I've handled thousands if not tens of thousands of sock puppets over the years, and some patterns do emerge from their behavior. The single most popular reason for people to coordinate voting on this site is to evade question bans. People who rely on this site to do their job will do whatever it takes to keep asking questions here. Even accounting for size, Stack Overflow sees far more instances of voting fraud than any other site on the network, and this is why.
Beyond evading question bans, in certain industries located in specific parts of the world, it is assumed that you will vote for your coworkers or your boss in order to elevate them. We have been told that some companies even teach new employees, formally or informally, how to create sock puppets or participate in voting rings. In these cases, that again is largely used to evade question bans.
Having a higher Stack Overflow reputation is a boost in some job markets, I've heard, but that mostly isn't the case. Some people can assume this is true and use puppets or rings to boost themselves in pursuit of this. That largely backfires once all their fraudulent votes are invalidated. One consulting company listed all their employees' Stack Overflow profiles on their front page, and became quite upset with us when they all were suspended at the same time. I imagine that didn't help them get clients.
For non-moderators, I know there's this impression that sock puppet operators are criminal masterminds, but when you look behind the scenes you realize just how lazy people are. This morning alone, I removed three sock puppets that had the exact same name as their primary account. When the driving factor is to evade question bans, which are in general triggered by a lack of effort, you can guess how much time they'll put into covering their tracks.
Every now and then, we will get a case where someone built a larger and more sophisticated network of puppets. I've found that half the time these tend to be connected to spam in some way (subtle promotion of products or platforms hidden in otherwise innocuous questions and answers). The other half, it's someone who decided to spend a little more time inflating their reputation. Once all the votes are invalidated, that time is wasted.