Entity Dossier
Person

Racine

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Operating PrincipleUseful as Luxury's Secret CoreSignature MoveCouple as Creative Collision EngineCornerstone MoveBirth a Rebel Brand to Free the Mother ShipCornerstone MoveNylon Backpack as Trojan HorseStrategic PatternMaterial Obsession from Saffiano to NylonCompetitive AdvantageDisturbing Concepts as Competitive MoatCapital StrategyNever-Sell-the-Bicycle Independence DoctrineRisk DoctrineSuccession as Company's Existential TestSignature MoveIce-White Lab Coats on CraftsmenCornerstone MoveEvery Bag Through the Founder's HandsSignature MoveSmash-the-Headlights Patriarch IntensitySignature MoveArchive Bags from 1914 Still ScandalizingCornerstone MoveRoyal Warrant to Runway OutsiderSignature MoveFoundation as Mind Food Not Brand DecorationIdentity & CultureGrandfather's Transgression in the ArchiveSignature 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 Thousands

Primary Evidence

"The shop becomes famous precisely for the trunks, being the exclusive importer in Milan of those from the Hartmann firm. The American suitcases of the Hartmann Trunk Company, from Racine in Wisconsin, represent excellence in the field."

Source:Prada: A Family Story (translated)

"Napoleon also took 125 books of history, geography, philosophy and Greek mythology in a specially constructed library, including Captain Cook’s three-volume Voyages, Montesquieu’s The Spirit of the Laws, Goethe’s Sorrows of Young Werther and books by Livy, Thucydides, Plutarch, Tacitus and, of course, Julius Caesar. He also brought biographies of Turenne, Condé, Saxe, Marlborough, Eugène of Savoy, Charles XII of Sweden and Bertrand du Guesclin, the notable French commander in the Hundred Years War. Poetry and drama had their place too, in the works of Ossian, Tasso, Ariosto, Homer, Virgil, Racine and Molière.6 With the Bible guiding him about the faith of the Druze and Armenians, the Koran about Muslims, and the Vedas about the Hindus, he would be well supplied with suitable quotations for his proclamations to the local populations virtually wherever this campaign was finally to take him. He also included Herodotus for his – largely fantastical – description of Egypt."

Source:Napoleon

Appears In Volumes