LEADERSHIP & TEAMS • 15 ROUNDS
WORKPLACE POLITICS EXPERIENCE
The Power Dynamics Lab
Every Team Has Invisible Politics
A live workplace simulation exploring influence, authority, alliances, stakeholder management, political behavior, executive pressure, difficult personalities, and invisible organizational dynamics.
Influence
Power often exists outside formal hierarchy.
Politics
Teams constantly negotiate invisible priorities.
Authority
Leadership and influence are not the same thing.
ROUND 1
Credit Theft
Your manager presents your idea as their own during a leadership review.
Influence often depends more on visibility and coalition-building than ownership alone.
ROUND 2
The Dominant Personality
One team member controls every meeting conversation and interrupts others constantly.
Dominance in groups is often mistaken for competence because visibility shapes perception.
ROUND 3
Executive Alignment
Two senior leaders want completely opposite outcomes from your project.
Most organizational conflict is priority conflict disguised as personality conflict.
ROUND 4
Silent Opposition
Nobody openly disagrees with your proposal — but nothing moves forward afterward.
In many organizations, disagreement becomes passive instead of explicit.
ROUND 5
Influence Without Authority
You must convince another department to prioritize your work — but you have no formal authority.
Large organizations often run more on influence networks than formal reporting structures.
ROUND 6
The Loud Expert
A highly confident person dominates the room despite weak analysis.
Confidence and competence are often psychologically confused in group environments.
ROUND 7
Meeting Politics
Important decisions are being made before meetings even begin.
Many formal meetings exist to confirm decisions already aligned informally.
ROUND 8
The Visibility Trap
A less capable employee gets promoted because leadership “knows them better.”
Visibility frequently influences career progression more than raw contribution alone.
ROUND 9
The Stakeholder Maze
Five different stakeholders want different outcomes from the same project.
Stakeholder management is often negotiation between competing incentives and fears.
ROUND 10
Executive Presence
Why do some people appear “leader-like” instantly?
Humans subconsciously associate calm certainty and visibility with leadership capability.
ROUND 11
The Political Survivor
An ineffective employee survives every restructuring while stronger performers leave.
Organizational survival often depends on perceived strategic value, not just performance.
ROUND 12
Conflict Avoidance
A leader avoids confronting a difficult high performer because they fear disruption.
Organizations frequently tolerate difficult behavior when perceived value is high enough.
ROUND 13
The Coalition Problem
Two influential groups inside the organization quietly oppose each other.
Most large organizations contain invisible alliance structures that shape decisions.
ROUND 14
The Trust Collapse
Leadership says “transparency matters” but repeatedly hides critical information.
Trust collapses fastest when organizational messaging and behavior become inconsistent.
FINAL INSIGHT
Influence Often Matters
More Than Authority
Most workplace politics are not irrational — they are humans competing for security, visibility, influence, trust, and survival inside complex systems.
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