Cheered on by a crowd of 700, a 40-person conga line — including CSC’s global chief learning officer, Office of Innovation vice president and vice president for culture change — shuffles and kicks its way through an Orlando, Fla., ballroom, while onstage 20 black-clad CSC musicians from nine different countries play Love Shack with full B-52’s attitude.
It’s 10 o’clock on the second night of CSC’s 2008 Technology & Business Solutions Conference. Two hours into an electrifying show that opened with Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Travelin’ Band, both the audience and the performers are still going strong.
“Music is a global unifier, a universal language,“ says vocalist and CSC business process architect Jill McNeil, the driving force behind CSC’s Global Jam. “Even if your mannerisms or culture or idioms are misunderstood country to country, music like oldies rock and roll is something everyone can tune into and share at the very deepest level.“
As the band seamlessly segues from Love Shack to the Eurythmics’ Sweet Dreams — with Gwennie Collins, a global security solutions learning manager from Annapolis, Md., at the microphone — it’s hard to believe that, just two days before, most of the members not only had never performed together but had never even met face-to-face. (Read entire story.)
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