Teamwork principle
Lessons from Lion
Coordinate roles. Compound outcomes.

Core lesson
Shared force works best when roles are clear. Good teams do not all do the same thing at once.
Biological basis
Heavy forequarters, social coordination, strong jaws, and low-light hunting ability turn lions into open-country control hardware built for decisive close-range force. Lions regulate herd behavior and prey distribution across grassland systems. Their influence is partly in the kill and partly in the fear patterns that reshape where herbivores linger.
Best use cases
Where this lesson tends to be most useful in practice.
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Related lessons
Other animals connected to the Teamwork principle.
Goose
Coordinate roles. Compound outcomes.
In Goose, teamwork creates a repeatable survival edge when conditions are uncertain.
Read lessonPenguin
Coordinate roles. Compound outcomes.
In Penguin, teamwork creates a repeatable survival edge when conditions are uncertain.
Read lessonWolf
Coordinate roles. Compound outcomes.
Endurance and coordination beat isolated bursts of talent. A disciplined group with shared direction can reshape a landscape over time.
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