There is a game inspired by the Prisoner Dilemma that I like to facilitate.
What is the Prisonerās Dilemma?
The Prisonerās Dilemma is a classic thought experiment in game theory. Two thieves must decide independently whether to cooperate or betray each other, with the outcomes reflecting their choices:
Both cooperate: They achieve the best mutual result.(e.g., 1 year in jail),
One betrays while the other cooperates: The betrayer benefits most, and the cooperator suffers. (no punishment vs 5 years in jail)
Both betray: Both lose more than if they had cooperated. (both 3 years in jail)
This demonstrates how fear of betrayal often leads individuals to act in their self-interest, resulting in worse outcomes.
The Game
Each team had a captain at the start line. At a signal, each captain could:
1ļøā£ Move forward (contributing to the team’s progress).
2ļøā£ Stay still (avoiding risk but potentially gaining more individually).
Rules:
If all moved forward: Every team earned 1 pointāa win for collaboration.
If some stayed still: Those who moved forward lost points, while those who stayed still gained points equal to the total moves.
The Parallels to Project Teams
In our game, captains who āstayed stillā mirrored those who betrayed in the Prisonerās Dilemma. Teams that trusted one another and all āmoved forwardā succeeded because collaboration maximized collective benefits.
The Lesson
Effective project teamwork demands trust, alignment, and a shared commitment to success.
#ProjectManagement#Teamwork#Collaboration hashtag#Leadership#PrisonersDilemma
Nov 27