Ebook: Sun Tzu was a sissy: conquer your enemies, promote your friends, and wage the real art of war
Author: Bing Stanley, Sunzi
- Tags: Business & Economics--Leadership, Business & Economics--Management, Executive ability, Management, Success in business, Humor, Sunzi -- active 6th century B.C, Executive ability -- Humor, Management -- Humor, Success in business -- Humor, Business & Economics -- Leadership, Business & Economics -- Management
- Year: 2009
- Publisher: HarperCollins e-books
- City: New York
- Language: English
- epub
We live in a vicious, highly competitive workplace environment, and things aren't getting any better. Jobs are few and far between, and people aren't any nicer now than they were when Ghengis Khan ran around in big furs killing people in unfriendly acquisitions. For thousands of years, people have been reading the writings of the deeply wise, but also extremely dead Chinese philosopher Sun Tzu, who was perhaps the first to look on the waging of war as a strategic art that could be taught to people who wished to be warlords and other kinds of senior managers.
In a nutshell, Sun Tzu taught that readiness is all, that knowledge of oneself and the enemy was the foundation of strength and that those who fight best are those who are prepared and wise enough not to fight at all. Unfortunately, in the current day, this approach is pretty much horse hockey, a fact that has not been recognized by the bloated, tree-hugging Sun Tzu industry, which churns out mushy-gushy...