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Leadership

Why leading an orchestra is a lot like leading a business

1 hour ago • by Rainer Hersch in Leadership

What business leaders can learn from orchestras about alignment, collaboration, and turning strategy into performance....

Leading an orchestra offers a compelling blueprint for business leaders, showing how to align teams, translate strategy into action, and deliver results through collaboration.

An orchestra is one of the most complex teams you can imagine: dozens of highly trained specialists, each focused on their own part, each capable of excellence, and all of them needing to come together to create something bigger than themselves. And then there’s me – the conductor. To the untrained eye, it might look like I’m just beating time, but in reality, I’m shaping far more than the rhythm.

As the conductor, I’m the team leader. My job is to bring all those individual lines together into a single, unified sound: to turn a set of separate contributions into something coherent and compelling. And it turns out, the role I play and the dynamics within the orchestra have rather a lot in common with leading a team in business.

What makes up an orchestra?

Most people are aware that an orchestra is a large group of musicians, from around 20 to 120 people, divided into groups of instruments: first violins, second violins, violas, cellos, woodwind, brass, and percussion.

The first violins are the biggest department. For the orchestra to function optimally, this group, as with all the other groups, must do exactly the same thing at exactly the same time. The first violins are managed by the leader of the orchestra – the principal violinist – who sub-conducts their peers based on direction from the conductor. From there, a hierarchy ripples through each department. The goal is to create a seamless, homogeneous unit that plays in harmony and in unison to bring the conductor’s vision to life.

Like any team, an orchestra has its own internal dynamics, hierarchies, tensions, and politics. My job isn’t to eliminate that; it’s to work with it and somehow bring all of those moving parts together into a single, coherent whole.

The score is the blueprint

As you probably know, the orchestra performs a piece of music that is written down in detail as a musical score for each instrument. This can be likened to the business strategy that defines what the business is going to deliver. However, only the conductor gets to see the whole score. Everyone else only sees what they are supposed to play. This means that the conductor is the only person with the complete picture and therefore must take responsibility to mold and lead this disparate, sometimes self-interested group of musicians to build something bigger than the sum of their individual parts. There’s a lot of information in the score, but the job isn’t just to get the notes right; we want to produce something beautiful. This takes judgment and the ability to get everyone aligned behind it.

The conductor is not deterministic but relies on the departments.

The role of the conductor

The conductor is not deterministic but relies on the departments. The main task is to interpret and communicate the ‘project’ (the music), to set the direction, but we depend on the orchestra to bring it to life.

This is not as easy as people think. You might assume that, because the music is so strictly written down, nothing anyone could do would possibly make a difference. The reality could not be further from that assumption.

Think of the conductor like a painter, combining the orchestra’s colors on canvas. The musicians are all artists too – but it is impossible for 50 to 150 painters to all work on the same painting. It’s the conductor’s job to examine the score and come up with a vision that inspires and unites everyone to create one piece of art.

A composer sees a butterfly in his mind, and tries very carefully, very delicately, to get it to alight on the page, still alive and intact. The conductor’s job is to see that same butterfly on the page and let it take flight again.
- Pierre Boulez, French composer and conductor

At the heart of this is collaboration

The orchestra has one golden rule: to listen and to react to what is going on around them to produce wonderful results. It’s a dynamic, interactive dance that requires listening and knowing when to participate in your own section, when to communicate within your section, and when to wait for – and follow – the communication of the person who is in charge of the big picture. Without coordination, even skilled musicians produce something empty or disjointed, but with alignment, the same group can produce something meaningful.

In the words of French composer and conductor Pierre Boulez, “a composer sees a butterfly in his mind, and tries very carefully, very delicately, to get it to alight on the page, still alive and intact. The conductor’s job is to see that same butterfly on the page and let it take flight again.”

How do you inspire and motivate your team?

To inspire and motivate your team, you have to know the project. If people think you don’t understand what’s in front of you, they simply won’t trust you. That knowledge is what builds confidence and gives you authority.

Have something to say – and believe it. If you’ve studied the score, you do know what to say. The job is to come up with an interpretation and bring everyone with you.

Authors

Rainer Hersch

Musician, comedian and conductor

Rainer Hersch began his musical studies with the piano, followed by three years as a conductor at The Conservatoire in Blackheath, London, master classes at the Royal Academy of Music, and special study of Johann Strauss’ music at the Volksoper in Vienna. Early in his career, he was a manager for concert agencies, organizing tours for some of the world’s great classical artists. He also performed stand-up comedy on the London cabaret circuit, which gradually developed into a parallel career. In 1999, he founded the Rainer Hersch Orkestra. Hersch’s performances led to invitations to guest conduct other symphony orchestras, including the Philharmonia Orchestra, the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, the BBC Concert Orchestra, and the Johann Strauss Orchestra with whom he toured for four years. He is a regular broadcaster for the BBC and Classic FM.

This article is inspired by a keynote session at IMD’s signature Orchestrating Winning Performance program, Lausanne (2026), which brings together executives from diverse sectors and geographies for a week of intense learning and sharing with IMD faculty and business experts.

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