in English,
which waters them down.
24You win a war by first assuring yourself of victory.

Only afterward do you look for a fight.


Outmaneuver the enemy before the first battle and then fight to win.

4 You must make good use of war.


Study military philosophy and the art of defense.
You can control your victory or defeat.

4This is the art of war:

“1. Discuss the distances.


2. Discuss your numbers.
The Art of War   4 0
3. Discuss your calculations. Again, we see that the five points of discus-
4. Discuss your decisions. sion listed here map specifically to the five
key factors defined in Chapter 1. Can you
5. Discuss victory. connect them properly? By using these pat-
terns, Sun Tzu compresses a lot of informa-
tion into his simple formulas.
10The ground determines the distance.
Sun Tzu was the first advocate of practice,
The distance determines your numbers. training, and drill. Most people remember
Your numbers determine your calculations. less than 5% of what they read. Most
people learn primarily from their mistakes,
Your calculations determine your decisions. which are a lot more expensive than spend-
ing the time to develop strategic cognition.
Your decisions determine your victory.”

15Creating a winning war is like balancing a coin of gold against a coin of silver.

Creating a losing war is like balancing a coin of silver against a coin of gold.

5 Winning a battle is always a matter of people.


You pour them into battle like a flood of water pouring into a deep gorge.
This is a matter of positioning.

4 1  Chapter 4: Positioning
Chapter 5: Momentum

Sun Tzu said:

1 You control a large group the same as you control a few.


You just divide their ranks correctly.
You fight a large army the same as you fight a small one.
You only need the right position and communication.
You may meet a large enemy army.
You must be able to sustain an enemy attack without being defeated.
You must correctly use both surprise and direct action.
Again, two opposing concepts—
Your army’s position must increase your strength. surprise and direct action—are
Troops flanking an enemy can smash them like eggs. defined both in terms of each
other and in terms of when they
You must correctly use both strength and weakness. are used in meeting challenges.

2 It is the same in all battles.


You use a direct approach to engage the enemy.
The choice between two comple-
mentary opposites makes the right
decisions in challenging situations
much easier.
You use surprise to win.

The Art of War   4 2


4You must use surprise for a successful invasion.

Surprise is as infinite as the weather and land.


Surprise is as inexhaustible as the flow of a river.

7You can be stopped and yet recover the initiative.


The natural impression that this sec-
You must use your days and months correctly. tion is poetic as opposed to substan-
tive is completely wrong.

9If you are defeated, you can recover. All the images involved—weather,
land, days, months, seasons, notes,
You must use the four seasons correctly. the scale, colors, shades, flavors,
etc.—are tied clearly and specifically
11There are only a few notes in the scale. to the five factors of strategic analy-
sis via the five Chinese elements and
Yet you can always rearrange them. their connections. Knowing those
connections makes the specific
You can never hear every song of victory.
meaning clear.

14There are only a few basic colors.

Yet you can always mix them.


You can never see all the shades of victory.

4 3  Chapter 5: Momentum
17There are only a few flavors.

Yet you can always blend them.


You can never taste all the flavors of victory.

20You fight with momentum.

There are only a few types of surprises and direct actions.


Yet you can always vary the ones you use.
There is no limit to the ways you can win. Water is one of the key elements tied
to one of the key strategic factors,
climate. When you are trained in Sun
24Surprise and direct action give birth to each other. Tzu’s system, these connections are
obvious and automatic.
They are like a circle without end.
You cannot exhaust all their possible combinations! Water is also one of the most fre-
quently used metaphors in Sun Tzu.

3 Surging water flows together rapidly.


Its pressure washes away boulders.
As you study Sun Tzu, you learn the
role it plays in Chinese philosophy
and the history of the martial arts.

This is momentum.

The Art of War   4 4


4A hawk suddenly strikes a bird.
Are timing and momentum the
Its contact alone kills the prey. complementary opposites we
have seen elsewhere? No,
This is timing. because you don’t choose be-
tween them, but they are used
7You must fight only winning battles. together.

Your momentum must be overwhelming. The key is that Sun Tzu has
Your timing must be exact. defined momentum much more
specifically than its usual use
in English. It is not winning. It is
10Your momentum is like the tension of a bent crossbow. taking control of the situation by
combining standard approaches
Your timing is like the pulling of a trigger. with an innovation.

4 War is very complicated and confusing.


Battle is chaotic.
Nevertheless, you must not allow chaos.

4War is very sloppy and messy.

Positions turn around.


Nevertheless, you must never be defeated.
4 5  Chapter 5: Momentum
7Chaos gives birth to control.
Remember when we said Sun Tzu
Fear gives birth to courage. works in mathematical terms similar
to the modern ideas of chaos theory?
Weakness gives birth to strength.
As conceptual constructs, you can
10You must control chaos. use these ideas in a way that makes
good decisions quick and easy to
This depends on your planning. make once you have all the parts fit
Your men must brave their fears. together in your thinking.

This depends on their momentum.

14You have strengths and weaknesses.

These come from your position.

16You must force the enemy to move to your advantage.

Use your position.


The enemy must follow you.
Surrender a position.
The enemy must take it.
You can offer an advantage to move him.
The Art of War   46
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If competition is chaotic, where does control come from? win a lot of awards.) It turns each
A. Control is impossible. stanza of Sun Tzu’s work into a
complete lesson on strategy.
B. It comes from human nature.
C. It comes from discipline.
D. It comes from aggressiveness.

Chaos gives birth to control.


Fear gives birth to courage.
Weakness gives birth to strength.
The Art of War 5:4.7-9
Answer: B. It comes from human nature.
Even our opponents want a sense of order. Competition among
people creates chaos, but that chaos itself creates a human need for order.
Human nature seeks to identify patterns. We want to make sense of con-
fusion. The greater the chaos, the more we desire order. It is this human
desire for order that makes it possible for us to take control of events even
during hostile confrontations. (Lesson continues below...)
47  Chapter 5: Momentum
You can use your men to move him.
You can use your strength to hold him.

5 You want a successful battle.


To do this, you must seek momentum.
Do not just demand a good fight from your people.
You must pick good people and then give them momentum.

5You must create momentum.

You create it with your men during battle. Strategic cognition connects the
rules of basic physics to the rules of
This is comparable to rolling trees and stones. human psychology, especially the
Trees and stones roll because of their shape and weight. psychology of groups. This makes
it easier to predict the most likely
Offer men safety and they will stay calm. course events will take.
Endanger them and they will act.
In classical strategy, the same rules
Give them a place and they will hold. defined physical and psychological
Round them up and they will march. momentum.

The Art of War   48


The same is true of courage. Uncertainty creates fear. The The Warrior Class was originally
greater our uncertainty, the greater our fear. At some point, developed from our Institute’s live
we need to escape from this fear. We find the courage to make workshops for our members. Its
lessons were discussion points
changes because, though change is normally frightening, any for the group. However, over the
change is less frightening than the uncertainty of chaos. Any years, we discovered the it was
more effective to offer shorter
predictable outcome, even death, is preferable to constant fear. live training sessions (our longest
workshop is now two-days) and
Everyone has weaknesses. We are all well aware of our let our members discuss the les-
personal weaknesses. Strength comes from accepting our weak- sons of the Warrior Class in their
local chapter meetings.
nesses and learning how to use them and compensate for them.
We are weak because we are small, but we learn to use our small For those who do not yet have
their own local chapters to work
size by becoming more focused. We are unknown, but we learn with, we have now automated
to use our obscurity to promote mystery. We are all novices, but the Warrior Class as interac-
tive lessons. Like a video game,
we learn to use our newness as the source of a fresh perspec- these lessons only allow you to
tive. We can learn to see that every possible weakness is also a move to the next level when you
are able to answer its questions
potential strength. successfully.
The chaos of competition makes our success possible.
Because you have to pass tests
Without it, our innovations would have little or no impact on the to complete the three parts of the
competitive battle. We must not fear chaos but embrace it. Our Warrior Class, we can now certify
people’s competence in applying
fear can give us courage. Our limitations are the source of human Sun Tzu’s lessons.
strength.
49  Chapter 5: Momentum
13You make your men powerful in battle with momentum.

This should be like rolling round stones down over a high, steep cliff.
Momentum is critical.
You are now only about a third of the way through the
text.

While each verse seems simple in itself, Sun Tzu has


been adding concept on top of concept and relation-
ship on top of relationship. By this point, no casual
reader can remember what has been taught clearly
enough to apply these ideas to everyday decision-
making. You need education and exercise to really
use this ideas. This is why training is so important.

The reader assumes that, as in modern nonfiction,


ideas will be repeated and illustrated so you can
remember them. To develop true strategic skills, this
framework has to become part of your thinking. This
requires more than just reading the work once.

The Art of War   5 0


Chapter 6: Weakness and Strength

Sun Tzu said:

1 Always arrive first to the empty battlefield to await the enemy at your leisure.
After the battleground is occupied and you hurry to it, fighting is more difficult.

3You want a successful battle.


The section discusses the skill of opportunity
Move your men, but not into opposing forces. recognition. One of the advantages in working
with others in a membership organization is
getting perspective on your own position.
5You can make the enemy come to you.
Weakness and strength are complementary
Offer him an advantage. opposites. Much of Sun Tzu’s system is based
on this ancient concept sometimes call yin-
You can make the enemy avoid coming to you. yang philosophy. We referred to this concept
Threaten him with danger. in a discussion of two other terms that are tied
to a single key factor in strategy. Do you re-
member what the two other terms were? They
9When the enemy is fresh, you can tire him. were “united” and “divided.” The key element
they relied on was a shared mission.
When he is well fed, you can starve him.
When he is relaxed, you can move him.

5 1  Chapter 6: Weakness and Strength


2 Leave any place without haste.
Hurry to where you are unexpected.
You can easily march hundreds of miles without tiring.
To do so, travel through areas that are deserted.
You must take whatever you attack. Remember when “attack” and “defense”
Attack when there is no defense. were discussed? Once you understand
when to defend and when to advance,
You must have walls to defend. you need to know how to advance. This
Defend where it is impossible to attack. is covered here.

The organization of The Art of War is


9Be skilled in attacking. similar to that of other works of classical
science. Basic concepts are introduced
Give the enemy no idea where to defend. and then more sophisticated concepts
are built on top of them, creating a con-
11Be skillful in your defense. sistent, integrated system. In Sun Tzu’s
time, writing and duplicating books was
Give the enemy no idea where to attack. very expensive. This discouraged long,

3 Be subtle! Be subtle!
Arrive without any clear formation.
detailed explanations and put more of a
burden on study by the reader.

The Art of War   5 2


Ghostly! Ghostly!
Arrive without a sound.
You must use all your skill to control the enemy’s decisions.
Our different adaptations
6Advance where he can’t defend. translate the concepts of
“weakness and strength” as
Charge through his openings. “emptiness and fullness” or
Withdraw where the enemy cannot chase you. even “need and satisfaction.”
All are legitimate, but more
Move quickly so that he cannot catch you. important is how these two
concepts are connected to the
10Always pick your own battles. overall structure Sun Tzu has
developed so far.
The enemy can hide behind high walls and deep trenches.
Do not try to win by fighting him directly.
Instead, attack a place that he must recapture.
Avoid the battles that you don’t want.
You can divide the ground and yet defend it.
Don’t give the enemy anything to win.
Divert him from coming to where you defend.

5 3  Chapter 6: Weakness and Strength


4 Make other men take a position while you take none.
Then focus your forces where the enemy divides his forces.
Though The Art of War is
studied all over the world, it
is best studied in conjunc-
tion with works explaining its
Where you focus, you unite your forces. ideas for specific uses.

When the enemy divides, he creates many small groups. Sun Tzu never gives ex-
You want your large group to attack one of his small ones. amples of how to use his
principles to make it easy to
Then you have many men where the enemy has but a few. master his ideas. He never
Your larger force can overwhelm his smaller one. talks about specific weapons
Then go on to the next small enemy group. or troop formations.

You can take them one at a time.

5 You must keep the place that you have chosen as a battleground a secret.
The enemy must not know.
Force the enemy to prepare his defense in many places.
You want the enemy to defend many places.
Then you can choose where to meet the enemy.
His forces will be weak there.

The Art of War   5 4


7If he reinforces his front lines, he depletes his rear.
Symbolically, the right, left,
If he reinforces his rear, he depletes his front. back, and front map to the
four points of the compass.
If he reinforces his right flank, he depletes his left.
If he reinforces his left flank, he depletes his right. The four points of the com-
Without knowing the place of attack, he cannot prepare. pass, plus its center, are
the basis for mapping the
Without knowing the right place, he will be weak everywhere. five key factors that define
a strategic position and the
four secret steps in advanc-
13The enemy has weak points.
ing a position, which is why
Prepare your men against them. Sun Tzu uses the formulation
several times to express his
He has strong points. approach to finding open-
Make his men prepare themselves against you. ings, the topic of this chapter.

6 You must know the battleground.


You must know the time of battle.
You can then travel a thousand miles and still win the battle.

4The enemy should not know the battleground.

He shouldn’t know the time of battle.


5 5  Chapter 6: Weakness and Strength
Here are those four compass
His left flank will be unable to support his right.
points again. Why are they His right will be unable to support his left.
repeated? A clue: the differ-
ence between “deplete” and
His front lines will be unable to support his rear.
“support"” is closely tied to His rear will be unable to support his front.
the topic of this chapter, find- His support is distant even if it is only ten miles away.
ing opportunities.
What unknown place can be close?
Strategic cognition is being
very systematically described
12You control the balance of forces.
here, but in simply reading
the book, we move so quickly The enemy may have many men but they are superfluous.
through these ideas that they
cannot stick. How can they help him to victory?

15We say:

You must let victory happen.

17The enemy may have many men.

You can still control him without a fight.

When you form your strategy, know the strengths and weaknesses of your plan. 7
The Art of War   56
Opposition on different issues must not unite. BONUS MATERIAL:
The Art of War for the Manage-
General opposition must not focus on one issue. ment Warrior applies Sun Tzu’s
lessons in a way that those who
Productivity must not disguise weaknesses. are responsible for a team of
Weaknesses must not stop productivity. people within a larger orga-
nization can appreciate. This
People won’t oppose changes that they don’t expect. adaptation uses our line-by-line,
side-by-side format as shown
How can unknown plans be opposed? here. We developed this book
training the management teams
for some of the world’s most suc-
You decide the balance of emotion. cessful companies.
People may vaguely oppose doing what is needed.
How can they stop you from succeeding?

This is always true.


You must allow yourself to succeed.

Your problems may be overwhelming.


You can still solve them by avoiding confrontations.

7 When you plan your strategy, know the strengths and weaknesses of your analysis.
5 7  Chapter 6: Weakness and Strength
When you execute a plan, know how to manage both action and inaction.
When you take a position, know the deadly and the winning grounds.
When you enter into battle, know when you have too many or too few men.
What does Sun Tzu mean
by a “war’s centerpiece”? 5Use your position as your war’s centerpiece.
You have to know what
factor Sun Tzu puts at the
Arrive at the battle without a formation.
center of his compass for Don’t take a position in advance.
mapping a position. In clas- Then even the best spies can’t report it.
sical Chinese, the center
was the ground, but for Sun Even the wisest general cannot plan to counter you.
Tzu, it was your philosophy. Take a position where you can triumph using superior numbers.
Keep opposing forces ignorant.
Everyone should learn your location after your position has given you success.
No one should know how your location gives you a winning position.
Make a successful battle one from which the enemy cannot recover.
You must continually adjust your position to his position.

8 Manage your military position like water.


Water takes every shape.
The Art of War   58
When you execute your plan, know what needs to be done and what can be left undone.
When you make a decision, know exactly what will work and what will not.
When you move, know when you have too many or too few resources.
The Art of War for the Manage-
Use your credibility as leverage for your projects. ment Warrior discusses strategy
in dealing with a management
Go into every situation with an open mind. war on two fronts: the competi-
tive pressures from outside the
Avoid being easily predictable. company and political pressures
Then the opposition can’t spread rumors against you. from within the company.

Even the most adamant opponent cannot counter you.


Make decisions that have the weight of the organization behind them.
Keep potential opposition in the dark.
Potential opponents should learn about your project only after it succeeds.
They should not see how you were able to create the support that you needed.
Make your success so clear-cut that others cannot disparage or minimize it.
Always adjust your plan to weaken any opposition.

8 You must remain flexible in your decision-making.


Decisions can take any shape.
5 9  Chapter 6: Weakness and Strength
It avoids the high and moves to the low. Here again we see Sun
Your war can take any shape. Tzu’s interconnection of
concepts. The five cam-
It must avoid the strong and strike the weak.
paigns are tied to the five
Water follows the shape of the land that directs its flow. key factors defining a
Your forces follow the enemy, who determines how you win. position. The four seasons
are tied to the four steps in
advancing a position.
8Make war without a standard approach.

Water has no consistent shape.


If you follow the enemy’s shifts and changes, you can always find a way to win.
We call this shadowing.
Weakness and strength
12Fight five different campaigns without a firm rule for victory. are the engine in Sun
Tzu’s system. If you want
Use all four seasons without a consistent position. to learn a little more for
Each day passes quickly. free, you might want to go
to warriorclassblog.com
A month can decide your failure or success. the free blog discussing
Sun Tzu’s concepts.

The Art of War   6 0


Chapter 7: Armed Conflict

Sun Tzu said:

1 Everyone uses the arts of war.


You accept orders from the government.
This chapter ends the first half
of the book, which lays out the
basic framework of strategic
Then you assemble your army. cognition. At this point, Sun Tzu
You organize your men and build camps. has defined literally dozens of
You must avoid disasters from armed conflict. key concepts, so many that
most casual readers will have
lost track of more of them. For
6Seeking armed conflict can be disastrous. the real student of strategy, this
is where the science gets even
Because of this, a detour can be the shortest path. more interesting.
Because of this, problems can become opportunities.
This chapter plays an important
role in summarizing the first
9Use an indirect route as your highway. half of the book and introducing
the more detailed second half,
Use the search for advantage to guide you. which looks at more specific
When you fall behind, you must catch up. conditions and the special re-
sponses that they require.
When you get ahead, you must wait.
You must know the detour that most directly accomplishes your plan.
6 1  Chapter 7: Armed Conflict
14Undertake armed conflict when it creates an advantage.
The concepts of “advantage”
Seeking armed conflict for its own sake is dangerous. and “fighting” were specifically
defined earlier. If you don't re-

2 You can build up an army to fight for an advantage.


Then you won’t catch the enemy.
member what they mean, you
won’t understand what Sun Tzu
specifically means by “fighting
for an advantage” here.
You can force your army to go fight for an advantage.
Then you abandon your heavy supply wagons. “Advantage” means an opening
where you have an opportunity
to outperform rivals. “Fight-
5You keep only your armor and hurry after the enemy. ing” means investing all your
resources. A basic idea of strat-
You avoid stopping day or night. egy is that you cannot, through
You use many roads at the same time. your own efforts, create an
opening. Investing resources
You go hundreds of miles to fight for an advantage. to try to create openings never
Then the enemy catches your commanders and your army. works in any situation, for
the specific reasons Sun Tzu
Your strong soldiers get there first. explains here.
Your weaker soldiers follow behind.
Using this approach, only one in ten will arrive.
You can try to go fifty miles to fight for an advantage.
Then your commanders and army will stumble.
The Art of War   6 2
Using this method, only half of your soldiers will make it.
You can try to go thirty miles to fight for an advantage.
Then only two out of three get there.

18If you make your army travel without good supply lines, your army will die.

Without supplies and food, your army will die.


If you don’t save the harvest, your army will die.

21Do not let any of your potential enemies know what you are planning.

Still, you must not hesitate to form alliances.


This list refers to specific top-
You must know the mountains and forests. ics—mountains, marshes, for-
You must know where the obstructions are. ests, alliances, etc.—that Sun
Tzu defines later in the text.
You must know where the marshes are.
If you don’t, you cannot move the army. He makes his point about the
importance of knowledge by
If you don’t, you must use local guides. intentionally introducing ideas
If you don’t, you can’t take advantage of the terrain. that you cannot understand at
this place in the text.

6 3  Chapter 7: Armed Conflict


3 You make war using a deceptive position.
If you use deception, then you can move.
Using deception, you can upset the enemy and change the situation.
You can move as quickly as the wind.
Though these topics are defined later, any
You can rise like the forest. reader of ancient Chinese would recog-
You can invade and plunder like fire. nize these associations, which again go
back to the I Ching and the ba gua.
You can stay as motionless as a mountain.
You can be as mysterious as the fog. For Western readers, it is necessary to
You can strike like sounding thunder. explain these concepts in today’s practical
terms, which we do in our adaptations.

10Divide your troops to plunder the villages.

When on open ground, dividing is an advantage.


Don’t worry about organization; just move.
Be the first to find a new route that leads directly to a winning plan.
This is how you are successful at armed conflict.

The Art of War   6 4


3
BONUS MATERIAL:
The Ancient Bing-fa:
You must not let potentially dangerous people think that you are Martial Arts Strategy is
and award-winning
against them. Your best opportunity to move forward is avoiding them sports book that we
developed for students
entirely. If you cannot avoid them, your goal should be to make them and teachers of the
think that you are willing to be friendly with them. You can then get martial arts. Our mem-
bership involves many
away from them as quickly as possible. You can learn their strengths and diverse communities of
weaknesses. You need to know how dangerous people might hamper interest, including those
interested in the martial
your progress. You need to learn where you might get trapped. Without arts.
creating a challenge, you must appear unmovable. Let dangerous people
know as little as possible about you. You can then surprise them by
defending yourself if necessary.

Making yourself seem less successful than you are protects your
resources. In situations in which you might be challenged, appearing
weak is an advantage. Don’t worry about what others think; focus on
your own progress. Be creative about finding an easy way around the
dangerous people who might confront you. Outmaneuvering opponents
is how you are successful in real-world fights.

6 5  Chapter 7: Armed Conflict


4 Military experience says:
“You can speak, but you will not be heard.
This section offers practical
advice about competitive com-
munication, but it is easy to miss
its connections to the larger pic-
You must use gongs and drums. ture. Notice that this is the fourth
block in this chapter. These four
You cannot really see your forces just by looking. blocks describe the four skills in
You must use banners and flags.” advancing a position.

We haven't mentioned the


6You must master gongs, drums, banners, and flags. “block” (indicated by large block
numbers) and “stanza” (each
Place people as a single unit where they can all see and hear. verse) system and its use in
You must unite them as one. developing the meaning in these
lessons. In ancient Chinese,
Then the brave cannot advance alone. chapters, blocks, and stanzas
The fearful cannot withdraw alone. repeat key concepts, changing
wording to emphasize differ-
You must force them to act as a group. ent ideas as we repeat verses
in a song. This approach adds
12In night battles, you must use numerous fires and drums. meaning in a systematic way
that is easy to memorize.
In day battles, you must use many banners and flags.
You must position your people to control what they see and hear.

The Art of War   66


The Ancient Bing-fa:

4 At this point, the topic changes from avoiding real-world battles to


winning in fights when you can’t avoid them. The first key to winning a
Martial Arts Strategy starts
by tracing the martial
arts back through
Asian history back to its
roots in sword training
real fight is making a lot of noise. You must work hard to get the atten- based upon Sun Tzu’s
tion of those around you. You can get aid from unexpected areas if you philosophy. When both
weapons and Sun Tzu’s
make your situation clear. work were denied to the
common people, his
tradition was carried on
Communication is how you control confrontations. You must control in the physical training
of the martial arts that
what others, both your opponents and potential allies, see and hear. You spread through Asia.
need to get other people on your side. If you are too aggressive, you alien-
ate others and increase the hostility against you. If you are too timid, you
lose the support of others and invite attacks. You must offer a reason for
others to join with you.

When it is night, you must make more noise. During the day, you use
motion to signal others. You must expect others to interpret their situ-
ation, whether it is safe to attack you or join you, based upon what they
see and hear you do.
67  Chapter 7: Armed Conflict
5 You control your army by controlling its morale.
As a general, you must be able to control emotions.

3In the morning, a person’s energy is high.


Remember the discussion
During the day, it fades. earlier about timing in the
By evening, a person’s thoughts turn to home. chapter on momentum? Can
you say how this discussion
You must use your troops wisely. is related?
Avoid the enemy’s high spirits.
In training people to under-
Strike when his men are lazy and want to go home. stand Sun Tzu, we continual-
This is how you master energy. ly ask questions to get them
thinking. You can develop
better decision-making skills
10Use discipline to await the chaos of battle. only by making decisions.
You learn faster from your
Keep relaxed to await a crisis. mistakes. We prefer people
This is how you master emotion. to make their strategic mis-
takes in our classes rather
then their lives.
13Stay close to home to await the distant enemy.

Stay comfortable to await the weary enemy.


The Art of War   68
Stay well fed to await the hungry enemy. The part of strategic cog-
This is how you master power. nition is called situation
response. The specific items

6 Don’t entice the enemy when his ranks are orderly.


You must not attack when his formations are solid.v
in this section are covered in
more detail later in the text.

Here the point is that avoid-


This is how you master adaptation. ing the wrong action is
often more important than
choosing the right action.
4You must follow these military rules.
This is important because,
Do not take a position facing the high ground. as you develop your sense
of strategic cognition, it is
Do not oppose those with their backs to the wall. usually easier to know the
Do not follow those who pretend to flee. wrong action. If you reject
those actions without having
Do not attack the enemy’s strongest men. to think about them, you are
Do not swallow the enemy’s bait. closer to choosing the cor-
rect action.
Do not block an army that is heading home.
Leave an escape outlet for a surrounded army. Since conflict can be so
Do not press a desperate foe. costly, good strategic think-
ing eliminates unnecessary
This is how you use military skills. conflict in people’s lives.

69  Chapter 7: Armed Conflict


Chapter 8: Adaptability

Sun Tzu said:

1 Everyone uses the arts of war.


As a general, you get your orders from the government. This is a pivotal chapter. Sun Tzu
has finished laying out his basic
You gather your troops. framework for making strategic
On dangerous ground, you must not camp. decisions. The next half of the
book has a different purpose.
Where the roads intersect, you must join your allies.
When an area is cut off, you must not delay in it. Here he warns us that before
we can really use this system,
When you are surrounded, you must scheme. we have to master an additional
In a life-or-death situation, you must fight. level of complexity. That level of
complexity was introduced in the
There are roads that you must not take. previous chapter and will be ex-
There are armies that you must not fight. plained in more detail in the next
three long chapters.
There are strongholds that you must not attack.
There are positions that you must not defend.
There are government commands that must not be obeyed.

The Art of War   70


14Military leaders must be experts in knowing how to adapt to find an advantage.

This will teach you the use of war.

16Some commanders are not open to making adjustments to find an advantage.

They can know the shape of the terrain.


Sun Tzu's concept
Still, they cannot find an advantageous position. of “adaptability”
doesn’t mean doing
19Some military commanders do not know how to adjust their methods. whatever you think.
It means doing
They can find an advantageous position. exactly what is
Still, they cannot use their men effectively. required given the
situation.

2 You must be creative in your planning.


You must adapt to your opportunities and weaknesses.
The following
chapters cover an
array of overlapping
You can use a variety of approaches and still have a consistent result. conditions defining
the situation specifi-
You must adjust to a variety of problems and consistently solve them. cally.

7 1  Chapter 8: Adaptability
3 You can deter your potential enemy by using his weaknesses against him.
You can keep your potential enemy’s army busy by giving it work to do.
You can rush your potential enemy by offering him an advantageous position.

4 You must make use of war.


Do not trust that the enemy isn’t coming.
Strategy focuses
on establishing
a position rather
than on defeating
Trust your readiness to meet him. enemies as its
goal.
Do not trust that the enemy won’t attack.
Rely only on your ability to pick a place that the enemy can’t attack. However, in the
following chap-
ters, Sun Tzu
will explain that
a key aspect of
any position is its
strengths relative
to opposing posi-
tions.

The Art of War   72


Flow Like Water and BONUS MATERIAL:
The Golden Key to Strat-
egy won the Ben Franklin
Change Like Wind Book Award for Psychol-
ogy/Self-help. It puts the
strategic lessons of Sun
You can know exactly where the position you desire is located, but Tzu into a fast, friendly,
you cannot plan exactly how to get there. The sea of human activity is and fun format.
more like a restless ocean than a fixed grid of city streets. We have many members
who have trouble relating
to the original work’s focus
The Key of Adaptabilit y: All moves depend on military war. So, unlike
totally on your ability to adapt. most of our other books,
The Godlen Key doesn’t
contain the complete text
of The Art of War, but as
No Cryst al Ball you can see from this
example, its principles are
You cannot know the conditions you will face getting to your des- all come directly on Sun
Tzu’s work.
tination until you are on your way. Like a ship sailing across the ocean,
you must continually adapt to the changing winds and currents using This design makes it an
excellent work for schools
all the techniques of sailing. In strategy, you must continually adapt to and school districts who
the changing winds and currents of situations using all the techniques want to help young people
master strategy.
of moving.

7 3  Chapter 8: Adaptability
5 You can exploit five different faults in a leader.
If he is willing to die, you can kill him.
The five key factors are again
the basis for this statement
about leadership, especially
leadership as specifically de-
If he wants to survive, you can capture him. fined in Chapter 1.

He may have a quick temper. If you don’t remember that


You can then provoke him with insults. definition of leadership, you
will miss how this discussion
If he has a delicate sense of honor, you can disgrace him. of flaws is based on excesses
If he loves his people, you can create problems for him. rather than absences. You may
want to go back to Chapter 1
In every situation, look for these five weaknesses. and find the five characteris-
They are common faults in commanders. tics of commanders. We have
said it before, but it does get
They always lead to military disaster. easier and easier to remember
all these elements when you
11To overturn an army, you must kill its general. study because they connect
together.
To do this, you must use these five weaknesses.
You must always look for them.

The Art of War   74


Str ategy As you advance in life, you are going to The Golden Key to Strategy is
makes you meet many different conditions on the way to based on the material that
acutely aware we use in our live presen-
of changes
many different destinations. Some moves will tations so there are a lot of
around you. be pleasant excursions. Other moves will turn quotes, stories, and even
jokes mixed in with its
into crazy games of chicken. Some moves will lessons. The Keys to Sun
become races. In other moves, you will discover Tzu lecture from our live
training is available as a
that the way you planned to go has been closed DVD video and audio CD
for construction. at Strategy-Shop.com and
as a video course at the
“Adapt or perish, now as ever, is Strategy-School.com
nature’s inexorable imperative.” H. G.
Wells

T he Nine Spec if ic Condit ions


There are nine special situations that you must instantly recognize and
adapt to:
 Scattering conditions arise when attacked by a foe.
 Easy conditions arise early in a new advance.
 Disputed conditions arise on valuable ground.
 Open conditions arise when the ground is clear.
7 5  Chapter 8: Adaptability
Chapter 9: Armed March
Sun Tzu sai d:
1 Anyone moving an army must adjust to the enemy.
When caught in the mountains, rely on their valleys.
This is the first of the three lon-
gest and most complex chap-
ters in Sun Tzu’s work. These
chapters explore all the details
Position yourself on the heights facing the sun. that make every situation
To win your battles, never attack uphill. unique and the prescriptions
for finding the right response to
This is how you position your army in the mountains. the situation. These chapters
rely much more heavily on past
6When water blocks you, keep far away from it. definitions, text organization,
and past interconnections for
Let the invader cross the river and wait for him. their meaning.
Do not meet him in midstream.
Wait for him to get half his forces across and then take advantage of the situation.

10You need to be able to fight.

You can’t do that if you are caught in water when you meet an invader.
Position yourself upstream, facing the sun.
Never face against the current.
Always position your army upstream when near the water.
The Art of War   76
15You may have to move across marshes.
Notice that Sun Tzu doesn’t list
Move through them quickly without stopping. the four ground conditions he
is discussing.
You may meet the enemy in the middle of a marsh.
You must keep on the water grasses. Technically, these conditions
Keep your back to a clump of trees. represent three problems plus
their absence. The first is an
This is how you position your army in a marsh. excess of ground, mountains.
The second an excess of
climate, water. The third is an
21On a level plateau, take a position that you can change.
excess of ground and climate
Keep the higher ground on your right and to the rear. combined, marshes. The fourth
is the lack of excess. This is
Keep danger in front of you and safety behind. important because the number
This is how you position yourself on a level plateau. three is connected to barriers
to progress, not to four skills
for advancing a position.
25You can find an advantage in all four of these situations.

Learn from the great emperor who used positioning to conquer his four rivals.

2 Armies are stronger on high ground and weaker on low.


They are better camping on sunny southern hillsides than on shady northern ones.
Provide for your army’s health and place men correctly.
77  Chapter 9: Armed March
Your army will be free from disease. One of the great benefits
Done correctly, this means victory. of developing your strate-
gic cognition is that all of
6You must sometimes defend on a hill or riverbank. Sun Tzu’s lessons can be
connected metaphorically
You must keep on the south side in the sun. to competitive situations in
Keep the uphill slope at your right rear. your life. In doing our many
adaptations of Sun Tzu’s
9This will give the advantage to your army.
work, we explain the types
of conditions, for example in
It will always give you a position of strength. the business environment,

3 Stop the march when the rain swells the river into rapids.
You may want to ford the river.
that you can map to these
classical competitive situa-
tions.

Wait until it subsides.

4All regions can have seasonal mountain streams that can cut you off.

There are seasonal lakes.


There are seasonal blockages.
There are seasonal jungles.
The Art of War   78
There are seasonal floods.
There are seasonal fissures.
Get away from all these quickly.
Do not get close to them.
Keep them at a distance.
Maneuver the enemy close to them.
Position yourself facing these dangers.
Push the enemy back into them.

16Danger can hide on your army’s flank. Here, we have the three chal-
lenges that limit progress. They
There are reservoirs and lakes. are called “distance,” “dan-
gers,” and “obstacles.” They
There are reeds and thickets. map to mountains, waters,
There are mountain woods. and marshes. Each concept
Their dense vegetation provides a hiding place. has a precise meaning but
these concepts are specifically
You must cautiously search through them. defined later in the text.
They can always hide an ambush.

79  Chapter 9: Armed March


4 Sometimes, the enemy is close by but remains calm.
Expect to find him in a natural stronghold.
Other times he remains at a distance but provokes battle. There are many specific les-
sons in this long section, but
He wants you to attack him. the general lesson is the same:
we can get information only by
5He sometimes shifts the position of his camp. interpreting the changes in the
environment, but that informa-
He is looking for an advantageous position. tion is never perfect.

7The trees in the forest move.

Expect that the enemy is coming.


The tall grasses obstruct your view.
Be suspicious.

11The birds take flight.

Expect that the enemy is hiding.


Animals startle.
Expect an ambush.
The Art of War   80
4
BONUS MATERIAL:
Strategy for Sales Managers is a
Sales managers must continually monitor competitors. companion book to our The
Art of War for the Sales War-
Competitors are confident in their most secure accounts. rior designed for those who are
responsible for managing sales
Prevent your salespeople from attacking these competitors. warriors. Like their salespeople,
Attacking entrenched competition discredits your salespeople. sales managers are on the front
lines of the competitive battle,
but they have to think more like
generals than warriors. While
Competitors may shift their market focus. salespeople can focus on one ac-
They are looking for new opportunities. count at a time, sales managers
must keep them in touch with the
big strategic picture.
Notice similar changes across different sales territories.
This means that a competitive threat is building.
You may not see which competitor is behind this threat.
You must be suspicious.

Notice when buyers suddenly become shy.


Suspect that competitors are planning a surprise.
Your customers are worried.
A competitor is challenging you.
8 1  Chapter 9: Armed March
15Notice the dust.

It sometimes rises high in a straight line.


Vehicles are coming.
The dust appears low in a wide band.
Foot soldiers are coming.
The dust seems scattered in different areas.
The enemy is collecting firewood.
Any dust is light and settling down.
This section gives a clear
The enemy is setting up camp. outline for interpreting an

5 Your enemy speaks humbly while building up forces.


He is planning to advance.
opponent’s intentions. Can you
simply outline the system it
describes?

Again, remembering all these


details would be impossible
3The enemy talks aggressively and pushes as if to advance. if they weren’t connected to
an underlying framework for
He is planning to retreat. thinking. Anyone can use this
5Small vehicles exit his camp first. system, but it takes some men-
They move the army’s flanks. tal training to master it.

They are forming a battle line.


The Art of War   82
Probe salespeople for rumors about competitors.
Strategy for Sales Managers is a
Salespeople learn about competitors from top decision-makers. practical and indispensable
This foreshadows an aggressive move. guide to using Sun Tzu’s
principles to meet the daily
Salespeople hear news of competitors from many low-level people. challenges of herding cats...
I mean, managing sales-
This means competitors have many people working the market. people.
News of competitors is scattered in different territories.
This means competitors are cherry-picking accounts.
News of competitors becomes rarer and rarer.
This means that competitors are dormant.

5 Your competitors sound pessimistic but are hiring salespeople.


Prepare your salespeople for a new competitive campaign.

Your competitors make silly claims and talk about new markets.
Prepare your salespeople for competitors consolidating business.

Your competitors make quick changes.


They reorganize their product offering.
Prepare your salespeople for a competitive sales push.
8 3  Chapter 9: Armed March
8Your enemy tries to sue for peace but without offering a treaty.

He is plotting.

10Your enemy’s men run to leave and yet form ranks.

You should expect action.

12Half his army advances and the other half retreats.

He is luring you. There is a secret in the change


of topic here that can help
you understand your rivals. At
14Your enemy plans to fight but his men just stand there. first the topic was seeing your
They are starving. rivals’ activities by changes
in the environment. Here the
topic changes to seeing your ri-
16Those who draw water drink it first. vals’ plans in how they behave.
Strategic cognition requires
They are thirsty. foreseeing the future just a little
bit better than others.
18Your enemy sees an advantage but does not advance.

His men are tired.

The Art of War   84


20Birds gather.

Your enemy has abandoned his camp.

22Your enemy’s soldiers call in the night.

They are afraid.


Visit www.ScienceOfStrategy.
24Your enemy’s army is raucous. com and buy any of our books
adapting the strategy of Sun
The men do not take their commander seriously. Tzu to see how you can put
each of these methods of pre-
26Your enemy’s banners and flags shift. dicting your opponents to work
in a practical way.
Order is breaking down.

28Your enemy’s officers are irritable.

They are exhausted.

30Your enemy’s men kill their horses for meat.

They are out of provisions.

8 5  Chapter 9: Armed March


32They don’t put their pots away or return to their tents.
This chapter focuses on “mov-
They are desperate. ing,” one of the four skills in the
Progress Cycle, but movement
is more than simply doing what
34Enemy troops appear sincere and agreeable. you have planned. The most
But their men are slow to speak to each other. interesting limits on movement
are actually explained in Chap-
They are no longer united. ter 11, “Types of Terrain.”

37Your enemy offers too many incentives to his men.

He is in trouble.

39Your enemy gives out too many punishments.

His men are weary.

41Your enemy first acts violently and then is afraid of your larger force.

His best troops have not arrived.

43Your enemy comes in a conciliatory manner.

He needs to rest and recuperate.


The Art of War   86
45Your enemy is angry and appears to welcome battle.

This goes on for a long time, but he doesn’t attack.


He also doesn’t leave the field.
You must watch him carefully. The strategic question is: when
do you stop? This is one an-

6 If you are too weak to fight, you must find more men.
In this situation, you must not act aggressively.
swer to that question, but there
are at least three other condi-
tions that can affect that deci-
sion. You have already seen
You must unite your forces. one related to the environment,
when “rivers swell with rain,” in
Prepare for the enemy. other words, when conditions
Recruit men and stay where you are. in the environment are chang-
ing too rapidly.
6You must be cautious about making plans and adjust to the enemy.

You must gather more men.

7 With new, undedicated soldiers, you can depend on them if you discipline them.
They will tend to disobey your orders.
If they do not obey your orders, they will be useless.

87  Chapter 9: Armed March


4You can depend on seasoned, dedicated soldiers. Strategy works only because
you are working with other
But you must avoid disciplining them without reason. people, and humans are more
Otherwise, you cannot use them. predictable and controllable
than events. If you think you
7You must control your soldiers with esprit de corps. work alone, you are not seeing
the complete picture. Seeing
You must bring them together by winning victories. the whole system instead of
You must get them to believe in you. the parts is what we call devel-
oping your strategic cognition.

10Make it easy for people to know what to do by training your people.


Your people will then obey you.
If you do not make it easy for people to know what to do, you won’t train your people.
Then they will not obey.

14Make your commands easy to follow.

You must understand the way a crowd thinks.

The Art of War   88


Chapter 10: Field Position
Sun Tzu said:
1 Some field positions are unobstructed.
Some field positions are entangling.
Some field positions are supporting.
Some field positions are constricted.
Some field positions give you a barricade. The chapter begins with more
definitions of specific conditions.
Some field positions are spread out. In situation response, the various
arrays of different types of condi-
7You can attack from some positions easily. tions (the four types of ground in
the previous chapter, these six field
Other forces can meet you easily as well. positions, the nine types of terrain
in the next chapter) all combine
We call these unobstructed positions. to make every situation unique.
However, because they consist of
These positions are open. known components, each unique
On them, be the first to occupy a high, sunny area. condition can be broken down into
a precise recipe for success.
Put yourself where you can defend your supply routes.
Then you will have an advantage.

89  Chapter 10: Field Position


14You can attack from some positions easily.
These six “field positions” (liter-
Disaster arises when you try to return to them. ally “ground forms") are extreme
conditions in a three-dimensional
These are entangling positions. array. We have already mentioned
the nature of this array. Can you
These field positions are one-sided. remember it? Three is the number
Wait until your enemy is unprepared. describing barriers to progress. Six
is now the number indicating the
You can then attack from these positions and win. six extreme situations of the three
Avoid a well-prepared enemy. dimensions of “distance,” “dan-
gers,” and “obstacles.”
You will try to attack and lose.
Since you can’t return, you will meet disaster.
These field positions offer no advantage.

24You cannot leave some positions without losing an advantage.

If the enemy leaves this ground, he also loses an advantage.


We call these supporting field positions.
These positions strengthen you.
The enemy may try to entice you away.
Still, hold your position.
You must entice the enemy to leave.
The Art of War   9 0
You then strike him as he is leaving. The power of strategy is that it
These field positions offer an advantage. gives you the tools to recognize
the relevant conditions in common
situations and know how to react.
33Some field positions are constricted. Since all real situations are com-
pounds of the idealized situations
Get to these positions first. described here, your actions can
be calibrated to the meet the pre-
You must fill these areas and await the enemy. cise requirement of the situation,
Sometimes, the enemy will reach them first. but in practice, we often identify
the dominate characteristic of the
If he fills them, do not follow him. situation and start from there.

However, if he fails to fill them, you can go after him.

39Some field positions give you a barricade.

Get to these positions first.


You must occupy their southern, sunny heights in order to await the enemy.
Sometimes the enemy occupies these areas first.
If so, entice him away.
Never go after him.

45Some field positions are too spread out.

9 1  Chapter 10: Field Position


Your force may seem equal to the enemy.
Still you will lose if you provoke a battle.
If you fight, you will not have any advantage.

49These are the six types of field positions.


Each battleground has its own rules.
As a commander, you must know where to go.
You must examine each position closely.

Notice again that these weak-


nesses form a pattern of six. By
2 Some armies can be outmaneuvered.
Some armies are too lax.
now, you should realize that this Some armies fall down.
isn’t an accident, but can you see
the deeper connections to the key Some armies fall apart.
pattern of six? In this case, the six Some armies are disorganized.
weaknesses of armies either arise
from or show up on the six types of Some armies must retreat.
field position described earlier.
7Know all six of these weaknesses.
They create weak timing and disastrous positions.
They all arise from the army’s commander.
The Art of War   9 2
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Each position is ideally a stepping-stone to a better position. Each radio shows, I am con-
stantly asked about the
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forward in the War on Terror, we must consider each step carefully and issues by going through
know precisely what we are trying to accomplish. Sun Tzu’s entire work.

2 In fighting terror, we must make certain that our own forces have none of
these weaknesses while spotting these weaknesses in terrorist organizations.
Thus far, we have managed to outmaneuver the terrorists by moving into the
Middle East. Their armies have either fallen apart, been disorganized, or had to
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We must be aware of our potential vulnerabilities in the media battle. Our


political and military leaders must be as skilled at communication strategy as
they are at military strategy.
9 3  Chapter 10: Field Position
10One general can command a force equal to the enemy.

Still his enemy outflanks him.


This means that his army can be outmaneuvered.

13Another can have strong soldiers but weak officers.


Again we go through a series
of definitions. Remember, these This means that his army is too lax.
definition are like mathematical
equations. Together they create an
easy-to-visualize network of inter- 15Another has strong officers but weak soldiers.
connecting ideas that anyone can
master. In Sun Tzu’s highly con- This means that his army will fall down.
densed form, it can be intimidating,
but anyone can master these ideas
in time. 17Another has subcommanders that are angry and defiant.

They attack the enemy and fight their own battles.


The commander cannot know the battlefield.
This means that his army will fall apart.

21Another general is weak and easygoing.

He fails to make his orders clear.


His officers and men lack direction.
The Art of War   9 4
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9 5  Chapter 10: Field Position
This shows in his military formations.
This means that his army is disorganized.

26Another general fails to predict the enemy.


The good news is that develop-
He pits his small forces against larger ones. ing strategic cognition does not
His weak forces attack stronger ones. require memorizing situations
by rote. Mastering the key
He fails to pick his fights correctly. elements of strategy more like
This means that his army must retreat. playing a game where you as
you master one level of skill,
you can move onto the next.
31You must know all about these six weaknesses. This is how we developed the
training methodology of our
You must understand the philosophies that lead to defeat. Warrior Class on-line training.
When a general arrives, you can know what he will do.
You must study each general carefully.

3 You must control your field position.


It will always strengthen your army.

3You must predict the enemy to overpower him and win.

You must analyze the obstacles, dangers, and distances.


The Art of War   96
This is the best way to command.

6Understand your field position before you meet opponents.

Then you will succeed.


You can fail to understand your field position and meet opponents.
Then you will fail.

10You must provoke battle when you will certainly win.


Remember, “provoking a battle”
It doesn’t matter what you are ordered. doesn’t mean picking a fight.
“Battle” specifically means “meet-
The government may order you not to fight. ing a challenge or an enemy” not
conflict. Ideally, you want to meet
Despite that, you must always fight when you will win. opponents when your advantage is
so crystal clear that they know that
you will win so that they give you
14Sometimes provoking a battle will lead to a loss.
what you want rather than fighting.
The government may order you to fight.
Despite that, you must avoid battle when you will lose.

17You must advance without desiring praise.

You must retreat without fearing shame.


97  Chapter 10: Field Position
The only correct move is to preserve your troops.
This is how you serve your country.
This is how you reward your nation.

4 Think of your soldiers as little children.


You can make them follow you into a deep river.
Notice another pattern here. Both
of the last two chapters in this sec-
ond section of the book end with
Treat them as your beloved children. a discussion of managing people.
You can lead them all to their deaths. The most advanced principles in
classical strategy explain human
psychology under competitive
5Some leaders are generous but cannot use their men. pressure. The science of strategy
might be said to combine simple
They love their men but cannot command them. mathematics and basic physics
with psychology.
Their men are unruly and disorganized.
These leaders create spoiled children.
Their soldiers are useless.

5 You may know what your soldiers will do in an attack.


You may not know if the enemy is vulnerable to attack.
You will then win only half the time.
The Art of War   98
You may know that the enemy is vulnerable to attack.
You may not know if your men have the capability of attacking him.
You will still win only half the time.
You may know that the enemy is vulnerable to attack.
You may know that your men are ready to attack.
You may not, however, know how to position yourself in the field for battle.
You will still win only half the time. In the end, your success depends
on only one issue: do you under-
stand enough to make a good
11You must know how to make war.
decision in your current situation?
Everyone tries to use strategy, but
You can then act without confusion. only those skilled in its methods
You can attempt anything. are successful. A single missing
piece prevents you from complet-
ing a puzzle, but Sun Tzu gives
14We say: you all the pieces. You just have to
put them together.
Know the enemy and know yourself.
Your victory will be painless.
Know the weather and the field.
Your victory will be complete.

99  Chapter 10: Field Position


C h a p t e r 1 1 : Ty p e s o f Te r r a i n
We begin again with more definitions
Sun Tzu said: of more situations. This time the magic

1 Use the art of war.


Know when the terrain will scatter you.
number is nine. The numbers five, four,
three, six, and nine all have special
meaning in Sun Tzu’s system. They are
all part of the larger pattern.
Know when the terrain will be easy. This pattern does get more complicated
Know when the terrain will be disputed. in these final chapters, which offer more
detailed instructions on how to recognize
Know when the terrain is open. and respond to specific situations.
Know when the terrain is intersecting.
Know when the terrain is dangerous.
Know when the terrain is bad.
Know when the terrain is confined.
Know when the terrain is deadly.

11Warring parties must sometimes fight inside their own territory.

This is scattering terrain.

The Art of War   1 0 0


13When you enter hostile territory, your penetration is shallow.

This is easy terrain.

15Some terrain gives you an advantageous position.


Though these nine conditions are de-
But it gives others an advantageous position as well. scribed as “terrain,” the Chinese char-
acter means “earth” or “ground”—the
This will be disputed terrain. same “ground” that is one of the five
key factors in Chapter 1. However,
that character also means “condition”
18You can use some terrain to advance easily.
and “situation.” Here, the conditions
described are situations that arise
Others can advance along with you. over time as you advance your posi-
This is open terrain. tion.

21Everyone shares access to a given area.

The first one to arrive there can gather a larger group than anyone else.
This is intersecting terrain.

24You can penetrate deeply into hostile territory.

Then many hostile cities are behind you.


This is dangerous terrain.
1 0 1  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain
27There are mountain forests.
In many of our books explain-
There are dangerous obstructions. ing Sun Tzu, we describe these
nine “terrains” as “stages of a
There are reservoirs. campaign.” Understanding them
Everyone confronts these obstacles on a campaign. as stages is very useful in using
They make bad terrain. the techniques presented in this
chapter.

32In some areas, the entry passage is narrow.

You are closed in as you try to get out of them.


In this type of area, a few people can effectively attack your much larger force.
This is confined terrain.

36You can sometimes survive only if you fight quickly.

You will die if you delay.


This is deadly terrain.

39To be successful, you must control scattering terrain by avoiding battle.

Control easy terrain by not stopping.


Control disputed terrain by not attacking.
The Art of War   1 0 2
Control open terrain by staying with the enemy’s forces.
Control intersecting terrain by uniting with your allies.
Control dangerous terrain by plundering.
Control bad terrain by keeping on the move.
Control confined terrain by using surprise.
Control deadly terrain by fighting.

2 Go to an area that is known to be good for waging war.


Use it to cut off the enemy’s contact between his front and back lines.
Prevent his small parties from relying on his larger force.
Stop his strong divisions from rescuing his weak ones. While not every stage occurs in every
campaign, the earlier stages tend to
Prevent his officers from getting their men together. occur at the beginning of campaigns,
while the later stages tend to occur
Chase his soldiers apart to stop them from amassing. at the very end of campaigns when
Harass them to prevent their ranks from forming. victory is in sight.

8When joining battle gives you an advantage, you must do it.

When it isn’t to your benefit, you must avoid it.

1 0 3  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain


10A daring soldier may ask:

“A large, organized enemy army and its general are coming.


What do I do to prepare for them?”

13Tell him:

“First seize an area that the enemy must have.


Then he will pay attention to you.
Mastering speed is the essence of war.
Take advantage of a large enemy’s inability to keep up.
Use a philosophy of avoiding difficult situations.
Attack the area where he doesn’t expect you.”

3 You must use the philosophy of an invader.


Invade deeply and then concentrate your forces.
“Invasion” has a very specific mean-
ing in classical strategy. We men-
tioned it in the first chapter. Do you
remember it? It means moving into
a new territory. At this point, almost
This controls your men without oppressing them. every word has been defined earlier
in the text in a very clear manner.
4Get your supplies from the riches of the territory.

It is sufficient to supply your whole army.


The Art of War   1 0 4
6Take care of your men and do not overtax them.

Your esprit de corps increases your momentum.


Improving your strategic cognition can
Keep your army moving and plan for surprises. make you more successful in every
aspect of your life. Here, the issue
Make it difficult for the enemy to count your forces. is commitment. People with a weak
Position your men where there is no place to run. commitment have to be managed
and monitored. People who are truly
They will then face death without fleeing. committed are self-starting and self-
They will find a way to survive. managing. You have to take action to
really commit yourself to mastering a
Your officers and men will fight to their utmost. skill. Most people are dilettantes who
learn about skills but never make the
investment necessary to “bury their
14Military officers who are committed lose their fear. wheels in the sand” to the master
master skills. .
When they have nowhere to run, they must stand firm.
Deep in enemy territory, they are captives.
Since they cannot escape, they will fight.

18Commit your men completely.

Without being posted, they will be on guard.


Without being asked, they will get what is needed.
Without being forced, they will be dedicated.
Without being given orders, they can be trusted.
1 0 5  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain
23Stop them from guessing by removing all their doubts.

Stop them from dying by giving them no place to run.


Everyone wants success. Everyone
25Your officers may not be rich. has the desire. The difference be-
tween successful people and every-
Nevertheless, they still desire plunder. one else is that the successful people
are engaged They understand that
They may die young. they have no choice but to respond
to their situation instead of taking the
Nevertheless, they still want to live forever. path of least resistance.

29You must order the time of attack.

Officers and men may sit and weep until their lapels are wet.
When they stand up, tears may stream down their cheeks.
Put them in a position where they cannot run.
They will show the greatest courage under fire.

4 Make good use of war.


This demands instant reflexes.
You must develop these instant reflexes.
Act like an ordinary mountain snake.
The Art of War   1 06
If people strike your head then stop them with your tail.
If they strike your tail then stop them with your head.
If they strike your middle then use both your head and tail.
Remember the point of these three
8A daring soldier asks: long chapters is to get into the specif-
ics of situations. Once you under-
“Can any army imitate these instant reflexes?” stand how to quickly diagnose your
situation, you know instantly how to
We answer: react appropriately.
“It can.”

12To command and get the most out of proud people, you must study adversity.

People work together when they are in the same boat during a storm.
In this situation, one rescues the other just as the right hand helps the left.

15Use adversity correctly.

Tether your horses and bury your wagons’ wheels.


Still, you can’t depend on this alone.
An organized force is braver than lone individuals.
This is the art of organization.
1 07  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain
Put the tough and weak together.
You must also use the terrain.

22Make good use of war.

Unite your men as one.


Never let them give up.

5 The commander must be a military professional.


This requires confidence and detachment.
Notice again how the topics in these
more advanced lessons lead naturally
to a discussion of managing people.
You must maintain dignity and order. These later chapters focus much
more heavily on the complex details
You must control what your men see and hear. of human psychology. Here, the focus
They must follow you without knowing your plans. is on getting the best result when you
are working with others.

6You can reinvent your men’s roles.

You can change your plans.


You can use your men without their understanding.

9You must shift your campgrounds.

The Art of War   1 08


You must take detours from the ordinary routes.
You must use your men without giving them your strategy.

12A commander provides what is needed now.

This is like climbing high and being willing to kick away your ladder.
You must be able to lead your men deep into different surrounding territory.
And yet, you can discover the opportunity to win.
This verse sounds repetitive and
poetic, but notice that pattern of six.
16You must drive men like a flock of sheep. This relates to the unobstructed,
entangling, supporting, constricted,
You must drive them to march. barricaded, and spread-out field
You must drive them to attack. positions we discussed earlier. Could
it be that each line says something
You must never let them know where you are headed. important about managing people on
these terrains? There is also a con-
You must unite them into a great army. nection of the six field positions to the
You must then drive them against all opposition. nine terrains here, but it would require
more explanation than I can put in
This is the job of a true commander. these side notes.

23You must adapt to the different terrain.

You must adapt to find an advantage.


1 09  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain
You must manage your people’s affections.
You must study all these skills.

6 Always use the philosophy of invasion.


Deep invasions concentrate your forces.
Shallow invasions scatter your forces.
When you leave your country and cross the border, you must take control.
This is always critical ground.
You can sometimes move in any direction.
Here, Sun Tzu again lists the nine
This is always intersecting ground. terrains but in a slightly different form.
You can penetrate deeply into a territory. Why? In the original, he listed them
in the order of progress. Here he lists
This is always dangerous ground. them in the order of where you find
You penetrate only a little way. the best opportunities. Do you see
why we describe these nine terrains
This is always easy ground. as the stages of a campaign? Strate-
gy teaches that competitive situations
Your retreat is closed and the path ahead tight. tend to unfold in a certain way.
This is always confined ground.
There is sometimes no place to run.
This is always deadly ground.
The Art of War   1 1 0
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Whenever and wherever you speak, you want to get invited

1 1 1  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain


16To use scattering terrain correctly, you must inspire your men’s devotion.

On easy terrain, you must keep in close communication.


On disputed terrain, you try to hamper the enemy’s progress.
On open terrain, you must carefully defend your chosen position.
On intersecting terrain, you must solidify your alliances.
On dangerous terrain, you must ensure your food supplies.
On bad terrain, you must keep advancing along the road.
On confined terrain, you must stop information leaks from your headquarters.
On deadly terrain, you must show what you can do by killing the enemy.

25Make your men feel like an army. Here is another list of the nine ter-
rains and how to use them. What is
Surround them and they will defend themselves. different here? How does this differ-
ence relate to the people with whom
If they cannot avoid it, they will fight. you are working? These situations
If they are under pressure, they will obey. are based on how interactions with
people change over time.

7 Do the right thing when you don’t know your different enemies’ plans.
Don’t attempt to meet them.
The Art of War   1 1 2
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8. The Corporate Marketplace

Though not one of the key steps in building a speaking career, you also need
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showcases, and speakers bureaus and agents.
1 1 3  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain
3You don’t know the position of mountain forests, dangerous obstructions, and reservoirs?

Then you cannot march the army. For Sun Tzu, alliances were a double
edged sword. There are times when
You don’t have local guides? they are needed but they also create
You won’t get any of the benefits of the terrain. a potential opening for opponents.
The basic approach is to only create
alliances when they are needed for
7There are many factors in war. a specific situation and not to get
entangled in them.
You may lack knowledge of any one of them.
If so, it is wrong to take a nation into war.

10You must be able to control your government's war.

If you divide a big nation, it will be unable to put together a large force.
Increase your enemy’s fear of your ability.
Prevent his forces from getting together and organizing.

14Do the right thing and do not arrange outside alliances before their time.

You will not have to assert your authority prematurely.


Trust only yourself and your self-interest.
The Art of War   1 1 4
This increases the enemy’s fear of you.
You can make one of his allies withdraw.
His whole nation can fall.

20Distribute rewards without worrying about having a system.

Halt without the government’s command. Many statements seem innocuous to


the casual reader, but I hope these
Attack with the whole strength of your army. notes have made you aware that
Use your army as if it were a single man. phrases such as “attack with skill”
are very condensed. Another way to
say this would be, “You must use all
24Attack with skill. four skills in a cycle to move into new
areas successfully.” Remember, each
Do not discuss it. ground has its own rules.
Attack when you have an advantage.
Do not talk about the dangers.
When you launch your army into deadly ground, even if it stumbles it can still survive.
You can be weakened in a deadly battle and yet be stronger afterward.

30Even a large force can fall into misfortune.

If you fall behind, however, you can still turn defeat into victory.
1 1 5  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain
You must use the skills of war.
To survive, you must adapt yourself to your enemy’s purpose.
You must stay with him no matter where he goes.
It may take a thousand miles to kill the general.
If you correctly understand him, you can find the skill to do it.

8 Manage your government correctly at the start of a war.


Close your borders and tear up passports.
How do you apply the idea of “gov-
Block the passage of envoys. ernment” to your own use of strategy?
Encourage the halls of power to rise to the occasion. In Sun Tzu’s view, every competitor—
including you—has a “government”
You must use any means to put an end to politics. component and an “army” compo-
nent, a productive capacity and a
Your enemy’s people will leave you an opening. competitive capacity. Knowing when
You must instantly invade through it. and where to govern, that is, plan,
and when and where to use strategy
is a critical idea.
8Immediately seize a place that they love.

Do it quickly.
Trample any border to pursue the enemy.
Use your judgment about when to fight.
The Art of War   1 16
12Doing the right thing at the start of war is like approaching a woman.

Your enemy’s men must open the door.


After that, you should act like a streaking rabbit.
The enemy will be unable to catch you.
Strategy as seduction? What situation
better describes competition? As in
real competition, you don’t even have
to have a specific rival, but you are
always competing in a relationship.
Strategy is the key to seduction and
seduction a key to strategy.

We sold out of our adaptation of Sun


Tzu to relationships, called The Art of
War Plus the Art of Love, but it is and
all our out-of-print books are always
available in electronic format to mem-
bers of our Strategy School.

1 1 7  Chapter 11: Types of Terrain


Chapter 12: Attacking With Fire

Sun Tzu said:

1 There are five ways of attacking with fire.


The first is burning troops.
When you use better strategic thinking, it
The second is burning supplies. begins changing your life. If you think literally,
you might skip this chapter about "fire attacks"
The third is burning supply transport. because you are never going to attack anyone
The fourth is burning storehouses. with fire or have to defend against fire. But
strategic cognition is a way of seeing the
The fifth is burning camps. world. Here, the methods are about how you
use weapons, specifically, those created by
conditions in the environment.
7To make fire, you must have the resources.
Most of those to whom we offer this book will
To build a fire, you must prepare the raw materials. not even make it this far reading it. Fewer will
spend any time thinking about its ideas. Only
a very few have the desire and fire needed to
9To attack with fire, you must be in the right season. master its power. Those are the ones for whom
we exist.
To start a fire, you must have the time.

11Choose the right season.

The weather must be dry.


The Art of War   1 18
13Choose the right time.

Pick a season when the grass is as high as the side of a cart.

15You can tell the proper days by the stars in the night sky.

You want days when the wind rises in the morning.

2 Everyone attacks with fire.


You must create five different situations with fire and be able to adjust to them.

3You start a fire inside the enemy’s camp.


The pattern of five is repeated again here,
Then attack the enemy’s periphery. twice: first with targets and then situations.
By now, after reading these notes, you
should know how to connect the dots, that
5You launch a fire attack, but the enemy remains calm. is, connect these elements to the five key
elements described in Chapter 1.
Wait and do not attack.

7The fire reaches its height.

Follow its path if you can.


If you can’t follow it, stay where you are.
1 1 9  Chapter 12: Attacking With Fire
10Spreading fires on the outside of camp can kill.

You can’t always get fire inside the enemy’s camp.


The rules in this chapter apply to all weapons, Take your time in spreading it.
but they are tailored for “environmental” weap-
ons. Nothing is more powerful in strategy than
leveraging the environment. 13Set the fire when the wind is at your back.

Don’t attack into the wind.


Daytime winds last a long time.
Night winds fade quickly.

17 Every army must know how to adjust to the five possible attacks by fire.
Use many men to guard against them.

When you use fire to assist your attacks, you are clever.
Water can add force to an attack.
3
You can also use water to disrupt an enemy.
It does not, however, take his resources.

You win in battle by getting the opportunity to attack. 4


The Art of War   1 2 0
Articulating hidden desires can win markets. BONUS MATERIAL:
Warrior Marketing: Strategy for Con-
Do this when you cannot address a core desire. quering Markets is our adaptation
for marketing products, compa-
Take your time generating the feeling of need. nies, and creating brands. Like
all of our business adaptations,
it has the complete Art of War on
Let the competitive situation fan market desires. its left-hand pages and our line-
Do not fight against prevailing attitudes. by-line adaptation for marketing
on the facing right-hand pages.
Well-known needs are the most lasting.
Less visible needs can fade quickly.

You must master the previous five approaches to using market desires.
You defend your customers by guarding them.

3 Leveraging market desires to generate sales is smart marketing.


Using any change can add force to your campaign.
You can use market change to put competitors at a disadvantage.
Change alone, however, does not take away competitors' sales.

4 You win in market competition by targeting unfulfilled needs.


1 2 1  Chapter 12: Attacking With Fire
It is dangerous if you fail to study how to accomplish this achievement.
As commander, you cannot waste your opportunities.
We have mentioned three times in these notes
that the term “fight” doesn’t mean “conflict.” 4We say:
What does it mean? It means “use all your
resources and hold nothing back.” In strategy, A wise leader plans success.
it is an action of last resort. By now, perhaps
you can see how clarifying these ideas gives A good general studies it.
impact to what Sun Tzu is saying. See how
knowing the real meaning of the work’s terms
If there is little to be gained, don’t act.
changes the meaning of every line? If there is little to win, do not use your men.
If there is no danger, don’t fight.

10As leader, you cannot let your anger interfere with the success of your forces.

As commander, you cannot let yourself become enraged before you go to battle.
Join the battle only when it is in your advantage to act.
If there is no advantage in joining a battle, stay put.

The Art of War   1 2 2


You create competitors if you do not pay attention to satisfying those needs.
Your decisions can create a competitor's opportunities.
Warrior Marketing offers the
original source material for the
Strategy teaches: whole idea of market positioning.
Like all of our business adapta-
You use your knowledge to choose your course. tions, its application of Sun Tzu’s
You must not forget what success really means. concepts are not taken from our
English translation but directly
If a market cannot make you money, do not target it. from the deeper concepts in the
original Chinese formulas.
If it cannot be profitable, do not waste your resources.
If the target customers lack real desire, do not sell to them.

You must never let your emotions affect the success of a marketing campaign.
You must never go after a market simply because you want to humble the competition.
Go up against the competition only when it is profitable to do so.
If you cannot make money in competition, stay out of it.

1 2 3  Chapter 12: Attacking With Fire


14Anger can change back into happiness. You may one day develop the powers of
strategic cognition. When you do, you will
Rage can change back into joy. make better decisions because you will
have to rely less on your emotions. Sun
A nation once destroyed cannot be brought back to life. Tzu teaches that emotions are a poor
basis for decision-making. People make
Dead men do not return to the living. decisions based upon emotion only be-
cause they have no systematic basis, such
as the principles of strategy, for making
18This fact must make a wise leader cautious.
better decisions.
A good general is on guard.

20Your philosophy must be to keep the nation peaceful and the army intact.

The Art of War   1 2 4


Chapter 13: Using Spies

Sun Tzu said:

1 All successful armies require thousands of men.


They invade and march thousands of miles.
Better strategic thinking can make
you rich both in money and in
experience. Sun Tzu saves his
most important chapter for last.
Whole families are destroyed. It is generally about setting up
Other families must be heavily taxed. information network. Its lessons
apply directly to why we set up the
Every day, a large amount of money must be spent. Science of Strategy Institute as a
membership organization to bring
people together.
6Internal and external events force people to move.
Strategy closely connects the
They are unable to work while on the road. issues of economics and informa-
tion. Information is the topic of this
They are unable to find and hold a useful job. chapter, but the value of informa-
This affects 70 percent of thousands of families. tion starts with some important
economics. Making decisions
without a broad perspective is
10You can watch and guard for years. much more expensive.

Then a single battle can determine victory in a day.


Despite this, bureaucrats worship the value of their salary money too dearly.
They remain ignorant of the enemy’s condition.
1 2 5  Chapter 13: Using Spies
The result is cruel. We are coming to the end of the text here
and are just now getting to some of its most
important lessons. People who fail to master
15They are not leaders of men. these lessons pay the price. Taking the time
and the effort to train your mind is much less
They are not servants of the state. costly even in the short run. Who know what
They are not masters of victory. opportunities you are missing?

18People need an intelligent leader and a worthy commander.

You must move your troops to the right places to beat others.
You must accomplish your attack and escape unharmed.
This requires foreknowledge.
You can obtain foreknowledge.
You can’t get it from demons or spirits.
You can’t see it from professional experience.
You can’t check it with analysis.
You can only get it from other people.
You must always know the enemy’s situation.

The Art of War   1 26


Your business is always at risk. Failure is always a possibility. You can BONUS MATERIAL:
Nine Formulas for Busi-
always make mistakes that threaten your business, but your business is in ness Success: the Science
danger even if you operate it perfectly. Changes in the marketplace or busi- of Strategy is our new-
est book. Like the The
ness climate can put you out of business. A new competitor can open next Golden Key to Strategy
door tomorrow. New technology can revolutionize an industry overnight. it does not reference
Sun Tzu’s text directly.
Your existing competitive position is constantly eroding. You have to Instead, it reorganizes
the material to make
constantly work to improve your competitive position, and improving, it easier for today’s
expanding, and building up your business is costly. Most of your new business people to
use. It is the book we
ideas will fail to pay for themselves. Only a precious few will be successful. use at the outline for
the Institute’s training
You can run a business for years. Then a single opportunity can come program. For example,
along and change everything. You must choose whether to embrace that Sun Tzu’s last chapter
on how to gather
opportunity or to reject it. If the opportunity proves to be false, embrac- information is so
ing it will cost you everything that you have built up over the years. If the critical that its material
becomes on of the first
opportunity proves to be your big chance at success, rejecting it may lead chapters in the Nine
Formulas system for
inevitably to failure. using Sun Tzu’s ideas.
You have to make the right decisions every day. Despite this, many
businesspeople invest their time, money, and effort in advertising, inven-
tory, and systems, but they don’t invest in building their channels of
1 27  Chapter 13: Using Spies
2 You must use five types of spies.
You need local spies.
You shouldn’t be surprised at this point by the
pattern of five. As you grasp the dimensions
of the five key elements, you see that they are
You need inside spies. the key to understanding Sun Tzu.
You need double agents. You might be a little surprised to learn that
You need doomed spies. the term translated as “spies” is really closer
in meaning to “go-between.” What Sun Tzu
You need surviving spies. is really talking about here is what a com-
puter person might call “interfaces,” points at
which people connect to people through other
7You need all five types of spies. people.

No one must discover your methods.


You will then be able to put together a true picture.
This is the commander’s most valuable resource.

11You need local spies.

Get them by hiring people from the countryside.

13You need inside spies.

Win them by subverting government officials.


The Art of War   1 28
information. The result can be devastating. Nine Formulas for Busi-
ness Success: reduces
Without the right information, you cannot compete. You cannot develop all of Sun Tzu’s ideas
a competitive position that attracts customers. You cannot run a business into a series of nine
recipes for success
profitably. It doesn’t matter how hard you work; without the right informa- in business. Here,
for example, the Find
tion, you will always be doing the wrong things at the wrong times. Friends formula com-
bines the range of con-
The Find Friends Formula tacts discussed in this
chapter with Sun Tzu’s
advice for managing
Ingredients: people and identifying
1) A focus on the future, 2) a range of contacts, 3) old pros, 4) young eyes, opportunities,

5) customer connections, 6) competitor contacts, 7) missionaries, 8) a sense of value, 9)


(optional) a specific opportunity
Instructions:
1) Develop a preference for getting information directly from people. 2) Look for a range of contacts.
3) Get to know some old business pros. 4) Get in regular contact with young people. 5) Make a con-
nection with your customers. 6) Contact your competitors’ contacts. 7) Develop your missionaries.
8) Invest time in maintaining relationships. 9) When targeting a specific opportunity, extend your
information network to gather specific information.

1 29  Chapter 13: Using Spies


15You need double agents.

Discover enemy agents and convert them.

17You need doomed spies.

Deceive professionals into being captured.


Let them know your orders.
They then take those orders to your enemy.

21You need surviving spies.

Someone must return with a report.

3 Your job is to build a complete army.


No relations are as intimate as the ones with spies.
Strategic cognition is based on the science of
information management for decision-making,
but not the computer type of information man-
agement. It is understanding the information
No rewards are too generous for spies. you get from real, live people.

No work is as secret as that of spies.

5If you aren’t clever and wise, you can’t use spies.

If you aren’t fair and just, you can’t use spies.


The Art of War   1 3 0
If you can’t see the small subtleties, you won’t get the truth from spies.

8Pay attention to small, trifling details!

Spies are helpful in every area.

10Spies are the first to hear information, so they must not spread information.

Spies who give your location or talk to others must be killed along with those to whom they have
talked.

4 You may want to attack an army’s position.


You may want to attack a certain fortification.
This chapter brings us full circle in strategic
theory. The book begins with analysis, but
analysis begins with information. Good strat-
You may want to kill people in a certain place. egy develops a feedback loop in which good
You must first know the guarding general. analysis followed by good strategic moves
leads to better information and better decisions
You must know his left and right flanks. and better moves.
You must know his hierarchy.
You must know the way in.
You must know where different people are stationed.
You must demand this information from your spies.
1 3 1  Chapter 13: Using Spies
10You want to know the enemy spies in order to convert them into your men.

You find sources of information and bribe them. Knowledge is power.


Strategy is the
You must bring them in with you. knowledge of power.
You must obtain them as double agents and use them as your emissaries. We provide this free
version of Sun Tzu’s
work because we
14Do this correctly and carefully. want to give you an
idea of what you can
You can contact both local and inside spies and obtain their support. learn and do with
history’s most power-
Do this correctly and carefully. ful knowledge.
You create doomed spies by deceiving professionals.
You can use them to give false information.
Do this correctly and carefully.
You must have surviving spies capable of bringing you information at the right time.

21These are the five different types of intelligence work.

You must be certain to master them all.


You must be certain to create double agents.
You cannot afford to be too cost conscious in creating these double agents.
The Art of War   1 3 2
5 This technique created the success of ancient Shang.
This is how the Shang held its dynasty.
Sun Tzu wrote for the
people of his time, who
understood these cultural
references. The Institute
was created for people
today.
3You must always be careful of your success.
As this book ends, you
Learn from Lu Ya of Shang. have a simple choice.
You can let your study of
Sun Tzu end here with
5Be a smart commander and a good general. your habits of thinking
unchanged. Or you can
You do this by using your best and brightest people for spying. enjoy the benefits of work-
ing with others who share
This is how you achieve the greatest success. your interests in strategy
and sign up as a Institute
This is how you meet the necessities of war. member today.
The whole army’s position and ability to move depends on these spies.

1 3 3  Chapter 13: Using Spies


Thus ends Sun Tzu's The Art of War.
At this point, you have to make a decision. Sun Tzu’s system is the science of making
better decisions. At this point, are you satisfied just being able to say you read The Art of
War? Or do you want to develop a better sense of strategic awareness? Are you willing
commit yourself to taking the first steps?
The Science of Strategy Institute is a membership organization, creating a home for people
who want to study the principles of strategic decision-making. We offer three levels of
membership:
Full Membership: Annual Dues: $89.00*
Benefits: Complete access to all member publications, and past libraries, special interest
groups, forums, local groups, and initial on-line training. Membership discounts on books,
additional training, and certification.
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Benefits: On-going access to member publications. Membership discounts on books, addi-
tional training, and certification. Membership in one local chapter or special interest group.
Student Membership: Annual Dues: $19.00*
Benefits: The benefits of full membership but restricted to full-time K-12 or college stu-
dents.
For more about the benefits of each program, visit our Membership Benefits page.
For information about memberships for your organization, visit our Organization page.

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