Next, consider how strategy often arises from what competitors dismiss. Sun Tzu’s *The Art of War* (c. 5th century BC) stresses advantage through positioning, timing, and deception—factors that are easy to ignore because they don’t look like “strength” in the usual sense. Similarly, many victories come from logistics, morale, information flow, and preparedness rather than raw force.
An illustrative modern parallel is how organizations win through supply chain reliability: customers may praise the product, yet the decisive factor is frequently inventory discipline, vendor redundancy, and delivery predictability. These are not glamorous, but they are precisely the non-obvious levers that, once organized, make success durable. [...]