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

  • New York Ballet Inst has the most employees (301).
  • The oldest company is Chicago Symphony Orchestra, founded in 1891.
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Jacksonville Symphony vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1949
3.7
Jacksonville, FL1$14.7M68
1922
4.1
Newark, NJ1$10.7M100
Hartford Symphony Orchestra
1936
3.8
Hartford, CT1$5.3M10
1974
4.1
New York, NY1$7.5M30
1895
3.9
Cincinnati, OH1$38.8M200
1946
4.0
Nashville, TN1$21.8M181
1978
4.4
Irvine, CA1$19.1M60
1936
3.4
Charleston, SC1$3.5M62
1911
3.6
Austin, TX1$5.0M93
1980
3.5
Princeton, NJ1$1.5M29
New World Symphony
1988
4.1
Miami Beach, FL1$17.5M20
1959
3.8
Saint Paul, MN1$13.7M125
The Florida Orchestra
1968
3.9
Saint Petersburg, FL1$10.6M1
1994
3.9
Beachwood, OH1$5.0M30
1911
4.1
San Francisco, CA2$75.7M200
1891
3.9
Chicago, IL1$28.5M50
Ensemble Theatre Co.
1980
3.8
Santa Barbara, CA1$1.9M6
1979
3.7
Atlanta, GA1$6.7M25
1957
3.4
Dallas, TX1$1.6M30
1948
4.3
New York, NY1$84.6M301
1985
3.9
Los Angeles, CA1$5.7M79

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Jacksonville Symphony salaries vs competitors

Compare Jacksonville Symphony salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Jacksonville Symphony
$37,291$17.93-

Compare Jacksonville Symphony job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Jacksonville Symphony
$41,677$20.04
New World Symphony
$97,622$46.93
Orchestra of St. Luke's
$97,559$46.90
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
$96,892$46.58
Austin Symphony Orchestra
$94,972$45.66
San Francisco Symphony
$88,358$42.48
The Florida Orchestra
$86,773$41.72
Hartford Symphony Orchestra
$83,445$40.12
The Atlanta Opera
$80,352$38.63
New Jersey Symphony Orchestra
$78,915$37.94
SAG-AFTRA Foundation
$70,965$34.12
Pacific Symphony
$69,313$33.32
The Dallas Opera
$69,262$33.30
Ensemble Theatre Co.
$69,122$33.23
New York Ballet Inst
$68,358$32.86
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
$61,898$29.76
Nashville Symphony
$55,312$26.59
Cleveland Pops Orchestra
$53,737$25.84
The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
$42,429$20.40
Princeton Symphony Orchestra
$42,212$20.29

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Jacksonville Symphony demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Jacksonville Symphony vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Nashville Symphony48%52%
SAG-AFTRA Foundation50%50%
New Jersey Symphony Orchestra52%48%
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra57%43%
Charleston Symphony63%37%
Jacksonville Symphony--

Compare race at Jacksonville Symphony vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
76%6%9%2%6%
7.9
59%15%12%12%2%
8.0
55%15%16%12%2%
6.6
71%7%12%6%4%
7.6
44%35%7%11%4%
8.0
67%12%12%6%3%
9.2

Jacksonville 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

Mark Cantrell
The Florida Orchestra

Mark Hanson joined the San Francisco Symphony as Executive Director in September 2017 and was given the title of Chief Executive Officer in 2018. During his tenure, the SFS experienced a period of exciting change and forward progress, including a new multi-year financial plan that put the organization on a path to restoring stability. In 2018, the SFS negotiated a new four-year musician contract that cemented the San Francisco Symphony’s leadership position among American orchestras. A unique housing shared-equity program to help combat the Bay Area’s high cost of housing was also introduced. Also in 2018, the San Francisco Symphony launched a multi-constituency DEI Workgroup with representatives from the Board, Orchestra, and staff. Over the following two years, the DEI Workgroup focused its efforts primarily on internal culture change, capacity building, and learning but recently led the development of the SFS’s first ever DEI Plan which intends to seed deeper engagement in this work across the rest of the organization. Important to its audience development efforts, the San Francisco Symphony announced a new partnership with Stanford University to present an annual series of concerts at Stanford University’s Frost Amphitheater in 2019 that continues once again this summer. With a seating capacity of more than 6,000, Frost Amphitheater provides the San Francisco Symphony with a long-desired summer home in the heart of Silicon Valley. These important institutional developments were accompanied by the appointment of Esa-Pekka Salonen as Music Director, an outcome that The New York Times reported as “the talk of the music world.” One of the most influential and creative forces in music, Salonen began his tenure as Music Director in September 2020, teaming up with eight new San Francisco Symphony Collaborative Partners from various cultural disciplines. While the 2020-2021 season was significantly impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, the San Francisco Symphony under Mr. Hanson launched a new on-demand streaming service, SFSymphony+, featuring original digital content now being viewed throughout the Bay Area and the world.

Michael Moody
Charleston Symphony

Alan D. Valentine
Nashville Symphony

Shirley Morgenstern
Cleveland Pops Orchestra

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