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Good conflict is when people want mutually exclusive, life-changing things.

GOOD CONFLICT:

Jenny’s father wants her to quit school so she can nurse her chronically ill grandmother and he can keep his job as a long-haul truck driver. Jenny wants him to sign a letter of consent for a prestigious military academy so she can learn to fly jets.

  • Only one of them is going to get what they want, and it is life-changing in both directions.
  • Each of them needs the other to back down so they can get what they want.
  • Someone is going to win and someone is going to lose.

BAD CONFLICT:

Jenny’s father wants her to nurse her grandmother. Jenny wants to win a baking competition so she can open her own cake shop.

  • They want different things, but they can figure out how to compromise.
  • This isn’t the only way to open a cake shop. There’s not a lot at stake.
  • There’s no timelock on it. Jenny can open a cake shop tomorrow or six months from now or next year. No tension.

Give good conflict to up your game.