字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント Hi folks, I'm here with Gary Muszynski, he is an expert in organizational development that uses music, neuroscience and play as a strategy of development. I'm Wagner Cassimiro and this is the Espresso3 Gary, could you explain me the relationship between music and organizational development sure so I use music as both a metaphor metaphor a-- and an actual embodied experience so there are five principles that I learned from so as an organizational development consultant as a musician as someone who's always also studied the brain and neuroscience I discovered that there are five principles in music making that can be applied to organizations first principle is listen listening at three levels to self to other in conversation and to the larger system that could be a room it could be an organization so listen to three level principle two is synchronize your team so the principle of synchronization is something you find in music whether it's in Samba or PI ecology or MPA or rock-and-roll or whatever right synchronization the rhythm is key to the aliveness of the music and the ability to move people which means to motivate them something business is also interested in so synchronization is key how do you synchronize a group of people around a common vision or set of values which in the workplace we call alignment in music we call it synching up with a beat right or the groove right so principle number three is being able to orchestrate now we might think of a classical conductor so a leader on a large team or in an organization needs to be able to orchestrate outcomes they get they need to get results they need to do that by inspiring their people by sharing stories so they people understand who they are authentically you know both in terms of the mistakes they've made as well as successes we relate and want to follow people who don't seem perfect you know who are like us who are struggling who are learning so when a leader can communicate that it creates a better bond but it's an act of orchestration they're not trying to micromanage people but just like a classical orchestra or a music producer they're listening to the big picture they're making sure that the right people are in the right roles so recruiting is important managing and developing talent listening to the big picture all of those skills from a big band jazz person or from a classical conductor our great inspiration for what orchestration means so principle four is collaborate with your team so that means as a leader I want to facilitate and coach rather than tell you what to do because I want your creativity I want you to be involved I want you to stay in this organization so I need to involve you need to give you room to grow experiment fail learn so collaboration you see it in music that there's a lot of give-and-take even if there's a clear band leader now if you hear great Brazilian music like I got to hear I met two Pascual recently in concert one of the great Brazilian jazz artists and he's continually playing and co-creating with his group and it's just amazing what they can achieve and then finally improvisation improvisation is really key because no matter how much we plan in life and you know businesses like metrics they like data they like to predict outcome but life as you know is very uncertain especially the world we live in today so you need to be able to adapt you need to be able to use your intuition and you need to be able to change very quickly now I'd like to lease in a short case that who can show do you think red sure so I worked with a chief executive officer at Bank of America for a couple years and what was unusual about the work is they brought in a consulting company first of all their need was they wanted to transform their division from a seventy million dollar organization to a hundred and fifty million dollar organization in two years and it was ecommerce at the beginning of e-commerce is a very flat growth business and when I spoke to the chief executive of that division I said what do you see as the barriers to your success what's stopping you from reaching that goal he said well one of the key things is that my entire leadership team does not believe we can do it they're in a mood of despair they are not confident about the future they don't think it's a realistic goal and he said to me so I need an experience to demonstrates louder than any words that we could do this that if we have the right mindset that if we believe in ourselves that we have the skills we have the capability we have the creativity and in 2010 IBM did a global study of the top 1,700 CEOs in seven different 13 different industries 25 different countries and the top thing that the CEO said they needed in their leadership was creativity it was in business acumen it wasn't customer intimacy it wasn't supply chain mojo it was creativity so that was the business need and he experienced our work at Eastman Kodak few years before that when they were trying to change their culture from analog film which was their bread and butter to digital you know when Fuji was eating their lunch so he said I need something to really shake up my people that will be very bold and will really demonstrate to them that how key their mindset is so that's one of the specialties of our work at orchestrating excellence is shifting people's mindset so now what we did is we started with a leadership development program for four hours half day with the top 120 liters in his division and we use Samba music from Brazil to transform them into a very precise sounding batucada orchestra so you have these North American leaders having no idea what Samba is learning to play the certo the a Gogol the tombow team the Alpha che the cueca the gangs ah all these things in different sections like different business units and first they sound terrible right and we just play for them as professionals and kind of show off the breaks and everything we ask them how many of you think you can achieve this level of precision and quality in four hours now vogner imagine yourself in their situation how many what percentage of the audience do you think said yes this is possible we can do it what percentage I really don't know guess in the beginning the one 5% 5% 5% is typical even with the brightest the best even top grossing salespeople 5% because we want to set it up like it seems impossible how can you know these North American Gringo's learn to play samba in four hours when you know in Rio and the ecology of Samba it takes you know it's a nine-month process and they haven't been playing it since they were little kids so so we asked them what do you think are the barriers to your success and they say it's not a realistic goal we don't have the time we don't have the talent there's no alcohol in the room we're all engineers and then we ask them if this miracle were to occur in the next four hours what would have to happen what are our conditions for success and when we flipchart both ml4 conditions for success will say clear leadership good training role clarity the ability to make mistakes learn fun creativity etc so now we have our change journey we have a map of our current reality psychology and desired future state so this is no longer about playing samba it's no longer about getting them to sound like a cohesive Orchestra it's about the psychological change of putting them into a very awkward and vulnerable place of learning about something they don't know about where they have no skills where I'm giving them very high standards in a very short period of time to induce stress wonderful case and oh so the impact of this work we did it five times through the organization's with different leadership groups was to completely transform their thinking about their goals in their business and within two years they grew the business from 70 million to 170 million and there's a case study about it on our website so I winked Oh buddy gotta know plus here you
B1 中級 米 ATD 2017(アメリカ)でのEspresso3 - 音楽、神経科学、組織開発 (Espresso3 at ATD 2017 (USA) - Music, neuroscience and organizational development) 14 2 Amy.Lin に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語