Copy and paste this into your KDP dashboard under Book Description.
Enter each phrase in its own keyword field in KDP (up to 7 fields).
| # | Phrase |
|---|---|
| 1 | bīngfǎ — military methods or laws of warfare |
| 2 | móu — strategic planning and deliberation before action |
| 3 | quán — the weighing of advantage; situational calculation |
| 4 | zhì — stratagems; the use of cunning and deception in command |
| 5 | zhèng qí — the orthodox and unorthodox; the theory of direct and indirect force |
| 6 | jiāng — the qualities and duties of a general; command philosophy |
| 7 | zhī — foreknowledge; intelligence and the use of spies |
These are the classical Chinese terms that educated military readers, court advisors, and scribal officials of the Spring and Autumn period used to categorize, discuss, and request texts on the conduct of war. They function as the 500 BC equivalent of Amazon search keywords — the vocabulary a lord's chamberlain or a general's aide would use when asking a court archivist whether a relevant text existed. Placing these concepts prominently in any presentation copy or herald's announcement ensures the text is correctly identified and routed to decision-makers who are actively seeking this type of counsel.
Distribution to states outside the Wu-Qi-Chu triangle: In 500 BC, Sun Tzu's strategic priority must be securing and maintaining his position at the Wu court. Wide distribution of the thirteen chapters to distant states — Jin, Qin, Yan — before the method has been validated in the field risks two things: gifting a strategic advantage to a potential enemy of Wu, and diluting the text's authority by allowing it to circulate without the supporting evidence of actual victories. Focus distribution on the Wu court and the immediate diplomatic network until at least two major Wu military successes can be attributed to the method. Cross-state distribution to distant lords is a second-phase strategy, appropriate once the text's military reputation is established and Sun Tzu's appointment is secure.
Four weeks before the court presentation to King Helü
The week of the royal audience and the two weeks following
Months two through six after the court presentation
Why this platform for your book: Military strategy texts had no mass audience in 500 BC — they had a small number of readers with extreme decision-making power. A single additional lord-reader was worth more than a thousand educated-but-powerless readers, because only a lord could test the method at scale, generate the victories that validated it, and commission further copies. The patronage network was not the best channel for reaching a large audience; it was the only channel that reached the right audience.
A spoken précis of the five-factor analysis from Chapter One, adapted to the specific strategic situation of whichever court Sun Tzu is visiting — demonstrating the method's relevance in real time rather than in the abstract.
The framing question that opens Chapter One: 'Which lord has the Way? Which general has greater ability? Which side has the advantages of Heaven and Earth?' — asked directly of a court advisor about his own lord's current campaign. It is a question that makes the interlocutor realize they do not have a systematic answer.
An anecdote from the Wu campaign that illustrates a specific principle — ideally one where the method's prediction diverged from common wisdom and the method proved correct.
A diplomatic reframing of the text's value: not 'how to defeat enemies' (which implies aggression) but 'how to achieve your objectives with the minimum expenditure of resources' — a framing that appeals to the administrative and economic concerns of a ruling lord, not just his military ambitions.
The text's central paradox, offered as a conversation starter: 'The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.' A lord who hears this and wants to know how will ask for the text unprompted.
The late Spring and Autumn period was the beginning of what would later be called the Hundred Schools of Thought — a period of intense intellectual competition among educated men offering systematic frameworks for governance, ethics, and strategy. While this tradition reached its peak in the subsequent Warring States period, its roots were already visible in Sun Tzu's era in the circulation of texts attributed to named masters. By positioning The Art of War within this tradition — as a systematic philosophical contribution rather than merely a practical military manual — Sun Tzu could reach the broader community of educated court advisors who consumed and debated these texts.
The primary patronage network reaches lords; the zǐ literature tradition reaches the advisors who counsel lords. An educated minister who has read and debated the thirteen chapters is likely to recommend them to his lord, and to frame them favorably. This is a slower channel than direct court presentation but produces more durable advocacy.
Getting started: Seek out opportunities to engage publicly — at court gatherings, at diplomatic receptions — with the ideas of other recognized masters circulating in the same period, particularly those whose frameworks touch on governance and the relationship between a ruler and his officials. Engaging respectfully but critically with existing intellectual frameworks positions the thirteen chapters as a contribution to an ongoing conversation rather than an isolated novelty.
Invite two or three recognized scholars or advisors to read the text and offer written responses — not endorsements, but genuine intellectual engagement. Responses, even critical ones, generate discussion, and discussion generates readers.
Consider composing a short supplementary text — not a new chapter, but a preface — that explicitly situates the thirteen chapters within the broader question of how a ruler maintains the loyalty of Heaven and the welfare of his people. This framing connects the military text to the governing philosophy debates that educated men were already having.
After each court presentation or significant diplomatic contact, record the name, title, and state of the recipient in a formal register. Assign a trusted aide to maintain this register and to prompt Sun Tzu when more than three months have passed without contact with a high-priority correspondent. Send brief written observations — one bamboo strip, not thirteen — tied to current events: a note on the strategic implications of Chu's recent border movements, a question about whether a correspondent's current campaign aligns with the terrain principles of Chapter Ten. Keep the correspondence short enough to be read immediately and substantive enough to be worth keeping.
Send to your list or personal contacts on launch day.
Send to bloggers and reviewers before your release date. Replace [REVIEWER_NAME] and [BOOK_LINK].
Use in Sponsored Products "Custom text" field. Test both.
Placement strategy: focus diplomatic correspondence and courier effort on the courts of states currently engaged in active military conflict or facing immediate strategic threats. A lord who is not at war has no urgent reason to read a military strategy text; a lord whose border is contested will read it this week. Within courts, target the chamberlains and senior military ministers first — they are the gatekeepers who decide what reaches the lord's attention. Avoid distributing copies to junior officials who lack both the authority to act on the text and the credibility to advocate for it upward.
| Competitor Titles | Genre Terms | Reader Behavior |
|---|---|---|
| The administrative and military writings attributed to Guan Zhong of Qi (the Guanzi tradition) — the dominant competing framework for systematic governance and military management | Bīngfǎ — military methods; the systematic approach to the conduct of war | Lords and senior ministers who received counsel from itinerant advisors and sought written frameworks to systematize what they had heard orally |
| The ritual warfare texts preserved in Zhou court archives — the traditional framework The Art of War explicitly displaces | Móuchén — strategic counsel; the genre of advice offered to rulers by expert advisors | Generals preparing for campaigns who required portable, memorizable reference systems for command decisions |
| Oral tactical traditions attributed to named commanders of the early Zhou period, circulated as anecdote rather than system | Zhìmóu — the use of stratagems and intelligence rather than brute force | Court archivists and scribal officials responsible for maintaining a state's repository of strategic knowledge |
| The administrative texts on logistics and resource management circulating among the states of the Central Plains | Bīngshū — military writings; texts devoted to the theory and practice of warfare | Diplomatic envoys who needed to understand the military doctrine of the states they were negotiating with |
| The diplomatic and strategic counsel offered by itinerant yóushuì advisors — the live human competition for the same advisory role Sun Tzu's text seeks to fill | Quánshù — the art of weighing circumstances; texts offering frameworks for situational calculation | Men who had previously consulted the Guanzi tradition on governance and were ready for a more specifically military analytical framework |
Copy and paste this into your KDP dashboard under Book Description.
Enter each phrase in its own keyword field in KDP (up to 7 fields).
| # | Phrase |
|---|---|
| 1 | ancient wisdom leadership books for modern life |
| 2 | military strategy self help books |
| 3 | Sun Tzu Art of War modern translation |
| 4 | books like Robert Greene 48 Laws of Power |
| 5 | competitive strategy books for entrepreneurs |
| 6 | stoic philosophy books for ambitious men |
| 7 | timeless business strategy books nonfiction |
The keyword strategy balances high-competition head terms with longer buying-intent phrases that signal where this reader already is in the purchase funnel. 'Sun Tzu Art of War modern translation' captures searchers who know the book and want the best edition — high intent, moderate competition. 'Books like Robert Greene 48 Laws of Power' exploits the well-established also-bought relationship between Greene's audience and ancient strategy titles — this is a long-tail phrase with strong conversion history in this subgenre. 'Ancient wisdom leadership books for modern life' and 'stoic philosophy books for ambitious men' tap the Stoic revival trend that has driven enormous nonfiction volume since 2022. Use the title and subtitle to anchor 1-2 of the highest-volume terms; place the comparison and behavior-based phrases in the 7 backend keyword slots. Rotate and test at 90-day intervals using Publisher Rocket or BookBeam data.
Facebook Ads: Facebook's nonfiction self-help audience skews older (45+) and has declining organic engagement in 2026 — the cost-per-click for leadership and philosophy titles has increased significantly while conversion rates have dropped compared to Amazon Ads and TikTok. Allocate the ad budget entirely to Amazon Sponsored Products in the first 90 days, where buying intent is highest and attribution is direct. Revisit Facebook Ads only if a wide-distribution audiobook or hardcover edition is launched in month four or later.
Weeks 1–4 before launch
Launch week
Weeks 2–8 post-launch
Why this platform for your book: The Art of War's themes are algorithmically optimized for BookTok without any contrivance. The 'books that made me dangerous' and 'books that rewired my brain' content categories — both evergreen high-performers on BookTok — are exactly what this book delivers. Sun Tzu's counterintuitive principles (win without fighting, know your enemy better than yourself, strength through concealment) are inherently short-video-friendly: each principle is a 30-second hook that demands elaboration. The book's age — 2,500 years and still the most cited strategy text in business schools — is itself a viral premise. The competitive and adversarial themes also perform strongly with the 25–38 male-skewing professional audience that BookTok's strategy and self-improvement content reaches.
Five content formats will drive the most consistent growth for this title: First, 'Principle of the Week' videos where a single Sun Tzu principle is stated provocatively on screen, then explained in 30 seconds with a modern example — 'Sun Tzu said never fight a battle you haven't already won. Here's what that actually means for your next negotiation.' Second, 'Who read this' videos listing surprising historical figures who studied The Art of War — from Napoleon to Steve Jobs to Tupac Shakur — which trigger the social proof and curiosity algorithms simultaneously. Third, 'Before and after' videos: 'How most people handle conflict vs. how Sun Tzu would handle it' — these have extremely high share rates because viewers tag people they want to 'fix.' Fourth, a reading-with-me clip: 5 seconds of the actual book page, then the creator's reaction — 'I wasn't ready for this one.' Fifth, direct response to current events: 'Sun Tzu's take on [major current business or sports rivalry in the news this week]' — relevance to trending topics dramatically increases algorithm reach.
A newsletter and long-form writing platform that allows authors to build a direct subscriber relationship — both free and paid tiers — outside of any algorithm. In 2026, Substack has a robust internal discovery engine and a reader demographic that skews toward educated, high-income, long-form content consumers who are exactly the leadership and philosophy book buyer.
Substack complements TikTok perfectly for this book: TikTok creates viral moments and drives new readers to discover Sun Tzu's ideas in 30-second bursts; Substack converts those readers into owned subscribers who will buy the book, recommend it, and follow the author's next project. For a book about strategic thinking and depth, the format itself signals authority — a Substack essay demonstrates the author can go long, which is exactly the credibility signal the leadership nonfiction reader wants before committing to a full book.
Getting started: Start by choosing a focused, repeatable newsletter format — 'one Art of War principle applied to one modern situation, every Tuesday' is sustainable and searchable. Set up on Substack (free to start, zero platform fees until monetization) with a publication name that signals the niche clearly, such as 'The Strategist's Edge' or 'Battlefield Thinking.' Import any existing email contacts immediately and cross-promote the Substack link in every TikTok bio and video description. Write and publish the first 3 essays before announcing the newsletter publicly — readers who discover it should not land on an empty page. Reach out to 3–5 adjacent Substack writers in the strategy, philosophy, or business thinking space and offer a reciprocal mention in the launch week issue; Substack's 'recommendations' feature means cross-publication endorsements have unusually high subscriber conversion rates. Set the first paid tier at $7/month or $60/year and offer early subscribers a 30-day free trial — the goal in the first 90 days is list size, not revenue.
Use ConvertKit (now Kit) as the email platform — it is the industry standard for authors in 2026, with strong automation, deliverability, and integration with landing page tools. Set up a single landing page with the lead magnet offer (see below) and link to it from every platform: TikTok bio, Substack about page, Amazon Author Central, and the book's back matter. Send one email per week in the pre-launch period — alternating between essay-style content adapted from Substack and direct 'book is coming' updates. Use a welcome sequence of 3 automated emails for every new subscriber: email 1 delivers the lead magnet, email 2 shares the most counterintuitive Sun Tzu principle in the book, email 3 invites them to follow on TikTok and Goodreads. Target 500 subscribers before launch day as the minimum viable list for a meaningful launch day sales push.
Send to your list or personal contacts on launch day.
Send to bloggers and reviewers before your release date. Replace [REVIEWER_NAME] and [BOOK_LINK].
Use in Sponsored Products "Custom text" field. Test both.
The keyword strategy layers three levels of intent: broad discovery terms that capture readers early in their search journey (leadership books, ancient philosophy), competitor title and author terms that intercept readers already committed to this genre and looking for their next read, and long-tail behavioral phrases that signal high purchase intent ('books like 48 Laws of Power,' 'best strategy books for entrepreneurs'). Use broad match on discovery terms to surface new keyword data in the first 30 days, then shift to phrase and exact match on the highest-converting terms at the 30-day optimization point. Harvest the Search Term Report weekly for the first 8 weeks to identify organic keywords you haven't yet bid on.
| Competitor Titles | Genre Terms | Reader Behavior |
|---|---|---|
| The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene | ancient philosophy books for modern life | books to read if you loved Robert Greene |
| The Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday | military strategy leadership books | best books on strategy and winning |
| The 33 Strategies of War by Robert Greene | best nonfiction books on power and influence | timeless books every ambitious person should read |
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