Home » Talent » Currently Reading:

Talent Networker: Dave Matthews

September 16, 2005 Aiden Choles Talent 1 Comment

Dave Matthews I remember the first time I heard the Dave Matthews Band – it was a summers day driving along the South Coast with Mike (see his post on DMB). I could not quite figure out why this band resonated with me. Boasting a gruff voice, tainted with mud, Dave is not an ordinary musician. He is not easy on the ear, and the way the Band comes together can lose you in its complexity. But what grabbed me was the way that he had constructed the band – in commercial terms, he’s the quintessential talent networker.


What Dave Matthews did was to find awesome talent in genre’s that you’d least expect to find in a band: a classically trained violinist built like a brick shithouse; a reserved saxophonist that won’t show his eyes; a drummer that chews gum prodigiously; a bassist that doubles as a coffin kid. And then there are the guests: a guitarist that embodies two enlightened guitarists in one set of hands and a pianist who can sense music better than Stevie. What Dave did was to bring this motley crew of talent together, allow them to feel each other out musically, and then find their own combined sound … a rocking folk sound is the best I can describe it.

What can we learn from Dave about finding and developing talent in our businesses? Well:

1 – It’s all about the music. They’re not in it for the cash – despite it being a GREAT perk. They’re in it for the passion, love and pain that musical enlightenment brings. And so great talent is in it for the work – fulfillment and success in the work is paramount. Look for the talent that loves the work!

2 – It’s about freedom. Each member of the Band is an individually accomplished musician in their own right, each with their own pet solo projects. So the band spends time apart on their own work, sometimes combining the two, to come back as a stronger team. What does this say about talent and the need or talent mobility? Talent needs freedom, and the payback on this freedom is better talent!

3 – It’s about surprising each other. The DMB tours constantly with one of the most hectic tour schedules around – they are playing the same songs every second night with just as much passion and enthusiasm as when they first wrote the songs. The surprise is that they seem to outdo each other on stage – and they love it. Talent revels in the discovery of new talent. Find talent that is secure and genuinely loves seeing the other develop.

4 – It’s not about the glamour. The DMB are not lookers. They are not style gurus, and they do not set the trend. They often define ‘weird’. So, the best talent is often not in the places you’d like to look. Talent will be weird because it’s in that weirdness that innovation flourishes (for local weirdness mixed with unbelievable talent check out The Missing Link guys).

And so, the talent managers are people who will double up as networkers: finding people with passion, creating environments of freedom and mobility, reveling in seeing talent develop more, and more, and more, and more, and then not being afraid of the weird ones.

Create PDF    Send article as PDF to

No related posts.

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Currently there is "1 comment" on this Article:

  1. amanda says:

    are you canadian? do you have any special talents?

Comment on this Article:







Subscribe to this blog

Get free delivery of this blog by email, RSS or feeder

Category Drop-Down

Flattr us

There's a new way to show your appreciation and admiration - it's called Flattr. It allows you to allocate small amounts of money to something you really like online. You need to sign up to get involved (email us if you need an invitation).

Go on - Flattr us:

Or Flattr any of the posts that have a Flattr icon.

Posts about Boomer Re-Tyre-ment

Visualisation: An ageing world

July 28, 2010 Graeme Codrington

Visualisation: An ageing world

I really enjoy clever visualisations of data (see previous blog entries on this here). So, this is the shortest of blog entries to alert you to one I just discovered. Brought to us by GE, it’s a visualisation of how various countries will age over the next few decades. See the population pyramids expand and [...]

Nine key workforce trends for the next decade

July 27, 2010 Graeme Codrington

Nine key workforce trends for the next decade

var flattr_url = ‘http://www.connectioneconomy.com/2010/07/27/nine-key-workforce-trends-for-the-next-decade-2/’; Download a copy of this article in PDF format – right click here. The contents of this article can be presented as a keynote or a workshop for your team. Contact our UK or South African offices to find out how. My company, TomorrowToday, researches the new world of work, and [...]

Markers of change in US Labor Statistics – 2010 is turning out to be quite historic

July 19, 2010 Graeme Codrington

Markers of change in US Labor Statistics – 2010 is turning out to be quite historic

var flattr_url = ‘http://www.connectioneconomy.com/2010/07/19/markers-of-change-in-us-labor-statistics-2010-is-turning-out-to-be-quite-historic/’; I think we might look back on 2010 as quite an important watershed year in the world of work. Since mid 2009, our team at TomorrowToday has been saying that the global financial downturn has been more than a financial crisis. We believe that as we emerge out of recession we’ll [...]

A note to Generation X: Learn How to Manage Up

July 13, 2010 Graeme Codrington

A note to Generation X: Learn How to Manage Up

var flattr_url = ‘http://www.connectioneconomy.com/2010/07/13/a-note-to-generation-x-learn-how-to-manage-up/’; The concept of “managing up” is well established in management and leadership theory. As someone who reports to a boss, you need to use many different techniques to get your boss’s attention, and influence your boss to act, think and react in certain ways. This is a critical skill for people [...]

Recent Comments

Archives

Tweet Blender

workforcetrendsworkforcetrends: Repost: Nine key workforce trends for the next decade http://bit.ly/a9TEQo
27 minutes ago from HootSuite
workforcetrendsworkforcetrends: Nine key workforce trends for the next decade - now with links to details on each trend (in the comments): http://ht.ly/2itl5
52 minutes ago from HootSuite
barriebramleybarriebramley: SA Linked-In usage report - great work from @mikeasaunders - http://ow.ly/2hUoC
1 hour ago from HootSuite
barriebramleybarriebramley: "How To Deal With A Younger Boss" - http://bit.ly/caE7re (via @carol_phillips @DenizDaver)
5 hours ago from HootSuite
workforcetrendsworkforcetrends: Please be part of a Twitter experiment and RT this: Many companies face a Talent Exodus in 2011: http://ht.ly/2ik0j
5 hours ago from HootSuite
workforcetrendsworkforcetrends: Thanks for RTs of http://ow.ly/2idbl 9 key trends for workforce for the next decade: @karlwilding @NCVOForesight
6 hours ago from HootSuite
karlwildingkarlwilding: RT @NCVOForesight: from @workforcetrends http://ow.ly/2idbl 9 key trends for workforce for the next decade: generational conflict?
7 hours ago from TweetDeck