Robert Greene - The Descent of Power
The Descent of Power, by Robert Greene, is an eBook that was taken from two speeches that he gave. The first was at the Emirates Festival of
Literature in Dubai and the second one was at the American Chamber of Commerce in Sangapore. The audience that he gave the speeches to are
business folks targeted.
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THE DESCENT OF POWER—
Thoughts on The Great Transformation and How to Master It
An eBook By Robert Greene
Page 2: The following is an amalgamation of two talks given by bestselling author
Robert Greene: the first at the Emirates Festival of Literature in Dubai, and
the second at the American Chamber of Commerce in Singapore. Both of these talks
were geared for a business audience.
#1 The subject that I am going to talk about this evening is the state of the
world as I see it, what is really going on—not what the newspapers report, not
the conventional wisdom. But before I get to that, I want to give you some
context about my perspective, my way of thinking and where it comes from. In
1996 I began work on my first book, The 48 Laws of Power. The book had a simple
premise: every human being has an innate desire for power. What I mean by power
is the ability to control to some degree the events around us—to be able to
influence people, move them in our direction, direct our career path and protect
ourselves from those who are malicious. It also means having some control over
our own destructive impulses. When we exercise such control, we feel energized
and confident. When we experience the opposite—helpless in the face of
circumstance —we become miserable and prone to all kinds of irrational behavior.
To gain power, we try almost anything, but we are never quite sure of what
really works. The problem in writing such a book, as I saw it then, was the
massive amount of confusion surrounding the subject. Few people like to admit
they are motivated by ambition or a hunger for power. That seems too ugly. If
somehow they attain some success in life it is because of their goodness or
talent, never because of any maneuvering or political gamesmanship. Many people
are masters at passive aggression—disguising their grabs at power behind a
benign or smiling façade.
Page 3: All of this moralizing and denial creates a great deal of fog. To pierce this
fog and get at the reality, I devised a method that has served me well in all of
my subsequent writings: I would ignore people’s words and justifications;
instead, I would study their actions. To show what is timeless and universal in
this hunger for power, I would look at the most illustrious people in
history—all periods, all cultures—and ruthlessly dissect their successes and
failures. In doing this research, I discovered patterns, which turned into laws,
48 of them. When you observe these laws, good things happen to you; when you
transgress them, you court disaster. These laws apply as much to Louis XIV as to
Bill Gates. They represent the physical reality of what happens in the world,
not the deceptive appearances that people like to present. The book came out in
1998, and slowly it gained some momentum. Around three years after the
publication, I began to be sought out by people in various lines of work who
wanted advice. Some of them were quite powerful in their fields. At first, I was
somewhat intimidated, as I have no real solid background in business or a degree
in psychology and I had not personally attained the heights of power. But soon
it became clear to me that these people did not want help in technical matters
or cared about my credentials. Their weakness was dealing with the political
side of human nature, how to handle all of the maneuverings that I describe in
The 48 Laws. They were confused. I saw that my advice could be very useful and
that the ideas I had discussed in the first book were more than relevant to
their experiences. As I acquired more and more of these consulting
relationships, I began to gain access to the inner workings of many important
businesses. I saw a pattern in the problems that many executives were facing,
and over the years my ideas on this coalesced into the following theory: we are
in the midst of one of those great transitional moments in history in which the
old ways of operating and thinking are finally dying off. Something new is
trying to emerge. All of this makes people confused and uncertain; it is
infecting everyone unconsciously. I saw signs of this struggle in business, but
also in politics—particularly in the Obama campaign. In the middle of these
speculations, the global economy crashed and this only confirmed what I had been
thinking.
Page 4: I want to talk to you tonight about these countercurrents of the old and the
new, what is really going on under the surface creating the turmoil that we are
experiencing. As with the subject of power, I’m not satisfied with how people
are describing these events. There is too much politicizing and too little
perspective. The human being handles change with difficulty. It makes us hold on
to the past or become overwhelmed by the apparent chaos. It makes us even more
emotional. People who live through revolutionary moments generally have little
notion as to what is going on. In this particular case, our lack of
understanding makes it very difficult for us to exploit the tremendous changes
and opportunities that are germinating at this moment. What I want to do tonight
is to broaden our viewpoint and provide a different way of looking at this
strange new world we have entered. Clearing up some of our confusion can help
make our actions more effective. To accomplish this reversal of perspective, I
will be bringing in many ideas, examples from history and so on, but all with
the purpose of explaining the present moment, so bear with me. #2 In
anthropology there is a concept known as historic fatality. What this means is
that occasionally there emerges a certain idea, a certain way of doing things
that is so immensely seductive to human beings that eventually it spreads around
the globe and forever changes our way of life. One of the greatest examples of
this would have to be agriculture. It was centered on a simple idea—instead of
constantly searching for new food sources, humans could raise their own food in
settled locations. As this took root in several places, it led to the formation
of villages, towns, cities, city–states, entire civilizations. With this came
all kinds of institutions such as civic government, social organization,
warfare, culture on a new level. It created the concept of surplus and leisure
time. Slowly, sometimes by force, it conquered the world. Mostly it conquered
because it contained an idea that was deeply seductive to human nature—a desire
for settlement, for roots, for consistency and familiarity. Once it came into
being, it was fated to spread everywhere.
Page 5: Now, in The 48 Laws I lay out what I consider to be another historic
fatality—the evolution of power from something heavily concentrated, to
something more and more diluted. I like to imagine this as kind of a
mathematical equation. Let us imagine a tribe of some 1000 people in some place
in ancient times. We could say this tribe had a certain amount of power, based
on its wealth and resources. The majority of this power, the control over it,
was in the hands of one man—the ruler, the king. He might, in this case, depend
on a small cadre of people to assist him, but he largely determined the roles
they could play. Let us say, with success and prosperity, this tribe grew to a
size of some 10,000. Now, such supreme concentration was too difficult. The
ruler would have to bring in others—advisors, generals, high priests. He could
keep this number relatively limited and the percentage of power was mostly in
his hands, but now ever so slightly diluted. If this town evolved into a city of
some 100,000, suddenly there came a qualitative change. The complexity of ruling
such numbers grew exponentially. Power at this moment had to be genuinely
distributed in order to maintain a sense of control. Now there were teams of
ministers, the military, the growing aristocracy and its court. To service this
administration, bureaucracies had to evolve. Power remained concentrated, but
with a different scale of distribution. We can make three generalizations at
this point. When a group of people is given power, it forms a power center. This
means, for instance, that a team of military leaders tends to think in two
directions—how to promote the interests of the ruler, while also advancing its
own agenda. Things now become political, as their interests will clash with
other power centers. The ruler must now manage this growing complexity. The
power environment becomes increasingly dangerous. Second, once people have been
given power on this level, they do not want to give it back or return to an
older way of governing. They work to keep what they have and extend their power
base. And finally, once power becomes diluted and divided this way, it tends to
keep on dividing, like a split atom. More and more people must be brought in to
keep the whole functioning. And so over the course of centuries, power slowly
became less and less concentrated.
Page 6: Two events in history sped this process along. First, after the Middle Ages,
the birth of modern capitalism and a merchant society. This meant the emergence
of a middle class and new power centers in business that began to wield more and
more influence. The second were the great political revolutions of the 18th and
19th centuries, creating a new power center among the citizens of that state. To
a lesser degree we could talk of modern media as another power center that came
to prominence in the 20th century, which in turn acted to dissolve and dilute
previous concentrations of influence. We could look now to a country like the
United States in the present, and see an almost extreme point of
development—networks of hundreds of power centers crisscrossing each other: from
within political parties, for instance, all kinds of niche groups, pushing their
own agendas, making governance almost impossible. Of course there remain
concentrations of power and wealth in the world today. But on the other hand,
there is no denying the remarkable evolution and dilution of power from that
time millennia ago when it was mostly in the hands of one man. From this
position in the present we can project into the future a period of even greater
dilution, as more and more people around the globe feel the right and necessity
to have more control over their lives. In 100 or 200 years we can imagine a
point of complete division. This is not so much about particular political or
economic systems, but rather about something deep within human nature. The need
to have such power has an inexorable appeal to us. Once the process began it
cannot be stopped until it reaches its logical conclusion. It is because of this
that we can talk of this division of power as a great historic fatality, perhaps
on the level of agriculture or even greater in my opinion for its far–reaching
ramifications. #3
Page 7: Now, in the 1990s something else came into being that sped this process along
even further. And this was more like warp speed, a sudden acceleration into the
future. I am talking about the Internet, or more specifically the world–wide web
as it evolved in the early 1990s. The web suddenly provided people three new
types of power that had tremendous appeal. First, it gave us access to all kinds
of information, without the need for newspapers or traditional forms of media.
We could bypass those centers that controlled the flow. We could communicate
with likeminded people and share information rapidly and directly with one
another. Second, it gave us the power to purchase items straight from the
source, cutting out the middleman. This would tend to lower prices, but more
importantly it greatly increased our choices. We could shop from any place
around the world, finding precisely what we needed or wanted. Third, we could
express our opinions on any subject that mattered to us and find some kind of
audience. We could review the products that we had purchased and gain some power
as consumers. Or we could voice our opinions on political matters and find
others that shared them. What interests me here is not the technology, but how
it changes our relationship to power and authority, altering in so many ways the
social dynamic—how people interact with one another. In this instance, the
Internet is flattening out relationships that were once hierarchical and
funneled through various centers. This tends to eat away at the prestige and
authority of traditional sources of information such as newspapers, or expert
opinions. It calls into question the need for so many middlemen in the world,
and reveals the dubious source of their power. Take for instance the
availability of digital music files and iTunes. When this began to spread it
altered our relationship to music itself. We could pirate it on the internet or
if so inclined, purchased this music directly and quickly. We could easily share
these files. Now it became possible to accumulate a vast library of music and
store it the way we wanted to, making us in some ways creatively involved in the
process. We no longer had to purchase an entire album, which would often contain
songs that were there just to fill space.
Page 8: This created a massive problem for the record industry; they went into panic
mode. It essentially destroyed their business model in which they were the sole
powers that marketed, distributed and sold this music. This model was based on
their ability to dominate the flow of money, and seduce artists into accepting
their role as vassals to the industry, to be discarded when they were no longer
so hot. Record executives tried desperately to hold back these changes, but once
the genie was let out of the bottle it was too late. Who was going to go back to
the old way of purchasing music? The aura of their authority and power had been
shattered. We could chart the same course for the mainstream media. It is
interesting to note that this great dissolving of these power centers was
preceded by an intense concentration of their power. This is almost a physical
law that we have seen before in history, but the subject for another night. I
compare these changes that the web was producing in society in the late 90s and
onwards to a small wave that was forming far out in the ocean, slowly gaining
volume and force as it spread.
#4 Now at the same time that this wave was building something else was going on,
something rather strange. We have gone through two economic bubbles in a very
short period of time. Economic bubbles generally occur for two reasons. The
first and the one that most people focus on is that businesses are generally
flush with cash, have money to burn. They are looking for something new to
invest in, some novel source of super capital. It is a feeling in the air—vast
amounts of money can be made in some new way. The competition heats up. Someone
hits upon something that promises fast money and in fact yields a substantial
return; it gains momentum. The profit that is produced has little to do with
real economic forces, but rather with human psychology—greed, the contagion of
emotions, exuberance that comes from something fast and easy. Money is poured
into things that have no real value apart from what people imagine is there and
once real economic forces come into play, the bubble is burst and it all
collapses.
Page 9: Another aspect of bubbles, one that is generally less discussed, is that they
tend to prefigure or occur in periods of transition. People sense that something
is going on; a significant shift is occurring in how business is done. They are
more likely to believe that all of the old rules of investing and building value
are a thing of the past and that anything goes. And so in such transitional
periods people are much more susceptible to the psychology of a bubble and the
exuberance it breeds. The fact that we went through two bubbles, one succeeding
the other in a matter of a few short years is an undeniable sign of something
stirring from below—a sign of change and systemic instability. The first bubble
was in tech stocks and its affect was relatively mild. But the second bubble (in
finance and housing) burst at a moment when the wave that had been building
since the 90s had finally gained sufficient momentum. These two forces—deep
social changes and the economic bubble—converged at a moment in time to create a
kind of tsunami. The old order that had been clinging to power and resisting
what had been stirring from below was finally swept away in a cycle in
capitalism known as Creative Destruction. As this tsunami is just now beginning
to recede, what we see in its wake is an altered landscape that at first glance
seems like devastation. Businesses that had been dependent on times of
prosperity, that created products that had no deep connection to consumers and
needed a lot of marketing to be sold, these are wiped out by the tsunami, never
to return. Large companies that had used their size as tremendous leverage in
the marketplace find that it is difficult to adapt; they are dependent on their
scale of mass. They are like dinosaurs—big and lumbering, they will continue to
make noise but they are doomed to disappear within a decade or two. Other
companies, however, which had foreseen the tremendous shift going on and had
structured their business accordingly, they are poised to not only survive the
tsunami, but to thrive. I am referring to a company like Google, which I will
talk about later on, but there other examples as well. Last and most important,
with all the destruction that is going on, there is finally space for new
businesses to spring up, based on a model that fits the times. A thousand
flowers can now bloom. #5
Page 10: Now, I know that this is not the usual way that people discuss what is
currently taking place in the world. Instead, we hear much about the banking
industry, the corruption within it, and its preying upon helpless consumers; the
new trading technology that makes it harder to think and act for the long–term;
the collusion of government in this scheme, and the lack of regulation; on and
on. All of these factors are real; they contain elements of truth. But they are
not the source of the underlying disturbance. The reality, what is really going
on underneath, is that we are currently experiencing a change as profound as any
in history. After the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century and the Mass
Production revolution of the 20th, with its emphasis on standardization and
marketing, we are now, finally, entering the Information Age. This means a
flattening of power structures, more fluidity and chaos, an accelerated pace of
innovation. This represents a fundamental change for which we are not prepared.
When we face situations that are novel, we tend to react in one of several ways.
We try to deny the reality. We hold on even more firmly to the past and how
things were done. We interpret events according to how we want to see them. Or,
we do the opposite—we succumb to all of the chaos and confusion, believing that
all of the old rules can be tossed out and that anything goes. We try this and
we try that, never with much thought or calculation. Both responses are reactive
and emotional. They do not represent an attempt to actually come to terms with
the changes going on and work to exploit them in a rational manner. To really
gain power, there is only one way to orient ourselves in such turbulent times—by
adopting a different way of thinking, what I prefer to call “strategy in depth.”
I differentiate this from the normal idea of strategy, which is so often
confused with merely planning and thinking ahead. Strategy in depth is a mental
discipline that can take years to acquire.
Page 11: To give you an idea of what I mean by this, I like to employ the following
metaphor: business, or life, is a kind of battlefield. On the ground, fighting
the daily battles to make your business competitive and to keep your army
advancing together can get quite confusing. Sometimes those on your side act
more like enemies or obstructers. There is a lot of smoke, sudden shifts in the
battle and chaos. On the ground, you have no real perspective of what is really
going on. You are constantly reacting to this or to that. If you were able to
stand on a ladder and elevate your perspective some ten feet, suddenly you would
have a different idea about what is happening. You would see some patterns to
the fighting. You thought you were advancing but in fact you seem to be
retreating. There’s more going on than you had imagined. If you were able to
somehow elevate to a hundred feet, what you saw at ten feet would now prove to
be an illusion. You would realize that the battles you are fighting today are
not really worth your attention, because on the horizon something much worse is
taking shape. Your sense of a pattern to the battle would now be more accurate
than before, and your strategies more rational and effective. If somehow you
could raise your perspective to a mountaintop you would have the clarity of the
gods on Mount Olympus, seeing far and wide. What you had seen at a hundred feet
elevation would prove to have been somewhat inaccurate or piecemeal. People who
remain on the ground operate in what I call tactical hell. They are constantly
reacting to what others bring and this creates a kind of constant wave
effect—each reverberation of an action/reaction keeps you locked in this mode,
your emotions continually buffeted by this back and forth. You might think you
are being rational, but you are far from it. The view from ten feet is better,
but still rather hellish. You can delude yourself that you have real
perspective, when you are simply seeing a small piece of the puzzle. The higher
you go, the more you enter the realm of strategy, which requires depth of
thinking and true perspective.
Page 12: In normal times, it is quite difficult to elevate your perspective—it is
simply unnatural for the human animal to not react, to not get caught up in the
moment. In times of confusion and change like ours, this process is made that
much harder. Add to that the incredible distractions that new technology has
inserted into our lives and it can become almost impossible. In such
circumstances, we tend to take pieces of information from the media, which
inundates us with all kinds of snapshots of the moment, and elevate them into
some kind of trend; we give these pieces disproportionate weight and act on them
without a sense of real direction or depth. This confusion tends to perpetuate
itself as more and more people are locked in this tactical hell. To be a
strategist in depth in this era, you must work at acquiring several skills.
First and primary is the ability to control your own emotions that tend to cloud
your sense of judgment. What matters is not your ego or appearing right or being
admired, but winning. To win you must be realistic and see things as they are.
From this base of inner balance, you study history and its many lessons; you
immerse yourself in the present and the trends that are taking shape. You
encompass in your considerations not merely the battle in front of you, but the
larger war, the cultural and social factors—everything. You understand what is
happening, the historic moment we are living through. Once you reach the proper
elevation, you can then make rational decisions —moving with calibrated boldness
or biding your time. In times of great change it might seem that there are no
patterns to discern in the present and nothing to be learned from history. After
all, events are unprecedented. But this is an illusion born out of our
confusion. There have been other periods in history of comparable change and
turmoil. In looking at them in depth we can see certain patterns—why most people
succumb to the chaos but a few manage to rise to the top. Those who succeed
generally follow the same simple path and adhere to a few basic strategic
principles that are particularly relevant to revolutionary times. To give you an
idea what I am talking about, I want to take you inside the mind of the man whom
I consider to be the greatest strategist who ever lived—Napoleon Bonaparte. #6
Page 13: Napoleon came to power in one of the most chaotic moments in history—the
French Revolution. The French people had overthrown a monarchy that had existed
for hundreds of years and established a new kind of political order. But because
it was so new, nobody quite understood what it all meant. The Revolution led to
terror and swings of reaction and more revolution, until in 1796, a turning
point had been reached. France’s numerous enemies, lead by the Austrians, were
threatening to invade the country and reestablish the old monarchy. The fighting
had grown particularly intense in Italy. If the Austrians and their allies were
able to overrun the French in Italy, they would pour into France from the South
and the Revolution would be over. The campaign in Italy was going badly for the
French and so in desperation, they named the 26– year–old Napoleon Bonaparte,
former artillery lieutenant, commander of all French forces fighting in Italy.
Through some bold maneuvering and some innovative strategies Napoleon was able
to save France from disaster, but barely. As a result of his success he was
named commander in chief of the French army. After the Italian campaign,
Napoleon did some reflecting. He felt there was a better way to wage war; he
needed a new kind of army or organizational principle. Napoleon began by
analyzing the way his enemies waged war and their organizational model.
Essentially, a typical general would have at his command an army of a certain
size and configuration. To make this army more mobile a general could break it
up into groups, but what he might gain in flexibility he would lose in control.
How could a general continue to direct and monitor the battle, if his army was
divided and scattered? This would also violate the key military principle of
keeping one’s forces concentrated. Control then was more important than
mobility, so he would keep this army together. The general would stay in the
back of the advancing forces and command the battle from this safe position.
Those in front, the scouts and vanguards, might see something unexpected as the
enemy approached, but before they could get the army to adjust to these changes,
they would have to pass messages to the general in the back, who would then
relay his response to the front, all of which took a lot of time. In addition,
this massive force had to be fed and for this purpose large wagons—led by horses
and oxen—would accompany the army, slowing it down. In times of bad weather,
which were frequent, these supply wagons would come to a complete halt.
Page 14: Because of all this, armies advanced slowly, both sides tending to march to a
point where they would meet in battle. Once there, some clever maneuvering and
superior firepower could decide the issue. This form of warfare was completely
linear and predictable. Although armies at the turn of the 19th century might
look modern, with the latest rifles and artillery, they were fighting according
to a model that was ancient. This was essentially the way wars had been fought
since Alexander the Great. It was out of fear that generals adhered to this
rigid system. War is inherently chaotic and such a system offered the maximum in
control. Napoleon had once compared these generals to Marie Antoinette. What he
meant was the following: the Queen had lived through a period of incredible
turmoil in France—famine, widespread discontent among the peasants and
bourgeoisie, the dissemination of dangerous ideas in the press, etc. To handle
all of this, Marie Antoinette employed a strategy: she increased the distance
between herself and the French people so as to control what she saw and heard.
She imagined that the turmoil was in fact rather superficial. After all, the
French monarchy had been through a lot, and this too would pass. Its prestige
and authority could never really be challenged. Why lose your head over such
momentary fluctuations? And so she held on to these beliefs all the way to the
bitter end. These generals operated in a similar way. They looked to the past,
instead of examining the present. They increased their distance from the common
soldier and the shifting realities of war. They held on to the old
organizational principle as if it were magical. Ultimately such faith in a
timeless power structure or model is a form of magical thinking—your belief
system overrides reality. Napoleon was different from these leaders. He was much
younger. He had grown up with the revolution—rising from the bottom of the
military, which had now been fashioned into a kind of citizens’ army. He was
deeply aware of the great changes in the world—social, political, technological.
He was aware that this altered the psychology of warfare—the French army was
fighting for the sake of the revolution, for the sake of an idea. It was a whole
new culture and social dynamic. War had to catch up with these changes; it had
to become fast and fluid, to fit the times. In military terms, speed is a force
multiplier. It brings momentum and surprise into the battlefield—with speed, an
army of 25,000 could have the force of 100,000.
Page 15: In order to have such power, however, Napoleon would have to reconstruct his
army from the ground up. And it is at this point that Napoleon made one of the
greatest discoveries in the history of warfare—namely that structure is
strategy. The structure of your group, of your army, is what gives it speed and
mobility, creates its tone, rhythm and way of action. If you structure it in a
dense, bureaucratic and ad-hoc way, you will have a slow, lumbering army, no
matter what you try to make them do. You have to be willing to accept a degree
of chaos. You have to let go. The fluidity you gain will more than compensate
for any momentary loss of control. After much analysis, Napoleon decided upon
the following: He would break his army up into smaller divisions, ranging in
size from 20,000 to 80,000. Each of these divisions would be led by a field
marshal, who would be inculcated in Napoleon’s philosophy of war and in what he
wanted in a particular campaign, but these marshals would be allowed to make
their own decisions based on what they saw on the battlefield. They would fight
in the front of the lines instead of safely in the back, so they could react in
real time. This would be replicated all the way down the line. Lieutenants and
sergeants could make decisions for their units based on what they saw, as long
as it fit into the overall mission of the division. Napoleon understood very
well the new social order and what motivated the common soldier. He enjoyed he
freedom from within the army structure, the chance to prove himself, to show
initiative. Napoleon would build into the structure of this army the chance for
the lowest soldier to rise to the top, based on merit and bravery, a novel
concept at the time. Furthermore, they would all be fighting for an idea—to
spread the revolution to the rest of Europe. Napoleon added one small technical
detail that revealed his way of thinking: his soldiers would now carry their
supplies in carefully designed backpacks, each individual responsible for
keeping his supplies in order.
Page 16: These were the components of the new army—smaller, more mobile units; no
supply wagons to slow them down; important decisions that could be made by
leaders in the moment; soldiers who were more intensely motivated and engaged in
the struggle. It was a force that was considerably faster and more fluid than
any other army in Europe. With such a weapon Napoleon could evolve a new
strategy, what is known as maneuver warfare. Instead of advancing his troops
along a single line, he could throw his five or ten divisions at the enemy in
scattered patterns, and they would decide to advance depending on how the enemy
reacted. In this way, he recaptured the initiative. He could adjust faster than
the enemy and destroy its willpower by making it impossible to foresee his
maneuvers. As you can imagine, with such an army Napoleon dominated the scene
for ten years in a way that no other military force has done in history. But
there is a second chapter to this story. For the next ten years, from 1806 to
1816, we see a steady decline in his powers. He starts to believe that his
success comes from his magical personality and genius, as opposed to the
strategies he had invented. He creates his own aristocracy and distances himself
from the revolutionary ideals. He begins to slow down with age, and to fight
wars the way his enemies had fought them. He believes in overwhelming the enemy
with size and firepower, instead of mobility. All of this leads to his tragic
campaign in Russia in 1812 and his final defeat at Waterloo in 1816. In essence
he had morphed into a kind of Marie Antoinette himself, holding on to the power
he had, believing in the magic of his authority and growing increasingly
arrogant. This then is the pattern and the lesson we can learn from any
revolutionary period in history: you are either a Marie Antoinette or a Napoleon
Bonaparte. One or the other spirit tends to dominate your decision–making
process. If you are a Marie Antoinette, you manage to convince yourself that
nothing is really changing in the world. You concern yourself with the present,
with the pleasures at hand. You trust in the power and privileges you have had
in the past. All of this will continue, you tell yourself. In essence, you
manage to keep your distance from the events around you. You live in your
bubble. Hard times or adversity only strengthen this bubble. If you’re a
Napoleon Bonaparte, you move in the opposite direction—towards the change coming
from the bottom up, towards reality. You want more contact with the world, no
matter how chaotic and challenging that might be, because power lies in moving
in that direction and exploiting the moment.
Page 17: The following are the two most critical strategic principles that you must
adhere to in times of change: first, speed is of the essence. You need to be
able to adapt quickly to events. To do so, your group must be organized to allow
for such fluidity. This means creating a structure that is looser and that
leaves room for initiative from within. Your brilliant strategies will mean
nothing in such times if your organization is bureaucratic and hierarchical.
Second, you must unite this group around an idea, a reason for fighting or
advancing, beyond money. You are creating a culture where you are harnessing the
creativity and energy of your soldiers. The old is finally dying out and leaving
space for something youthful and new. You are riding this tide, this historic
fatality as it sweeps the globe. In conjunction with these principles, you must
be continually vigilant that any kind of success does not slowly transform you
into a Marie Antoinette. #7 Now, as I was writing about Napoleonic Bonaparte for
my book The 33 Strategies of War, in 2003 and 2004, I became intrigued by a
company that seemed to exemplify—in an almost uncanny way—the Napoleonic model I
have just outlined. That company was Google. I initiated an informal
study—gathering as much material and contacts within the company as possible.
And as I went deeper into this subject, I saw more and more
connections—confirming my idea that there is a pattern to periods of change and
revolution. The following is the gist of my analysis: Like Napoleon, the two
founders of Google, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, came from a radically different
background than your average CEO. They were scientists at Stanford, their field
being statistics and probability. In founding Google in the late 1990s, based
around their innovations in the field of search engines, they came to several
important conclusions: the Internet is going to radically alter the business
environment. The world is entering a new era—the Information Age. They wanted
their company to reflect these changes and the historic fatality I’ve been
talking about. They needed to create their own business and organizational
model. And so they studied in depth how other businesses operated, particularly
in technology, to see if there were lessons to be learned.
Page 18: Most of these companies, like Microsoft, had intense layers of bureaucracy.
They would have a giant staff of software engineers to create new products. But
before such products could be launched, they had to be integrated with
everything else, and they had to be as close to perfect as possible. Once the
product was ready, large–scale sales and marketing teams would go into action,
making sure they saturated the public. If these companies were creating any kind
of content, there was an editorial staff. To keep this all running smoothly,
they had to have a very large management staff. To roll out any new product
would take years, as this machinery was slow and lumbering. All of the different
departments and layers of bureaucracy had to be brought into the process. By the
time the product came out, competitors had already appeared, but it was too late
to adapt to what was evolving. The sheer size of the company made it difficult
to maintain close ties to the public; better to make perfect products and sell
them hard than respond to public feedback. Everything was geared towards market
domination—using vast resources and muscle to maintain that. All of this
bureaucracy created small power bases from within the company, increasing the
political games being played and adding to the slowness. A company like IBM once
dominated the computer field, but completely lost ground in the 1980s, mostly
because it did not believe in the personal computer. There were some from within
the company that thought differently, but they could not get their voices heard
or influence the entrenched culture. All of the resources that IBM had were
useless in the face of such rigidity—proving that structure, strategy and ideas
are more important than money and technology. (In war, a similar example would
be the Blitzkrieg of 1941: the French had superior equipment and technology, but
their ideas on how to use them were completely outmoded and they collapsed in
the face of a superior strategy.)
Page 19: To Page and Brin, a company in this new environment had to be lean and fast,
able to stay ahead of the innovation cycle and adapt quickly to trends. They had
to build a new kind of structure. This governed most of their key organizational
decisions. They would not produce any content; Google would serve as a platform
for others to create or move content, enhancing the flow of information. They
would have no editorial staff. To make money, they would sell advertising space,
but all of this would be automated. Customers would buy through a self-serve
platform. This allowed Google to have a minimal sales staff. Any kind of
feedback or data on advertising sales could flow directly and immediately to
anyone within the company—there were no bottlenecks from within to slow down the
flow of information. Google would have a relatively small staff of engineers.
They would hire the best but keep the numbers down. They predicated this all on
their philosophy of release often, release early. They would not spend months
perfecting their latest product—in fact they would release it in a beta version
and let the customers help improve it with their feedback. This meant no
marketing or sales team to push the new product. This would also help them to
develop close ties to their client base and make people feel involved in the
process. As a result of all this, the company would need far fewer managers to
keep Google running. As far as possible, employees would be self–managed. It is
this remarkable lightness of Google that has allowed them to move, adapt and
expand at such a rapid rate. It is the foundation of their power, as it was for
Napoleon. To ignore this simple truth is to ignore a fundamental principle of
strategy. In addition, Google created a completely different culture, to reflect
the historic fatality I had mentioned in the beginning. The company was broken
down into small units that could be self– managed. They created the 20% rule:
all employees must devote 20% of their time to creating something of their own—a
pet project, an innovative idea that could later fit into Google or if not,
could be taken elsewhere. Periodically small teams of peers would review these
projects and critique them. It became possible to rise fast within the company
and make a fortune.
Page 20: The culture was centered around the idea that Google was the spearhead of a
revolution: this was the company that was going to give the world access to
information, to news, to everything going on in the world, opening things up and
allowing people to make what they wanted with it. This sense of being part of a
cause created an extremely motivated workforce that does not need to be policed
by teams of managers. A degree of chaos is allowed for and even encouraged. With
such an organization in place, Google could practice a kind of maneuver warfare.
Most companies focus on dominating a particular position in the marketplace,
like armies that marched to meet the enemy at a set point. This is old style
warfare and business—linear and predictable. In the new environment what matters
is putting your company in a position in which it can quickly adapt to the
latest trend and get a toehold there before others. To do so, you have to be
built for that. As a company that focused on primarily having a search engine as
its center, Google could quickly move to other areas—Gmail or Google News, et
al—all with the aim of creating a kind of operating system for the Internet. If
some new trend appears on the horizon, they are ready to pounce and exploit it.
For instance, they saw great potential for YouTube, tried to produce their own
version of it and when that failed, they simply bought YouTube. This kind of
fluidity is rare in business and devastatingly powerful. As opposed to past
models, Google does not invent something they think is clever and then figure
out how to market it to the masses, with all of the time and money that
requires. They work on what is already there—the demand that is palpable. As
opposed to the traditional business practice as it evolved in the era of mass
consumption, their ideal is to create less and less distance between themselves
and their customers.
Page 21: I focus on Google because to me they are the most radical version of a new
business model that has succeeded on a large scale. I could also bring in other
companies that have experimented as well and had success. A company like Zara,
which has adapted brilliantly to the new environment, has based its model on the
speed with which it can produce items that respond to the latest trends, giving
consumers a much wider choice. The company is structured in a similar loose
fashion to Google. There are many other examples as well on smaller scales all
around the world. As the tsunami of the global meltdown is receding, these are
the companies that are poised to take over. I do not mean to imply that Google
is infallible and already we see signs of their limitations. Like Napoleon, they
could slowly morph into the enemy, into a slightly more mobile version of
Microsoft. This was merely to point out the radical departure they made in the
initial structure of the company and the power that brought them. If they are
smart, they could dominate the scene for years to come, but nothing is certain.
This then is the point that we have reached. What is really changing in the
world is not technology, or the globalization of capital, but the relationships
between people—relationships that were once hierarchical and based on the force
of authority. This has been radically flattened. What matters most now are the
connections between people, the interdependencies and networks that can be
formed and the unimpeded flow of information. Any kind of obstruction to that
flow will be seen as something from the past, someone or some group trying to
halt the course of an historic fatality. We are in the midst of a
countercurrent. As the new is flowing in, the tide of the old is still there. We
see signs of this decrepitude everywhere. Looking at large businesses with their
big marketing campaigns, often tied around celebrities, we are simply seeing
dinosaurs making a lot of noise before they disappear. The signs of this old
order clinging to power are everywhere, and it will be quite a spectacle to see
them become extinct in the years to come. Without grasping this wider
perspective of what is happening in the world, the crest of a change that began
millennia ago but greatly accelerated by the advent of the Information Age,
nothing you do will have any kind of lasting effect or power.
Page 22:
#8 In closing, I wanted to tell you about a dream I had a couple of months ago—I
mean the kind of dream you have in your sleep. I dreamt that it was the year
2070 and that I was walking on the crowded streets of some city. People seemed
oddly happy and there was a feeling of lightness in the air, as if something had
really changed in the world and we had figured out a better way to live. What
was most strange about this dream was that in the midst of it I was conscious of
thinking back to the year 2010, so long ago. For some reason it occurred to me
that that moment in time was some kind of turning point. That was when things
began to right themselves, I told myself, but few people saw or understood this.
If only we could have realized back then what was happening, where we were
headed. How sad. In the middle of this strange thought, I woke up. The dream and
its intense mood stayed with me for quite some time. It made me think—this is
clearly how it is in history. People never appreciate the moment they are living
in. We can look back at all of the tumultuous, exciting periods in history with
an air of nostalgia, but it’s an illusion. Those in that moment have no such
perspective and no such appreciation. If only we could now have that perspective
and realize that we are living through one of the great transformational moments
and that the old is finally dying away. I leave you with that thought. Thank
you. Robert Greene has worked in New York as an editor and writer at several
magazines, including Esquire and in Hollywood as a story developer and writer.
Greene has author several international bestsellers including The 48 Laws of
Power, The Art of Seduction, and The 33 Strategies of War. His most recent book,
The 50th Law, was co-author by 50 Cent, is about fearlessness. More of his work
can be seen at PowerSeductionandWar.com
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