Create psychological safety by agreeing on roles, stakes, and timeboxes before practicing. Use fictional names but realistic constraints, so participants can stretch skills without personal exposure. Rotate observers with clear lenses—listening, clarity, empathy—then capture micro-commitments that transfer into tomorrow’s meetings with measurable, behavior-level follow‑through.
Bake constraints into the scenario: missing data, compressed time, conflicting incentives, and an impatient executive. Real frictions surface default habits and status games. Calibrate difficulty so learners encounter edges, recover composure, and choose better moves, reinforcing courage, humility, and situational awareness under pressure when consequences are real.
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