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John Coltrane: Lessons in Leadership

John Coltrane: Lessons in Leadership

Gordon Diggs

May 22, 2019
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  1. –John Coltrane, writing about Rashied Ali in the liner notes

    of “Live at the Village Vanguard Again!” “The way he plays allows the soloist maximum freedom. I can really choose just about any direction at any time in the confidence that it will be compatible with what he's doing. You see, he's laying down multi-directional rhythms all the time. To me he is definitely one of the great drummers.”
  2. –You, writing a performance review of one of your software

    engineers “The way she architects software allows others maximum freedom. We can really choose just about any future functionality in the confidence that it will be compatible with what she built. To me she is definitely one of the great software engineers.”
  3. Four Themes to Discuss 1. Synthesizing inspiration from others 2.

    Assembling the right team 3. Finding opportunities for others
  4. Four Themes to Discuss 1. Synthesizing inspiration from others 2.

    Assembling the right team 3. Finding opportunities for others 4. Leading experiments with a team
  5. –Bill Cole, “John Coltrane” “In the solo of ‘Ah-Leu-Cha,’… most

    of his lower register playing sounds like a polished Gene Ammons.”
  6. –John Coltrane, Downbeat Magazine, September 29, 1960 "But now it

    seemed that [Miles] was moving...to the use of fewer and fewer chord changes in songs. ... In fact, due to the direct and free-flowing lines in his music, I found it easy to apply the harmonic ideas that I had."
  7. –John Coltrane on Elvin Jones “Elvin was ready from the

    first time I heard him, you know. I could hear the genius there - but he had to start playing steadily, steadily, every night.”
  8. –John Coltrane “I had a sound that I wanted to

    hear...I wanted the band to have a drone. We used two basses...One bass plays almost all the way through. The other has rhythmic lines around it.”
  9. A T-Shaped person has a broad set of general skills,

    with one or more areas of expertise
  10. –Bill Cole “Each piece is developed around small rhythmic figures

    from which each member operates independently, creating sounds which will orally tell the nature of this band and its very intimate communications.”
  11. –Nat Hentoff, Liner notes to “Best of John Coltrane” “Many

    young musicians have witnessed to the encouragement he gave them, the time he would take with them.”
  12. Find Opportunities • Use the context we have as leaders

    to give people chances to succeed • Use the clout we have as leaders to put people in positions for success
  13. 2. Use the clout we have as leaders to put

    people in positions for success
  14. –John Coltrane, 1966 “I figured I could do two things:

    I could have a band that played like the way we used to play, and a band that was going in the direction [that I am now].”
  15. “Ain't no one coming?” [Ali] said to Coltrane “No, it's

    just you and me.” “What are we playing? Is it fast? Is it slow?” “Whatever you want it to be. Come on. I'm going to ring some bells. You can do an 8-bar intro.”
  16. Lunch and Learns • Monthly meetings • Topics do not

    have to be work related • Topics do not have to be technical
  17. Lunch and Learns • Monthly meetings • Topics do not

    have to be work related • Topics do not have to be technical • Important just to share our excitements
  18. Some good Lunch and Learn topics • A talk about

    standards for git commits • A talk about Chrome Dev Tools
  19. 10% Time • Every other Friday, people can work on

    things outside of their sprint priorities on projects that they think will improve our work
  20. Efficiency Friday projects • Speeding up our CI builds •

    Automating a repetitive process • Learning a new editor or tool
  21. “Why should we try this technology?” “Are we using it

    elsewhere?” “How easy is it to hire people who work in this technology?”
  22. Tech Radar Rings • Adopt: our core technologies • Trial:

    technologies we have in flight that we think are viable • Assess: technologies that we want to try or learn more about • Hold: technologies that we want to move away from, or stay away from
  23. Lead like Coltrane 1. Synthesize influences • Read, listen, learn,

    experience others, and apply that to our leadership style
  24. Lead like Coltrane 1. Synthesize influences • Read, listen, learn,

    experience others, and apply that to our leadership style 2. Assemble the right team
  25. Lead like Coltrane 1. Synthesize influences • Read, listen, learn,

    experience others, and apply that to our leadership style 2. Assemble the right team • Assess what skills would complement our team well, and either develop those skills within our team, or bring others in who will do that
  26. Lead like Coltrane 1. Synthesize influences • Read, listen, learn,

    experience others, and apply that to our leadership style 2. Assemble the right team • Assess what skills would complement our team well, and either develop those skills within our team, or bring others in who will do that 3. Find opportunities
  27. Lead like Coltrane 1. Synthesize influences • Read, listen, learn,

    experience others, and apply that to our leadership style 2. Assemble the right team • Assess what skills would complement our team well, and either develop those skills within our team, or bring others in who will do that 3. Find opportunities • Set our team members up for chances to succeed at solving new problems, and use our position as leaders to help others gain traction in the industry
  28. Lead like Coltrane 1. Synthesize influences • Read, listen, learn,

    experience others, and apply that to our leadership style 2. Assemble the right team • Assess what skills would complement our team well, and either develop those skills within our team, or bring others in who will do that 3. Find opportunities • Set our team members up for chances to succeed at solving new problems, and use our position as leaders to help others gain traction in the industry 4. Foster experimentation
  29. Lead like Coltrane 1. Synthesize influences • Read, listen, learn,

    experience others, and apply that to our leadership style 2. Assemble the right team • Assess what skills would complement our team well, and either develop those skills within our team, or bring others in who will do that 3. Find opportunities • Set our team members up for chances to succeed at solving new problems, and use our position as leaders to help others gain traction in the industry 4. Foster experimentation • Try things, and see what happens. Let's lead by example by failing in front of our teams, and learning
 from it
  30. Sources • John Coltrane, by Bill Cole • Coltrane on

    Coltrane, Edited by Chris DeVito • Coltrane: The Story of a Sound, by Ben Ratliff • Liner notes of John Coltrane LPs
  31. Questions? Thanks to:
 
 Alex Bell, Leslie Borrell, Kavita Chaudhry,

    Chelsea Crisafulli, Jen Dary, Alyssa Diggs, Christina Diggs, David B. Diggs, Grace Diggs, Dorian Ellerbe, Michelle Fogerty, Paul Gasbarra, Brian Gempp @ Record Grouch, Jack Hayford, Jazz Record Center, Taina Larosiliere, David Mitchell, Ayesha Rahim, Shira Schuster, Stephen Thomas. Alex Tran, Fernando Velasquez, Patrick Way, Julie Yang @GordonDiggs