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Competitor Summary. See how Charleston Symphony compares to its main competitors:

  • Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra has the most employees (200).
  • The oldest company is Chicago Symphony Orchestra, founded in 1891.
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Charleston Symphony vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1936
3.4
Charleston, SC1$3.5M62
1895
3.9
Cincinnati, OH1$38.8M200
1982
3.5
Hagerstown, MD1$1.4M30
1974
4.1
New York, NY1$7.5M30
1980
3.5
Princeton, NJ1$1.5M29
1960
3.3
Madison, WI1$2.6M125
Hartford Symphony Orchestra
1936
3.8
Hartford, CT1$5.3M10
American Symphony Orchestra
1962
3.0
New York, NY1$2.7M20
1922
4.1
Newark, NJ1$10.7M100
1982
3.6
Kansas City, MO1$17.4M108
1959
3.8
Saint Paul, MN1$13.7M125
New World Symphony
1988
4.1
Miami Beach, FL1$17.5M20
1997
3.6
Mobile, AL1$1.6M40
1921
3.3
Birmingham, AL1$7.5M55
1978
4.4
Irvine, CA1$19.1M60
1935
4.1
Buffalo, NY1$11.9M100
1991
3.2
New Orleans, LA1$5.5M68
Charlotte Symphony
1932
3.9
Charlotte, NC1$11.0M20
1916
4.3
Baltimore, MD1$24.9M200
1891
3.9
Chicago, IL1$28.5M50
1998
3.9
Las Vegas, NV1$5.0M61

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Charleston Symphony salaries vs competitors

Compare Charleston Symphony salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Charleston Symphony
$36,110$17.36-

Compare Charleston Symphony job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Charleston Symphony
$39,405$18.94
American Symphony Orchestra
$109,920$52.85
New World Symphony
$97,622$46.93
Orchestra of St. Luke's
$97,559$46.90
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
$96,892$46.58
Hartford Symphony Orchestra
$83,445$40.12
New Jersey Symphony Orchestra
$78,915$37.94
Pacific Symphony
$69,313$33.32
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra
$65,540$31.51
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
$61,898$29.76
Alabama Symphony Orchestra
$54,288$26.10
Kansas City Symphony
$48,196$23.17
Las Vegas Philharmonic
$45,978$22.10
Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra
$45,742$21.99
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
$44,014$21.16
Charlotte Symphony
$43,234$20.79
The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
$42,429$20.40
Louisiana Philharmonic
$42,338$20.35
Princeton Symphony Orchestra
$42,212$20.29
Mobile Symphony Orchestra
$41,745$20.07

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Charleston Symphony demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Charleston Symphony vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Charlotte Symphony35%65%
Alabama Symphony Orchestra47%53%
New Jersey Symphony Orchestra52%48%
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra57%43%
Charleston Symphony63%37%
Louisiana Philharmonic68%32%

Compare race at Charleston Symphony vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
55%15%16%12%2%
6.6
76%6%9%2%6%
7.9
64%13%14%5%3%
7.8
70%9%17%2%2%
5.0
59%15%12%12%2%
8.0
Charlotte Symphony
66%12%16%3%3%
8.0

Charleston Symphony and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio

Chief Executive Officer with a successful history of working in the music industry. Skilled in Fundraising, Board Development, Artistic Planning, Performing Arts, Marketing Strategy, Collective Bargaining Agreements and Business Process Improvement. Results driving capacity builder with an entrepreneurial business focus. Master of Arts Administration/MBA focus in Performing Arts Management, Fundraising, Marketing, Strategy, Organizational Development from University of Cincinnati.

Howard Herring
New World Symphony

Brien J. Poffenberger
Maryland Symphony Orchestra

David Fisk
Charlotte Symphony

David Fisk joined the Charlotte Symphony as its new President & CEO in August 2020. For the previous eighteen years, he was Executive Director of the Richmond Symphony, Virginia. Prior to that, David served as Chief Executive of the Ulster Orchestra in Belfast, the national symphony of Northern Ireland, and as General Manager of the Orchestra of St. John's, Smith Square in London, one of the United Kingdom's principal chamber orchestras. He has also held the position of Development Director for the Yorkshire Sculpture Park - the UK's leading open-air art gallery complex - and was creator and Executive Director of the award-winning Manchester International Festival of Expressionism 1992. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 2001. Strong financial management and access to music for all were consistent theme of David's 18 years in Richmond. Under his leadership, the operating budget doubled; the Symphony's endowment grew from $8M to $18M; and a cash reserve was created. The Richmond Symphony expanded its youth orchestras program to five; created its annual 'Come & Play' event, that brings 700 community members together playing with the RSO musicians; launched its Lollipops family concerts, and Rush Hour at Hardywood Brewery concerts; and presented many popular new programs that have introduced tens of thousands of new audiences to the Symphony. David was the mastermind behind the Richmond Symphony's 'Big Tent', a $250,000 mobile stage that transformed the Symphony's relationship with the City of Richmond and the neighboring Counties. The Big Tent has become a cultural icon for the region, bringing families together for community festivals in public parks, including a record crowd of 22,000 for one 4th July celebration. Most noteworthy, though, has been the Big Tent's ability to generate proceeds from its events, of almost $500,000 to date, to buy musical instruments for all the City's elementary and middle schools, so that every public school student has access to learning an instrument. Born in Great Britain, David began his musical life aged 8 as a boy chorister for five years at St. Paul's Cathedral in London, where he also studied piano, cello and organ. He continued those studies through high school, before pursuing a bachelor's degree in music from Manchester University, specializing in piano. He holds a postgraduate performer's diploma in piano accompaniment from the Royal Northern College of Music, where he also studied harpsichord, composition and conducting. David worked for a number of years as a freelance composer/arranger, conductor, opera coach, and orchestral keyboard-player, before moving into arts management. Throughout his career, David has continued to give public concerts frequently as an instrumental and vocal accompanist, and in recent years as a substitute church organist. David Fisk is married to the Irish soprano Anne O'Byrne, with a new home in the Dilworth neighborhood of Charlotte. They have a daughter, Fionnuala or ''Finn'', (23), and son Oliver, (20). Other than music, David's hobbies include swimming, tennis and scuba diving - often off the coast of North Carolina - horse riding, and motorcycling. He is currently learning Spanish, slowly.

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