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"Leadership - Business and all that jazz"
MUSIC AND BUSINESS have more in common than you might think, claims jazz
pianist and conductor Dominic Alldis. Alldis, the founder of Music and
Management, works with companies to explore the parallels between music
and business. Using musical analogies he introduces a new way of thinking
about issues such as teamwork, leadership and innovation.
Alldis recently ran a leadership presentation for 82 senior managers with
Rolls Royce’s Controls and Transmissions Systems Operating Business
Unit. At the event, Alldis demonstrated how two types of music - classical
and jazz - use disciplines that can be applied to the business world.
Following a clip of an orchestra in full flow, Alldis questioned the audience
about what they saw. He elaborates: “The orchestra looks up for
reassurance from the conductor who represents supreme confidence. He is
there to sell the message to the rest of the orchestra. His job is to
energise and inspire people around him. He has to be charismatic on the
podium.“
"It is the conductor’s job to keep everyone together, which also
requires the orchestra to be adept at responding to different styles of leadership.”
As in business, where employees like different styles of leadership, so
members of an orchestra favour different conductors. “Some like
the energy of an over conductor, while others like the under conductor
who lets them get on with it,” says Alldis.
In the same vein, different kinds of musicians are attracted to different
ways of making music. For example, the jazz band thrives in a chaotic
and turbulent environment, rotating leadership and building on each other’s
ideas. “Listening and responding is essential when we don’t
have instructions in front of us,” says Alldis. “You need
to have minimal structures and rules when improvising. You have to listen
to each other and be flexible.”
Alldis and two other musicians played a jazz improvisation. Alldis explained
how the other players quickly picked up which key he was in. “In
this situation, the musicians are freewheeling, being playful. They understand
the language.”
Alldis believes that all business can learn from the jazz band. He sees
the future organization as “an orchestra made up of lots of small
jazz bands – to maintain the quality of communication and the fun.”
But can business really gain from these types of course? “A course
might ignite the interest of the individual, but it also needs to work
with the business,” says Cary Cooper, Professor of Organisational
Psychology and Health at Lancaster University Management School.
Jon Cook, a business transformation manager a Rolls-Royce, commends the
event: “Many of Dominic’s insights have been adopted within
the day-to-day behaviour of our leadership team.”
Sarah Hanson, Associate Editor
Director Magazine, Institute of Directors
January 2006
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