|
Showing 1 - 23 of
23 matches in All Departments
This is Volume Five (30 articles) of our Art of War Rule Book. This
part of the Rule Book focuses on Sun Tzu's principles for avoiding
the most common strategic mistakes and minimizing the size of
potential errors. His method is for avoiding mistakes lies in
choosing the least risky ways to explore an opportunity. As with
the original work, the Playbook repeatedly references related
concepts again and again in different competitive contexts.
However, unlike the original, these articles explain these concepts
in detail and illustrates them with examples from modern
competition. This provides an understanding of Sun Tzu you can only
get otherwise from years of study. While the original Art of War
was originally written for military generals who understood the
philosophical concepts of ancient China, the Art of War Playbook is
written for today's readers and provide enough descriptive material
so that Sun Tzu's ideas can actually be used in everyday life.
Because of its size and detail, the Playbook is published in nine
volumes. This is the fifth volume. It contains a review of the
previous volumes so that readers can understand the larger context
of the work. The concepts covered in this volume are listed below:
Contents Rule Book Overview About Positions About Mistakes 5.0.0
Minimizing Mistakes 5.1.0 Mission Priorities 5.1.1 Event Pressure
5.1.2 Unproductive Responsibility 5.2.0 Opportunity Exploration
5.2.1 Choosing Adaptability 5.2.2 Campaign Methods 5.2.3 Unplanned
Steps 5.3.0 Reaction Time 5.3.1 Speed and Quickness 5.3.2
Opportunity Windows 5.3.3 Information Freshness 5.4.0 Minimizing
Action 5.4.1 Testing Value 5.4.2 Successful Mistakes 5.5.0 Focused
Power 5.5.1 Force Size 5.5.2 Distance Limitations 5.5.3 Evaluation
Deadlines 5.6.0 Defensive Advances 5.6.1 Defense Priority 5.6.2
Acting Now162 The Art of War Rule Book Series About the Translator
and Author Other Art of War Books by Gary Gagliardi Glossary of Key
Concepts The Nine Parts of the Rule Book cover the following
topics: 1. Positions, 2. Perspective, 3. Opportunities, 4.
Probability, 5. Mistakes, 6. Situations, 7. Momentum, 8. Rewards,
and 9. Vulnerabilities.
This is Volume Eight (25 articles) of our Art of War Playbook. It
is both the shortest and perhaps the most important of the series.
The articles in this volume explain how you must make claims to win
the rewards of positioning. On unique aspects of Sun Tzu's
competitive system is that focuses specifically in on winning
rewards rather than just winning battles. The Playbook itself is
the culmination of over a decade of work breaking down Sun Tzu's
principles into a series of step-by-step practical articles by the
Institute's multiple award-winning author and internationally
recognized Art of War expert, Gary Gagliardi. The work explains the
concepts in the verses of Sun Tzu's classic on strategy in detail,
explaining the situations to which they apply the steps in Sun
Tzu's system for using them with examples from modern competition.
While the original Art of War was originally written for military
generals who understood the philosophical concepts of ancient
China, our Art of War Playbook is written for today's readers and
provide enough descriptive material so that Sun Tzu's ideas can
actually be used in everyday life. The Art of War Playbook puts Sun
Tzu's ideas into everyday, practical language as a book of
instruction. Because of its size and detail, the Playbook is
published in nine volumes. The concepts covered in this volume are
listed below: Playbook Overview About Positions About Rewards 8.0.0
Winning Rewards 8.1.0 Successful Positions 8.1.1 Transforming
Resources 8.1.2 Reward Boundaries 8.1.3 Reward Timing 8.2.0 Making
Claims 8.3.0 Securing Rewards 8.3.1 Gauging Value 8.3.2 Distinctive
Packaging 8.3.3 articles of Engagement 8.3.4 Position Production
8.4.0 Individual Support 8.5.0 Leveraging Emotions 8.6.0 Winning
Attention 8.7.0 Productivity Improvement 8.7.1 Position Erosion
8.7.2 Abandoning Positions The Art of War Playbook Series About the
Translator and Author Other Art of War Books by Gary Gagliardi
Glossary of Key Concepts Except for review and overview articles,
each article is written in standard format including the related
quote in Sun Tzu, the general principle in more modern terms, the
situation to which the rule is applied or which necessitates the
rule, the opportunity created or exploited by the concept, the list
of specific Art of War articles breaking down the general principle
into a series of actionable steps with references to related
concepts in the Playbook, and illustrations of the application of
each of those step to a specific competitive arena, i.e. sales,
politics, small business, etc. articles are written generically to
apply to every competitive arena (business, personal life, career,
sports, relationships, etc.) with each specific illustrations drawn
from one of these areas. The initial number identifies where each
article appears in Playbook Structure. For example, the article
2.1.3 Strategic Deception is the third article in the first section
of the second book in the nine volumes of the Strategy Playbook. In
our on-line version, this links are live, clicking on them brings
you to the article itself. We provide them because the
interconnection of concepts is useful important in learning Sun
Tzu's system. The Nine Parts of the Playbook cover the following
topics: 1. Positions, 2. Perspective, 3. Opportunities, 4.
Probability, 5. Mistakes, 6. Situations, 7. Momentum, 8. Rewards,
and 9. Vulnerabilities.
This is Volume Six (47 articles) of our Art of War Playbook. This
is the longest volume of the Playbook. The principles in this
volume explain the nature of a competitive campaign, the nine
common situations that arise in campaigns, and the proper responses
to those situations. The Playbook itself is the culmination of over
a decade of work breaking down Sun Tzu's principles into a series
of step-by-step practical articles by the Institute's multiple
award-winning author and internationally recognized Art of War
expert, Gary Gagliardi. The work explains the concepts in the
verses of Sun Tzu's classic on strategy in detail, explaining the
situations to which they apply the steps in Sun Tzu's system for
using them with examples from modern competition. While the
original Art of War was originally written for military generals
who understood the philosophical concepts of ancient China, our Art
of War Plabook is written for today's readers and provide enough
descriptive material so that Sun Tzu's ideas can actually be used
in everyday life. The Art of War Playbook puts Sun Tzu's ideas into
everyday, practical language as a book of instruction. Because of
its size and detail, the Rule Book is published in nine volumes.
The concepts covered in this volume are listed below: Rule Book
Overview About Positions About Responding To Situations 6.0.0
Situation Response 6.1.0 Situation Recognition 6.1.1 Conditioned
Reflexes 6.1.2 Prioritizing Conditions 6.2.0 Campaign Evaluation
6.2.1 Campaign Flow 6.2.2 Campaign Goals 6.3.0 Campaign Patterns
6.3.1 Early-Stage Situations 6.3.2 Middle-Stage Situations 6.3.3
Late-Stage Situations 6.4.0 Nine Situations 6.4.1 Dissipating
Situations 6.4.2 Easy Situations 6.4.3 Contentious Situations 6.4.4
Open Situations 6.4.5 Intersecting Situations 6.4.6 Serious
Situations 6.4.7 Difficult Situations 6.4.8 Limited Situations
6.4.9 Desperate Situations 6.5.0 Nine Responses 6.5.1 Dissipating
Response 6.5.2 Easy Response 6.5.3 Contentious Response 6.5.4 Open
Response 6.5.5 Intersecting Response 6.5.6 Serious Response 6.5.7
Difficult Response 6.5.8 Limited Response 6.5.9 Desperate Response
6.6.0 Campaign Pause 6.7.0 Tailoring to Conditions 6.7.1 Form
Adjustments 6.7.2 Size Adjustments 6.7.3 Strength Adjustments 6.8.0
Competitive Psychology 6.8.1 Adversity and Creativity 6.8.2
Strength in Adversity 6.8.3 Individual Toughness The Art of War
Rule Book Series About the Translator and Author Other Art of War
Books by Gary Gagliardi Glossary of Key Concepts The Nine Volumes
of the Playbook cover the following topics: 1. Positions, 2.
Perspective, 3. Opportunities, 4. Probability, 5. Mistakes, 6.
Situations, 7. Momentum, 8. Rewards, and 9. Vulnerabilities.
Two books in one, this award-winning work contains the complete
original text of "The Art of War" on the left-hand pages and its
line-by-line adaptation for facing marketing challenges, "The Art
of Marketing" on the facing right-hand pages. This book applies Sun
Tzu's methods to positioning a brand in the marketplace and
creating market awareness of that brand. It focuses specifically on
choosing the right target markets and seeing opportunities among
specific groups of people. It won Ben Franklin Book Award
recognition as one of the best Business books of the year. This
book also contains the only award-winning complete English
translation of Sun Tzu's "The Art of War." Sample Text: "Sun Tzu
said: 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. Your skill comes from five
factors. Study these factors when you plan war. You must insist on
knowing your situation. 1.Discuss philosophy. 2.Discuss the
climate. 3.Discuss the ground. 4.Discuss leadership. 5.Discuss
military methods." This is market competition. Without marketing
strategy, your organization will fail. Marketing is the foundation
of fortunes and failures. Your marketing strategy is to preserve
the best and destroy the rest. You must see all aspects of your
market position. There are five aspects that define your position
in a marketplace. Weigh these factors in your market analysis. You
must insist on knowing your marketing situation. 1.Discuss your
business mission. 2.Discuss the marketplace trends. 3.Discuss your
market segment. 4.Discuss decision-making. 5.Discuss the marketing
process. Table of Contents: The Art of War Plus The Art of
Marketing Foreword: Using This Book9 Introduction: Sun Tzu's Basic
Concepts19 1 Analysis25 Research27 2 Going to War39 Targeting41
3Planning an Attack51 Focus53 4Positioning63 Branding65 5Momentum
75 Creativity77 6Weakness and Strength87 Needs and Satisfaction89 7
Armed Conflict103 Communication105 8 Adaptability 117 Resilience119
9Armed March127 Campaigns129 10Field Position 147 Opportunities149
11Types of Terrain 165 Stages167 12 Attacking with Fire191
Desires193 13 Using Spies 203 Intelligence205 Glossary of Strategic
Concepts216 Index of Topics in The Art of War220 About the
Authors222
This is Volume Two (27 articles) of our Art of War Playbook. This
section of the Playbook focuses on Sun Tzu's concepts for using
information in competition, specifically, getting a more complete
and useful picture from competitive information. In Sun Tzu, key
strategic information is a combination of objective facts and
subject opinions that changes dramatically with a shift
perspective. The Playbook itself is the culmination of over a
decade of work breaking down Sun Tzu's principles into a series of
step-by-step practical articles by the Institute's multiple
award-winning author and internationally recognized Art of War
expert, Gary Gagliardi. Unlike most of Gagliardi's other books on
The Art of War, this work does not follow the original work's
structure, verse by verse. Instead, it explains the concepts
described the quoted verses in a manner more familiar to modern
readers. The original Art of War was originally written for
military generals who understood the philosophical concepts of
ancient China. Our Art of War Playbook is written for today's
reader with enough descriptive material so that Sun Tzu's
principles can actually be used in everyday competition. It puts
Sun Tzu's key methods into everyday, practical language as a book
of instruction. Because of its size and detail, the Playbook is
published in nine volumes. This is just the second volume. The
topics covered in this volume are listed below: Playbook Overview
About Perspective 2.0.0 Developing Perspective 2.1 Information
Value 2.1.1 Information Limits 2.1.2 Leveraging Uncertainty 2.1.3
Strategic Deception 2.1.4 Surprise 2.2 Information Gathering 2.2.1
Personal Relationships 2.2.2 Mental Models 2.2.3 Standard
Terminology 2.3 Personal Interactions 2.3.1 Action and Reaction
2.3.2 Reaction Unpredictability 2.3.3 Likely Reactions 2.3.4 Using
Questions 2.3.5 Infinite Loops 2.3.6 Promises and Threats 2.4
Contact Networks 3 2.4.1 Ground Perspective 8 2.4.2 Climate
Perspective 3 2.4.3 Command Perspective 8 2.4.4 Methods Perspective
3 2.4.5 Mission Perspective 8 2.5 The Big Picture 3 2.6 Knowledge
Leverage 8 2.7 Information Secrecy 3
This is Volume One (28 articles) of our Art of War Playbook. This
first part of the Playbook focuses on Sun Tzu's concepts for
understanding and evaluating strategic positions. Sun Tzu's
powerful approach to winning starts with the concept that
competition is simply comparison and what is compared is "a
position," which is a combination of five key elements. The
Playbook itself is the culmination of over a decade of work
breaking down Sun Tzu's principles into a series of step-by-step
practical articles by the Institute's multiple award-winning author
and internationally recognized Art of War expert, Gary Gagliardi.
Unlike most of Gagliardi's other books on The Art of War, this work
does not follow the original work's structure, verse by verse.
Instead, it explains the concepts described the quoted verses in a
manner more familiar to modern readers. The original Art of War was
originally written for military generals who understood the
philosophical concepts of ancient China. Our Art of War Playbook is
written for today's reader with enough descriptive material so that
Sun Tzu's ideas can actually be used in everyday competition. It
puts Sun Tzu's ideas into everyday, practical language as a book of
instruction. Because of its size and detail, the Playbook is
published in nine volumes. This is just the first volume. The
topics covered in this volume are listed below: A Playbook Overview
About Positions 1.0 Strategic Positioning 1.1 Position Paths 1.1.1
Position Dynamics 1.1.2 Defending Positions 1.2 Subobjective
Positions 1.2.1 Competitive Landscapes 1.2.3 Position Complexity
1.3 Elemental Analysis 1.3.1 Competitive Comparison 1.3.2 Element
Scalability 1.4 The External Environment 1.4.1 Climate Shift 1.4.2
Ground Features 1.5 Competing Agents 1.5.1 Command Leadership
1.5.2. Group Methods 1.6 Mission Values 1.6.1 Shared Mission 1.6.2
Types of Motivations 1.6.3 Shifting Priorities 1.7 Competitive
Power 1.7.1 Team Unity 1.7.2 Goal Focus 1.8 Progress Cycle 1.8.1
Creation and Destruction 1.8.2 The Adaptive Loop 1.8.3 Cycle Time
1.8.4 Probabilistic Process 1.9 Competition and Production 1.9.1
Production Comparisons 1.9.2 Span of Control
The book that is the basis of the Science of Strategy Institute's
on-line training program. This award-winning book ("Foreword
Magazine's" Self-Help Book of the Year) offers our most detailed
lessons of Sun Tzu's strategic methods. The book was designed as
long series of short, easy-to-understand lessons for those who
really want to understand the inner workings of human competition.
Examples from modern business and every day life are used to
illustrate what people do right and wrong in making strategic
decisions.Each lesson is put into a format that frames each stanza
of Sun Tzu's work as a specific strategic concept. Sun Tzu's
non-intuitive approach to success is contrasted with our less
successful instinctual reactions to competitive challenges. Below,
we show you the table of contents, a list of the type of topics the
lessons address, and a sample lesson from the book. Table of
Contents Lesson Topics10 Using This Book15 Introduction: Sun Tzu's
Basic Concepts Lessons 1-2116 Analysis Lessons 22-3839 Going to War
Lessons 39-5358 Planning an Attack Lessons 54-6874 Positioning
Lessons 69-8590 Momentum Lessons 86-104108 Weakness and Strength
Lessons 105-124128 Armed Conflict Lessons 125-145150 Adaptability
Lessons 146-159172 Armed March Lessons 160-193188 Field Position
Lessons 194-220224 Types of Terrain Lessons 221-267252 Attacking
with Fire Lessons 268-284300 Using Spies Lessons 285-306318
Glossary of Key Concepts342 Index of Art of War Topics348 Sample
List of Lesson Topics: Emotion versus Strategy17 2: The Framework
of Strategy18 3: The Goal of Strategy19 4: A Unique Position20 5:
The Competitive Environment21 6: The Changing Times22 7:
Competitive Success23 8: The Need for a Philosophy24 9: Advancing a
Position25 10: The Source of Knowledge26 11: The Source of
Opportunity27 12: Acting on Vision28 13: Positioning29 14: Attacks
and Battles30 15: Moving through Opposition31 Sample Lesson Lesson
14: Attacks and Battles What is the difference between an attack, a
battle, and conflict? A.Only conflict is inherently destructive.
B.Only battle is inherently costly. C.Only attack is inherently
aggressive. D.There is no difference. "You must avoid disasters
from armed conflict." The Art of War 7:1.5 Answer: A. Only conflict
is inherently destructive. In English, conflict, battle, and attack
can be used interchangeably. However, Sun Tzu expresses these ideas
as three distinct, though related, concepts critical to his
strategic theory. The concept of attack is " gong." It means
movement (" hang") into a new area. It doesn't necessarily-but
can-mean meeting the enemy in battle or conflict with an opposing
force. Attacks are the topic of chapter 3, Planning an Attack. The
concept of battle is " zhan," which means meeting challenges or
opponents but not necessarily conflict with them. We meet opponents
when we have an advantage-when our opponents will back down,
surrender, or come to an advantageous agreement. The final concept
is " zheng," conflict. This is the destructive meeting of forces.
Typically, we avoid conflict, but it is not always avoidable. This
is the topic of chapter 7, Armed Conflict. So we have an array of
ideas becoming progressively more costly. Movement ("hang") is the
most general. Movement into new areas is attack ("gong"). Attacks
that involve confrontation are battles ("zhan"). Battles that
involve conflict are "zheng" .
|
You may like...
Business Cases
Sharon Rudansky-Kloppers
Paperback
(2)
R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
|