Sun Tzu is a well-known philosopher and strategist that had a profound point of view on many spheres of importance. You may have read some of his thoughts in the classic, The Art of War, and some derived editions like the art of business, the art of leadership and even marketing. Unfortunately the philosopher passed away 2500 years ago before any major economic downturn or recession. I had this vision last night of his soul being so restless on missing the golden opportunity of writing his ultimate 9th symphony; I heard him blasphemously describing the angel of death with some half Chinese and half Lebanese adjectives. He moaned on being taken away before the sub-prime crisis, Lehmann brothers, Maddoff and the likes. This metaphysical experience got me wondering as to what the guru of strategy might have written for times like this. Hence very humbly, I attempt to write on his behalf respectfully as a ‘self appointed’ disciple. So here is what I call in Sun Tzu style” The Art of Thriving in Recession”. The year 2009 began with dampened enthusiasm and dented optimism. Despite the new mantra of “Yes we can” from Barack Husain Obama the newly elected president of the world, our happiness is diluted and our peace threatened by the financial injuries that have afflicted our families and organizations. Dinner party gossip continues to center around the number of abandoned cars that are being recovered from UAE airports, the number of static construction cranes that decorate our skyline to rumors that reputed construction companies are offering to pay their suppliers in apartments instead of cash. There is no doubt about the severity of the situation we are in today nor should there be any delusion about the challenges ahead. They are indeed going to be Herculean. But as my guru Sun Tzu encourages “Command your people in a way that gives them a higher shared purpose. You can lead them to death. You can lead them to life. They must never fear danger”. So whilst Sun Tzu’s wisdom dictates that we approach the enemy (our challenges) with full understanding and knowledge, you stand already defeated if you do so with fear and pessimism. “You must make use of war. Do not trust that the enemy isn’t coming. Trust your readiness to meet him. Military leaders must be experts in knowing how to adapt to find an advantage”. Sun Tzu therefore implies that recession is definitely not a problem. It is indeed an opportunity. This era belongs to the tribe of the entrepreneurs that remain focussed on opportunities and have the will, the agility, the foresight and the flexibility to harvest the gains. It is in financial downturns like this that billionaires and fortune 500 companies are created. Sadly on the other hand, recession is also the end of the road for many. It comes in as a periodic cataclysmic upheaval that eliminates elements of mediocrity. In Darwinian logic, this is when the theory of natural selection kicks in and only the fittest move on. The secret as Sun Tzu would have agreed is the speed of adapting to change. “Old dogs will have to learn new tricks”. The so called boom time leaders will swiftly have to think and act like challengers once more or write out their epitaphs. So what kind of species is likely to emerge from the clutches of this economic blitzkrieg, an innocent question I asked the master of strategy in my vision? Is it the soldier tucked away in the bunker with some rations and some ammunition or is it the sniper who ventures out with just his rifle looking for higher ground and an