11-06-2025, 09:46 PM
Long ago in Delhi, during British colonial rule, officials faced a serious problem — too many deadly cobras slithering through the city.
To fix it, they came up with what seemed like a brilliant plan:
“We’ll pay for every dead cobra brought in.”
At first, it worked perfectly. People hunted snakes, and dead cobras poured in by the dozens. But then, human creativity kicked in.
Some clever locals began breeding cobras just to kill them and claim the reward 😂.
When the government discovered the scam, they scrapped the program.
But now, the breeders had no use for their snakes, so they released them. The result? More cobras than before.
That’s the Cobra Effect -- when a well-intentioned policy or incentive ends up making the problem worse.
It didn’t stop there. The same thing happened years later in French colonial Vietnam.
Authorities in Hanoi offered bounties for every dead rat to control an outbreak. People began cutting off rat tails to claim the reward. But instead of killing the rats, they let them go so they could breed more.
Before long, the city had a rat explosion 💥💥💥😂.
Another example comes from East Germany.
Factories were once rewarded based on how many nails they produced. So workers made tiny, useless nails by the thousands to hit their targets.
When officials changed the rule to pay by total weight instead, the workers made a few giant, heavy nails that nobody could use.
Either way, the metric was met _ but the goal was missed.
Even in modern times, the Cobra Effect is everywhere:
– Hospitals rewarded for short waiting times might start turning away complex cases that would slow them down.
– Schools rewarded for high exam scores might teach to the test instead of teaching real understanding.
– Social media companies rewarded for engagement ended up building systems that favor outrage and addiction over quality content.
Now imagine a hotel rewarding its staff for every positive guest review.
At first, it seems like a great idea as reviews skyrocket!
But soon, staff focus more on begging for reviews than on genuine service.
When the reward stops, so does the effort, and the culture of real hospitality fades.
The lesson:
Short-term carrots can breed long-term cobras.
Lasting success doesn’t come from dangling incentives. IT comes from values, pride, and purpose.
When people act out of integrity, not manipulation, good results take care of themselves.
To fix it, they came up with what seemed like a brilliant plan:
“We’ll pay for every dead cobra brought in.”
At first, it worked perfectly. People hunted snakes, and dead cobras poured in by the dozens. But then, human creativity kicked in.
Some clever locals began breeding cobras just to kill them and claim the reward 😂.
When the government discovered the scam, they scrapped the program.
But now, the breeders had no use for their snakes, so they released them. The result? More cobras than before.
That’s the Cobra Effect -- when a well-intentioned policy or incentive ends up making the problem worse.
It didn’t stop there. The same thing happened years later in French colonial Vietnam.
Authorities in Hanoi offered bounties for every dead rat to control an outbreak. People began cutting off rat tails to claim the reward. But instead of killing the rats, they let them go so they could breed more.
Before long, the city had a rat explosion 💥💥💥😂.
Another example comes from East Germany.
Factories were once rewarded based on how many nails they produced. So workers made tiny, useless nails by the thousands to hit their targets.
When officials changed the rule to pay by total weight instead, the workers made a few giant, heavy nails that nobody could use.
Either way, the metric was met _ but the goal was missed.
Even in modern times, the Cobra Effect is everywhere:
– Hospitals rewarded for short waiting times might start turning away complex cases that would slow them down.
– Schools rewarded for high exam scores might teach to the test instead of teaching real understanding.
– Social media companies rewarded for engagement ended up building systems that favor outrage and addiction over quality content.
Now imagine a hotel rewarding its staff for every positive guest review.
At first, it seems like a great idea as reviews skyrocket!
But soon, staff focus more on begging for reviews than on genuine service.
When the reward stops, so does the effort, and the culture of real hospitality fades.
The lesson:
Short-term carrots can breed long-term cobras.
Lasting success doesn’t come from dangling incentives. IT comes from values, pride, and purpose.
When people act out of integrity, not manipulation, good results take care of themselves.

