A master in his own lifetime

Mon, Dec 3, 2012, 00:00

   

Management books, by their nature, slip quietly on to the shelves without much hype. The launch of Robert Greene’s latest book, Mastery, however, was accompanied with a video promo that could be likened to a Hollywood movie trailer.

Greene is certainly big business. His first title The 48 Laws of Power, sold a reported 1.2 million copies in the US alone and achieved a strong following with entrepreneurs, celebrities and the rap community, among others. He has followed through with four titles.

Greene is an unassuming and affable character, belying his best-seller power guru status. He jokes, for example, about his Jewish mother visiting bookshops and moving his titles to more prominent positions.

A common theme in his work is understanding the dynamics of power. The 48 Laws of Power addresses it explicitly but it also features in his other titles, The 33 Strategies of War, The 50th Law, co-written with rap artist 50 Cent, and The Art of Seduction.

Achieving mastery

Mastery takes things to a different level. It is a big read, stretching to more than 300 tightly packed pages. Achieving mastery is not an easy feat, he agrees, but it is something that most people can achieve if they put in the effort. The book provides a road map for how to do this and in distilling the stories of famous masters from the worlds of art, science and business, shows the common themes running through the lives of those who have achieved it.

Greene claims to have spent 20,000 hours researching the book and says he had an epiphany in 2007 when the themes came together. The starting point for mastery is to have a deep and abiding passion for a subject. This needs to be followed by an apprenticeship, then a creative period where we experiment and make necessary mistakes before achieving mastery.

“Masters don’t necessarily have a high IQ but they do have radar that guides them like a north star. If they take wrong turns, it pulls them back,” he observes.

Mastery, he adds, is about having an inner calling; those who follow it can withstand the pain of the process – the self-doubts, the long hours of practice, the setbacks and criticisms from the envious. It is as much a matter of emotional resilience as what is commonly perceived as intelligence.

Being a maverick, not fitting in with the establishment and taking divergent paths emerge as common themes. Academic achievement is not a precursor for mastery as many have demonstrated over the years, Greene says. Having a good mentor is more important, he adds.

Irish Times Culture