Why Being A Drummer Benefits Being a Good Manager


Most people know the role of a drummer in a band, who keeps the beat and provides the tempo for the overall music. However, the ordinary person does not usually notice that the drummer, while not always receiving the accolades of being the leader, does function as the band's director.

While some types of music, such as classical, may not require a drummer, most current music must. Whereas the piano used to be the major beat giver and tempo manager, the drummer now holds a band's music together. In this aspect, the drummer and the manager of the music being created are necessary. Every other musician in the band, including the singer, relies on the drummer to tell them where things are in the song being performed at the time. When playing in a band, the drummer is the day-to-day production manager.

Doug Pitassi has been a drummer by hobby, manager, and corporate leader by career, so he understands both sides. And he is well aware that, while a CEO might push a vision for where a firm should go, they must also be the daily manager who ensures that employees and tools are combined to deliver goods or services being marketed. Douglas Pitassi, the executive leader of Pacific Office Automation, is similar to a band drummer in that both must keep the music going, keep everyone on tempo, and complete projects with a degree of quality that pleases audiences and consumers.

Doug Pitassi would probably advocate working as a band drummer for a few years to understand the psychology of being a people manager. And, while Drumming 101 is unlikely to become a course at the Chicago School of Business anytime soon, it certainly helps. Keeping the beat has to happen regardless of how stressful it is. That is what distinguishes trustworthy managers from shady ones.

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