Entity Dossier
Person

Pope

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Signature MoveBerthier's Pen as Force MultiplierSignature MoveCupboard Drawers for Compartmentalized FocusSignature MoveImpatience as Operating TempoStrategic PatternCaesar's Playbook as Operating ManualDecision FrameworkSmall Detail Decides Great EventsStrategic PatternRead the Terrain Before You ArriveIdentity & CultureHonour Over Liberty as Motivational LeverOperating PrincipleGuide Opinion, Never Debate ItOperating PrincipleDelegate Execution, Dictate IntentCornerstone MoveCrisis as Institution-Building OpportunitySignature MoveSevere to Officers, Kindly to MenRelationship LeverageControlled Accessibility as Status ArchitectureSignature MoveFive-Hour Reviews to Know Every ShoeCornerstone MoveAncient Glory as Mass Motivation EngineCornerstone MoveConverge All Force on the Decisive PointRisk DoctrineAppropriately Severe Examples Save ThousandsCompetitive AdvantageLanguage Fluency as Global WeaponCapital StrategySwiss Base for Unbureaucratic Global ReachSignature MoveKitchen-Table Apprenticeship Before the OfficeIdentity & CultureAll Natural as Brand DNASignature MoveProductive Dissatisfaction as Permanent EngineCornerstone MoveBuild the Machine No One Can CopySignature MoveReinvent Every Five Years or StagnateOperating PrincipleHydrometer Obsession with Product PerfectionSignature MoveMuhammad Ali When They Say ImpossibleStrategic PatternScience Funding as Future InsuranceCornerstone MoveConquer Country by Country Then Reverse the MapIdentity & CultureQuiet Generosity Over Public Virtue

Primary Evidence

"Since the campaign had begun a year earlier, Napoleon had crossed the Apennines and the Alps, defeated a Sardinian army and no fewer than six Austrian armies, and killed, wounded or captured 120,000 Austrian soldiers. All this he had done before his twenty-eighth birthday. Eighteen months earlier he had been an unknown, moody soldier writing essays on suicide; now he was famous across Europe, having defeated mighty Austria, wrung peace treaties from the Pope and the kings of Piedmont and Naples, abolished the medieval dukedom of Modena, and defeated in every conceivable set of military circumstances most of Austria’s most celebrated generals – Beaulieu, Wurmser, Provera, Quasdanovich, Alvinczi, Davidovich – and outwitted the Archduke Charles."

Source:Napoleon

"For global expansion, he needed an advertising medium that was known worldwide. In a meeting with the employees, he went through the names of worldwide celebrities, and Wild jokingly said that the Pope would be his first choice, but unfortunately he would not be considered. The same would probably apply to heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali. "But the same moment I spoke in our meeting of the sheer impossibility of winning this world-famous athlete for us, the idea of hiring 'the greatest champion of all time' became fixed in my head.""

Source:Mr. Capri-Sun – Die Autobiographie

Appears In Volumes