
Counseling for Balance - The Art of Business Transformation
written by Guillaume Dussau Doumenge
When I sing Zarastro in The Magic Flute, I experience this fascinating duality: the score remains immutable, but each performance is unique. The acoustics of the hall, the energy of the orchestra, my own disposition and, above all, the audience's reactions profoundly transform the interpretation. This musical alchemy finds its perfect echo in my consulting work with corporate executives.
Universality as a foundation for change
In business transformations, as in music, certain principles transcend context. These universal frameworks provide essential reference points when everything seems to be changing. When an international pharmaceutical group is reorienting its strategy or a luxury goods company is rethinking its organization, these shared foundations create a foundation of trust.
What's fascinating is that these universal values act as emotional anchors. At a time when the usual points of reference are disappearing, they offer the psychological security we all need to adapt. Let's not forget that most of our decisions are guided by our emotions, well before our rationality.
Accuracy: interpretation that resonates
Yet universality alone is sterile. On stage, the magic only happens when the interpretation resonates with the present moment. I've sung in Nabucco dozens of times, but it's only when my interpretation adjusts to the particular vibrations of a room that the emotions arise.
For an aerospace group or a leading semiconductor manufacturer, transformation follows the same logic. Standardized methodologies must bend to the cultural, historical and human specificities of each organization. It is precisely in this subtle adjustment that the difference lies between imposed change and purposeful and embodied change.
Balance as the art of coaching
Our role as coach, and sometimes consultant, is akin to that of an orchestra conductor, facilitating harmony between global score and local interpretation. This approach is based on three fundamental principles:
- Deep listening: Before any transformation, understand everyone's resistance, expectations and fears. It is this listening that enables us to adapt the tempo of change.
- Structured flexibility: proposing robust methodological frameworks while preserving room for adaptation. In a large beauty house, for example, digital transformation will follow a common framework, while adjusting to the specificities of each division.
- Attention to emotions: Successful transformations are those that generate positive, lasting emotions. As with a memorable opera, it's not the technical perfection that remains, but the shared emotion.


Towards a transformation that resonates
The managers we support, whether in defense, consulting or healthcare, all face the same challenge: to drive change that respects the universal while adapting to the particular. This subtle alchemy requires us to understand that any major transformation relies on the ability to create emotions that mobilize.
Just as on stage, where a performance finds its accuracy in its ability to move across cultural differences, the most successful corporate transformations are those that manage to touch everyone while also serving a common purpose.
The future of our organizations lies in this delicate balance between universality and accuracy.
