We present everything you need to know about facing your foes, and all of life's battles, based on the book The 33 Strategies of War by best-selling author Robert Greene.
Greene has studied countless battles throughout history and pulled together the need-to-know strategies that can also be used for "winning the subtle social game of everyday life."
The first 4 strategies are all about getting your head in the game.
The Polarity Strategy
Life is endless battle and conflict, and you cannot fight effectively unless you can identify your enemies.
Learn to smoke out your enemies, to spot them by the signs and patterns that reveal hostility.
Then, once you have them in your sights, inwardly declare war.
Your enemies can fill you with purpose and direction.
In the heat of battle, the mind tends to lose its balance. It is vital to keep you presence of mind, maintaining your mental powers, whatever the circumstances. Make the mind tougher by exposing it to adversity. Learn to detach yourself from the chaos of the battlefield.
Create a sense of urgency and desperation
ORGANIZATIONAL (TEAM) WARFARE
The next 3 strategies are about making the most of your team.
Ideas and tactics mean nothing without an organized, responsive, creative, and motivated army.
The problem in leading any group is that people inevitably have their own agendas.
You have to create a chain of command in which they do not feel constrained by your influence yet follow your lead. Create a sense of participation, but do not fall into groupthink — the irrationality of collective decision making.
The Controlled-Chaos Strategy
The critical elements in war are speed and adaptability — the ability to move and make decisions faster than the enemy.
Break forces into independent groups that can operate on their own.
Make your forces elusive and unstoppable by infusing them with the spirit of the campaign, giving them a mission to accomplish, and then letting them run.
Transform your war into a crusade
The next four strategies will reveal defensive warfare is the height of strategic wisdom — a powerful style of waging war.
Get ready to master the arts of deception.
The Counterattack Strategy
Moving first — initiating the attack — will often put you at a disadvantage: You are exposing your strategy and limiting your options.
Instead, discover the power of holding back and letting the other side move first, giving you the flexibility to counterattack from any angle.
If your opponents are aggressive, bait them into a rash attack that will leave them in a weak position.
To retreat in the face of a strong enemy is not a sign of weakness but of strength.
Grand Strategy
It's the art of looking beyond the battle and calculating ahead.
It requires that you focus on your ultimate goal and plot to reach it.
Let others get caught up in the twists and turns of the battle, relishing their little victories.
Grand strategy will bring you the ultimate reward: the last laugh.
Know your enemy
Control the dynamic
When you attack people directly, you stiffen their resistance and make your task that much harder. There is a better way: Distract your opponents' attention to the front, then attack them from the side, where they least expect it.
Bait people into going out on a limb exposing their weakness, then rake them with fire from the side.
The Annihilation Strategy
People will use any kind of gap in your defenses to attack you. So offer no gaps. The secret is to envelop your opponents — create relentless pressure on them from all sides and close off their access to the outside world.
The Diplomatic-War Strategy
Before and during negotiations, you must keep advancing, creating relentless pressure and compelling the other side to settle on your terms.
The more you take, the more you can give back in meaningless concessions.
Create a reputation for being tough and uncompromising, so that people are back on their heels before they even meet you.
Know how to end things
The Exit Strategy
You are judged in this world by how well you bring things to an end. A messy or incomplete conclusion can reverberate for years to come.
The art of ending things well is knowing when to stop.
The height of strategic wisdom is to avoid all conflicts and entanglements from which there are no realistic exits.
The Ordinary-Extraordinary Strategy
People expect your behavior to conform to known patterns and conventions. Your task as a strategist is to upset their expectations.
First do something ordinary and conventional to fix their image of you, then hit them with the extraordinary.
The terror is greater for being so sudden. Sometimes the ordinary is extraordinary because it is unexpected.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Instead of frontal battles, deliver irritating but damaging side attacks and pinprick bites.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
The best way to advance your cause with the minimum of effort and bloodshed is to create a constantly shifting network of alliances, getting others to compensate for your deficiencies, do your dirty work, fight your wars. At the same time, you must work to sow dissension in the alliances of others, weakening your enemies by isolating them.
The One-Upmanship Strategy
Life's greatest dangers often come not from external enemies but from our supposed colleagues and friend who pretend to work for the common cause while scheming to sabotage us. Work to instill doubts and insecurities in such rivals, getting them to think too much and act defensively. Make them hang themselves through their own self-destructive tendencies, leaving you blameless and clean.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Communication Strategies
Communication is a kind of war, its field of battle is the resistant and defensive minds of the people you want to influence.
The goal is to penetrate their defenses and occupy their minds. Learn to infiltrate your ideas behind enemy lines, sending messages through little details, luring people into coming to the conclusions you desire and into thinking they've gotten there by themselves.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Greene has studied countless battles throughout history and pulled together the need-to-know strategies that can also be used for "winning the subtle social game of everyday life."
SELF-DIRECTED WARFARE
The mind is the starting point of all war and all strategy...
Declare war on your enemies
Life is endless battle and conflict, and you cannot fight effectively unless you can identify your enemies.
Learn to smoke out your enemies, to spot them by the signs and patterns that reveal hostility.
Then, once you have them in your sights, inwardly declare war.
Your enemies can fill you with purpose and direction.
Do not fight the past
The Guerrilla-War-Of-The-Mind Strategy
What most often weighs you down and brings you misery is the past. You must consciously force yourself to react to the present moment. Be ruthless on yourself; do not repeat the same tired methods.
Wage guerrilla war on your mind, allowing no static lines of defense — make everything fluid and mobile.
Amidst the turmoil of events, do not lose your presence of mind
The Counterbalance Strategy
Create a sense of urgency and desperation
The Death-Ground Strategy
You are your own worst enemy. You waste previous time dreaming of the future instead of engaging in the present. Cut your ties to the past — enter unknown territory. Place yourself on "death ground", where your back is against the wall and you have to fight like hell to get out alive.
ORGANIZATIONAL (TEAM) WARFARE
Ideas and tactics mean nothing without an organized, responsive, creative, and motivated army.
Avoid the snares of groupthink
The Command-And-Control Strategy
The problem in leading any group is that people inevitably have their own agendas.
You have to create a chain of command in which they do not feel constrained by your influence yet follow your lead. Create a sense of participation, but do not fall into groupthink — the irrationality of collective decision making.
Segment your forces
Make your forces elusive and unstoppable by infusing them with the spirit of the campaign, giving them a mission to accomplish, and then letting them run.
Transform your war into a crusade
Morale Strategy
The secret to motivating people and maintaining their morale is to get them to think less about themselves and more about the group. Involve them in a cause, a crusade against a hated enemy. Make them see their survival as tied to the success of the army as a whole.
DEFENSIVE WARFARE
Pick your battles carefully
The Perfect-Economy Strategy
We all have limitations — our energies and skills will take us only so far.
You must know your limits and pick your battles carefully. Consider the hidden costs of war: time lost, political goodwill squandered, an embittered enemy bent on revenge. Sometimes it is better to wait, to undermine your enemies covertly rather than hitting them straight on.
Turn the tables
Instead, discover the power of holding back and letting the other side move first, giving you the flexibility to counterattack from any angle.
If your opponents are aggressive, bait them into a rash attack that will leave them in a weak position.
Create a threatening presence
Deterrence Strategies
The best way to fight off aggressors is to keep them from attacking you in the first place. Build up a reputation: You're a little crazy. Fighting you is not worth it. Uncertainty is sometimes better than overt threat: If your opponents are never sure what messing with you will cost, they will not want to find out.
Trade space for time
The Non-Engagement Strategy
To retreat in the face of a strong enemy is not a sign of weakness but of strength.
By resisting the temptation to respond to an aggressor, you buy yourself valuable time — time to recover, to think, to gain perspective.
Sometimes you can accomplish most by doing nothing.
OFFENSIVE WARFARE
The next 11 strategies outline the form of warfare practiced by the most successful captains in history.
The secret to their success is a blend of strategic cleverness and audacity — it will give all of your attacks much greater force.
Lose battles but end the war
It's the art of looking beyond the battle and calculating ahead.
It requires that you focus on your ultimate goal and plot to reach it.
Let others get caught up in the twists and turns of the battle, relishing their little victories.
Grand strategy will bring you the ultimate reward: the last laugh.
Know your enemy
The Intelligence Strategy
The target of your strategies should be less the army you face than the mind or women who runs it. If you understand how that mind works, you have the key to deceiving and controlling it. Train yourself to read people, picking up the signals they unconsciously send about their innermost thoughts and intentions.
In a world in which many people are indecisive and overly cautious, the use of speed will bring you untold power.
Striking first, before your opponents have time to think or prepare, will make them emotional, unbalanced, and prone to error.
Control the dynamic
Forcing Strategies
People are constantly struggling to control you. The only way to get the upper hand is to make your play for control more intelligence and insidious. Instead of trying to dominate the other side's every move, work to define the nature of the relationship itself.
Maneuver to control your opponents' minds, pushing their emotional buttons and compelling them to make mistakes.
Hit them where it hurts
The Center-Of-Gravity Strategy
Everyone has a source of power on which he or she depends. When you look at your rivals, search below the surface for that source, the center of gravity that holds the entire structure together.
Hitting them there will inflict disproportionate pain.
Find what the other side most cherishes and protects — that is where you must strike.
Defeat them in denial
The Divide-And-Conquer Strategy
Never be intimated by your enemy's appearance. Instead, look at the parts that make up the whole. By separating the parts, sowing dissension and division, you can bring down even the most formidable foe.
When you are facing troubles or enemies, turn a large problem into small, eminently defeatable parts.
Expose and attack your opponent's soft flank
The Turning Strategy
Bait people into going out on a limb exposing their weakness, then rake them with fire from the side.
Envelop the enemy
People will use any kind of gap in your defenses to attack you. So offer no gaps. The secret is to envelop your opponents — create relentless pressure on them from all sides and close off their access to the outside world.
As you send their weakening resolve, crush their willpower by tightening the noose.
Maneuver them into weakness
The Ripening-For-The-Sickle Strategy
No matter how strong you are, fighting endless battles with people is exhausting, costly, and unimaginative. Wise strategist prefer the art of maneuver: Before the battle even begins, they find ways to put their opponents in positions of such weakness that victory is easy and quick. Create dilemmas: Devise maneuvers that give them a choice of ways to respond — all of them bad.
Negotiate while advancing
The more you take, the more you can give back in meaningless concessions.
Create a reputation for being tough and uncompromising, so that people are back on their heels before they even meet you.
Know how to end things
The art of ending things well is knowing when to stop.
The height of strategic wisdom is to avoid all conflicts and entanglements from which there are no realistic exits.
UNCONVENTIONAL (DIRTY) WARFARE
The following 11 strategies will give a greater understanding of the diabolical psychology involved in dirty warfare, helping to arm you with the proper defense.
It gets nasty.
Weave a seamless blend of fact and fiction
Since no creature can survive without the ability to see or sense what is going on around it, make it hard for your enemies to know what is going on around them, including what you are doing. Feed their expectations, manufacture a reality to match their desires, and they will fool themselves. Control people's perceptions of reality and you control them.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Take the line of least expectation
People expect your behavior to conform to known patterns and conventions. Your task as a strategist is to upset their expectations.
First do something ordinary and conventional to fix their image of you, then hit them with the extraordinary.
The terror is greater for being so sudden. Sometimes the ordinary is extraordinary because it is unexpected.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Occupy the moral high ground
The Righteous Strategy
In a political world, the cause you are fighting for must seem more than just the enemy's. By questioning your opponents' motives and making them appear evil, you can narrow their base of support and room to maneuver.
When you find yourself come under moral attack from a clever enemy, do not whine or get angry; fight fire with fire.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Deny them targets
The Strategy Of The Void
The feeling of emptiness or void — silence, isolation, non-engagement with others — is for most people intolerable.
Give your enemies no target to attack, be dangerous but elusive, then watch as they chase you into the void.
Instead of frontal battles, deliver irritating but damaging side attacks and pinprick bites.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Seem to work for the interests of others while furthering your own
The Alliance Strategy
The best way to advance your cause with the minimum of effort and bloodshed is to create a constantly shifting network of alliances, getting others to compensate for your deficiencies, do your dirty work, fight your wars. At the same time, you must work to sow dissension in the alliances of others, weakening your enemies by isolating them.
Give your rivals enough rope to hang themselves
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Take small bites
The Fait Accompli Strategy
Overt power grabs and sharp rises to the top are dangerous, creating envy, distrust, and suspicion. Often the best solution is to take small bites, swallow little territories, playing upon people's relatively short attention spans. Before people realize it, you have accumulated an empire.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Penetrate their minds
Communication is a kind of war, its field of battle is the resistant and defensive minds of the people you want to influence.
The goal is to penetrate their defenses and occupy their minds. Learn to infiltrate your ideas behind enemy lines, sending messages through little details, luring people into coming to the conclusions you desire and into thinking they've gotten there by themselves.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Destroy from within
The Inner-Front Strategy
By infiltrating your opponents' ranks, working from within to bring them down, you give them nothing to see or react against — the ultimate advantage. To take something you want, do not fight those who have it, but rather join them — then either slowly make it your own or wait for the moment to stage a coup d'état.
Dominate while seeming to submit
Terror is the ultimate way to paralyze a people's will to resist and destroy their ability to plan a strategic response.
The goal in a terror campaign is not battlefield victory but causing maximum chaos and provoking the other side into desperate overreaction. To plot the most effective counter-strategy, victims of terror must stay balanced. One's rationality is the last line of defense.
The Passive-Aggression Strategy
In a world where political considerations are paramount, the most effective form of aggression is the best hidden one: aggression behind a compliant, even loving exterior. To follow the passive-aggression strategy you must seem to go along with people, offering no resistance. But actually you dominate the situation. Just make sure you have disguised your aggression enough that you can deny it exists.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.
Sow uncertainty and panic through acts of terror
The Chain-Reaction Strategy
Terror is the ultimate way to paralyze a people's will to resist and destroy their ability to plan a strategic response.
The goal in a terror campaign is not battlefield victory but causing maximum chaos and provoking the other side into desperate overreaction. To plot the most effective counter-strategy, victims of terror must stay balanced. One's rationality is the last line of defense.
Source: Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War.