48 Laws of Power
By Robert Greene
- Never appear power hungry
- Never make overt power moves
- Say as little as possible
- Be audacious
- Be formless
1. Never outshine the master
Always make those above you feel comfortably superior. In your desire to please and impress them, do not go too far in displaying your talents or you might accomplish the opposite - inspire fear and insecurity. Make your masters appear more brilliant than they are and you will attain the heights of power.
2. Never put too much trust in friends, learn how to use enemies
Be wary of friends - they will betray you more quickly, for they are easily aroused to envy. They also become spoiled and tyrannical. But hire a former enemy and he will be more loyal than a friend, because he has more to prove. In fact, you have more to fear from friends than from enemies. If you have no enemies, find a way to make them.
- Friends often conceal things in order to avoid conflict; this can be dangerous.
- Keep friends for friendship, but work with the skilled and competent.
- Whenever you can, bury the hatchet with an enemy, and make a point of putting him in your service.
- Use enemies to define your cause more clearly to the public, even framing it as a struggle of good against evil.
- It is better off to know who and where your opponents are than to not know where your real enemies lie.
3. Conceal your intentions
Keep people off-balance and in the dark by never revealing the purpose behind your actions. If they have no clue what you are up to, they cannot prepare a defense. Guide them far enough down the wrong path, envelop them in enough smoke, and by the time they realize your intentions, it will be too late.
I: Use decoyed objects of desire and red herrings to throw people off the scent:
- If at any point in the deception you practice people have the slightest suspicions to your intentions, all is lost. Do not give them the chance to sense what you are up to: Throw them off the scent by dragging red herrings across the path. Use false sincerity, send ambiguous signals, set up misleading objects of desire. Unable to distinguish the genuine from the false, they cannot pick out your real goal.
- Hide your intentions not by closing up, but by talking endlessly about your desires and goals - just false ones.
II: Use smoke screens to disguise your actions:
- Deception is always the best strategy, but the best deceptions require a screen of smoke to distract people attention from your real purpose. The bland exterior - like the unreadable poker face - is often the perfect smoke screen, hiding your intentions behind the comfortable and familiar. If you lead the sucker down a familiar path, he won't catch on when you lead him into a trap.
- A helpful or honest gesture can divert from a deception.
- Patterns will also help mask a deception.
- Often the key to deception is being bland and acting with humility.
4. Always say less than necessary
When you are trying to impress people with words, the more you say, the more common you appear, and the less in control. Even if you are saying something banal, it will seem original if you make it vague, open-ended, and sphinx like. Powerful people impress and intimidate by saying less. The more you say, the more likely you are to say something foolish.
- Silence generally makes people uncomfortable - they will jump in and nervously fill the silence.
- Generally saying less makes you appear more profound and mysterious.
- Be particularly careful with sarcasm - rarely is it valuable.
- Be careful with arousing suspicion or insecurity by being silent. At times it is easier to blend by playing the jester.
5. So much depends on reputation - guard it with your life
Reputation is the cornerstone of power. Through reputation alone you can intimidate and win; once it slips, however, you are vulnerable, and will be attacked on all sides. Make your reputation unassailable. Always be alert to potential attacks and thwart them before they happen. Meanwhile, learn to destroy your enemies by opening holes in their own reputations. Then stand aside and let public opinion hang them.
- Work to establish a reputation of outstanding quality, whether generosity or honesty or cunning.
- A good reputation can save you much - a lot of work is done in advance by your reputation.
- Once established, always take the high road when attacked.
6. Court attention at all cost
Everything is judged by its appearance; what is unseen counts for nothing. Never let yourself get lost in the crowd, then, or buried in oblivion. Stand out. Be conspicuous, at all cost. Make yourself a magnet of attention by appearing larger, more colorful, more mysterious than the bland and timid masses.
I: Surround your name with the sensational and scandalous
- Draw attention to yourself by creating an unforgettable, even controversial image. Court scandal. Do anything to make yourself seem larger than life and shine more brightly than those around you. Make no distinction between kinds of attention - notoriety of any sort will bring you power. Better to be slandered and attacked than ignored.
- At the beginning of your rise, spend all your energy on attracting attention. The quality of attention is irrelevant.
II: Create an air of mystery
- In a world growing increasingly banal and familiar, what seems enigmatic instantly draws attention. Never make it too clear what you are doing or about to do. Do not show all your cards. An air of mystery heightens your presence; it also creates anticipation - everyone will be watching you to see what happens next. Use mystery to beguile, seduce, even frighten.
- Remember: Most people are upfront, can be read like an open book, take little care to control their words or image, and are hopelessly predictable. By simply holding back, keeping silent, occasionally uttering ambiguous phrases, deliberately appearing inconsistent, and acting odd in the subtlest of ways, you will emanate an aura of mystery.
- Do not let mystery turn to an air of deceit; it must always seem a game, playful, unthreatening.
7. Get others to do the work for you, but always take the credit
Use the wisdom, knowledge, and legwork of other people to further your own cause. Not only will such assistance save you valuable time and energy, it will give you a god like aura of efficiency and speed. In the end your helpers will be forgotten and you will be remembered. Never do yourself what others can do for you.
- You must secure the credit for yourself.
- Learn to take advantage of others work to further your own cause.
- Use the past, a vast storehouse of knowledge and wisdom. Learn this and you will look like a genius.
- Note: be sure to know when letting other people share the credit furthers your cause.
8. Make other people come to you - use bait if necessary
When you force the other person to act, you are the one in control. It is always better to make your opponent come to you, abandoning his own plans in the process. Lure him with fabulous gains - then attack. You hold the cards.
- The essence of power is keeping the initiative and forcing others to react, keeping them on the defensive.
- Master your anger yet play on people's natural tendency to react angrily when pushed and baited.
9. Win through your actions, never through argument
Any momentary triumph you think you have gained through argument is really a Pyrrhic victory: The resentment and ill will you stir up is stronger and lasts longer than any momentary change of opinion. It is much more powerful to get others to agree with you through your actions, without saying a word. Demonstrate, do not explicate.
- When aiming for power, always look for the indirect route.
- Verbal argument has one use: deception when covering tracks or caught in a lie.
10. Infection: avoid the unhappy and unlucky
You can die from someone else's misery - emotional states are as infectious as diseases. You may feel you are helping the drowning man but you are only precipitating your own disaster. The unfortunate sometimes draw misfortune on themselves; they will also draw it on you. Associate with the happy and fortunate instead.
- The most important person to avoid: the sufferer of chronic dissatisfaction.
- Examine someone's history to recognize these people: turbulence, a long line of broken relationships, etc.
- The other side of infection is equally valid: there are those who attract happiness by their good cheer, natural buoyancy, and intelligence.
- Use this rule to counteract your own undesirable or weak qualities.
11. Learn to keep people dependent on you
To maintain your independence you must always be needed and wanted. The more you are relied on, the more freedom you have. Make people depend on you for their happiness and prosperity and you have nothing to fear. Never teach them enough so that they can do without you.
- Do not mistake independence for power; power requires a relationship.
- To cultivate this: possess a talent and creative skill that simply cannot be replaced.
12. Use selective honesty and generosity to disarm your victim
One sincere and honest move will cover over dozens of dishonest ones. Open-hearted gestures of honesty and generosity bring down the guard of even the most suspicious people. Once your selective honesty opens a hole in their armor, you can deceive and manipulate them at will. A timely gift - a Trojan horse - will serve the same purpose.
- Learn to give before you take - an actual gift, a generous act, a kind favour, an "honest" admission - whatever it takes.
- Selective honesty is best employed on your first encounter with someone.
- A history of deceit will cause any act of generosity to be viewed with suspicion. Counter by embracing your reputation for dishonesty openly.
13. When asking for help, appeal to people's self-interest, never to their mercy or gratitude
If you need to turn to an ally for help, do not bother to remind him of your past assistance and good deeds. He will find a way to ignore you. Instead, uncover something in your request, or in your alliance with him, that will benefit him, and emphasize it out of all proportion. He will respond enthusiastically when he sees something to be gained for himself.
- Do not be subtle: you have valuable knowledge to share, you can make him rich, you can make him live longer and happier.
- Train yourself to see inside other's needs and interests and desires.
- Distinguish differences among powerful people and figure out what makes them tick. When they ooze greed, do not appeal to charity; when they want to look charitable and noble, do not appeal to their greed.
14. Pose as a friend, work as a spy
Knowing about your rival is critical. Use spies to gather valuable information that will keep you a step ahead. Better still: Play the spy yourself. In polite social encounters, learn to probe. Ask indirect questions to get people to reveal their weaknesses and intentions. There is no occasion that is not an opportunity for artful spying.
- During social gatherings and innocuous encounters, pay attention. This is when people's guards are down, and they will reveal things.
- Give a false confession, and someone else will give you a real one.
- Contradict others to stir them to emotion and lose control of their words.
15. Crush your enemy totally
All great leaders since Moses have known that a feared enemy must be crushed completely. (Sometimes they have learned this the hard way.) If one ember is left alight, no matter how dimly it smolders, a fire will eventually break out. More is lost through stopping halfway than through total annihilation: The enemy will recover, and will seek revenge. Crush him, not only in body but in spirit.
- Recognize that you will accumulate enemies who you cannot bring over to your side, and that to leave them any escape will mean you are never secure. Crush them completely.
16. Use absence to increase respect and honour
Too much circulation makes the price go down: The more you are seen and heard from, the more common you appear. If you are already established in a group, temporary withdrawal from it will make you more talked about, even more admired. You must learn when to leave. Create value through scarcity.
- The truth of this law can most easily be appreciated in matters of love and seduction.
- Another example of this law exists in economics - scarcity increases value.
- Note: this law only applies once a certain level of power has been attained. Leave too early and you do not increase respect, you are simply forgotten. Similarly, absence is only effective in love and seduction once you have surrounded the other with your image.
- In the beginning, make yourself not scarce but omnipresent
17. Keep others in suspended terror: cultivate an air of unpredictability
Humans are creatures of habit with an insatiable need to see familiarity in other people's actions. Your predictability gives them a sense of control. Turn the tables: Be deliberately unpredictable. Behavior that seems to have no consistency or purpose will keep them off-balance, and they will wear themselves out trying to explain your moves. Taken to an extreme, this strategy can intimidate and terrorize.
- Unsettle those around you and keep the initiative by being unpredictable.
- Predictability and patterns can be used as a tool when deceiving.
18. Do not build fortresses to protect yourself - isolation is dangerous
The world is dangerous and enemies are everywhere - everyone has to protect themselves. A fortress seems the safest. But isolation exposes you to more dangers than it Protects you from - it cuts you off from valuable information, it makes you conspicuous and an easy target. Better to circulate among people, find allies, mingle. You are shielded from your enemies by the crowd.
- Retreat to a fortress and you lose contact with your sources of power, and your knowledge of what is going on.
- If you need time to think, then choose isolation as a last resort, and only in small doses.