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Entrepreneurship Center for Music announces leadership transition

Jeff Nytch's headshot

On June 30, 2025, Professor of Composition Jeffrey Nytch鈥攚ho鈥檚 directed the College of Music鈥檚 Entrepreneurship Center for Music (ECM) for the past 16 years鈥攚ill step down from that role. Marilyn Brock鈥攃urrently ECM lecturer鈥攚ill assume the roles of assistant teaching professor and interim ECM director; and Nytch鈥攁s professor of composition + entrepreneurship鈥攚ill continue to teach The Entrepreneurial Artist, the Certificate in Music Entrepreneurship capstone and the college鈥檚 new Graduate Career Seminar, as well as help develop new opportunities for the composition department with the 缅北禁地 ATLAS Institute and Leeds School of Business.

鈥淚鈥檓 proud of what Jeff Nytch has built,鈥 says College of Music Dean John Davis. 鈥淭he college鈥檚 Entrepreneurship Center for Music is broadly recognized, domestically and abroad, as one of the top programs of its kind.

鈥淭he center is a keystone of our college's universal musician approach to developing multiskilled, multifaceted musicians prepared for flexible career options.鈥

At the time of its founding by former Dean Daniel Sher in 1999, the ECM was the first program of its kind. Nytch鈥檚 subsequent appointment to lead the center was the first known tenure-track position in arts entrepreneurship.

As an early leader in developing entrepreneurship programming on our campus, Nytch helped establish the university鈥檚 New Venture Challenge and other cross-campus programs. He later developed the first arts-focused track in a collegiate entrepreneurship competition and鈥攎ost recently鈥攈is work in these areas was recognized with the Frank Moyes Award, the university鈥檚 top award for entrepreneurship.

鈥淏ack when the New Venture Challenge had an Arts & Creative Industries track, teams from the College of Music made the championship round every year,鈥 recalls Nytch, who also received the 2020 Sharon T. Alpi Award for Innovative Pedagogy, the highest award given by the Society of Arts Entrepreneurship Education. 鈥淔ive times we placed in the top three鈥攁nd one year we won the $100,000 championship!

鈥淲e鈥檝e placed scores of internships and jobs in the arts sector, supported numerous student startups, and awarded nearly $30,000 in funding for student ventures and professional development. Most importantly, we鈥檝e worked with hundreds of students鈥攆rom first-year undergraduates to doctoral students鈥攖o help prepare them for careers that are financially sustainable and artistically fulfilling.鈥

Specifically, Nytch overhauled the College of Music鈥檚 entrepreneurship curriculum creating new courses, updating others and launching the first-ever Certificate in Music Entrepreneurship that combines coursework in music with a minor from the Leeds School of Business. He also augmented ECM offerings with workshops, an online resource center and coordination of internships; and he launched Entrepreneurial Project Grants that support student projects in entrepreneurship and professional development through cash awards of up to $1,000. In recognition thereof, the ECM was the first arts-based entrepreneurship program to be recognized for 鈥淓xcellence in Specialty Programming鈥 by the Global Consortium of Entrepreneurship Centers.

Concludes Nytch, 鈥淚 look forward to continuing to be engaged with our College of Music community鈥攖eaching entrepreneurship classes and lessons in the composition department, working on commissions and other creative and research projects, and brainstorming interdisciplinary curriculum development with other units on campus.鈥

搁别濒补迟别诲:听
Nytch鈥檚 book鈥斺溾濃攊s a seminal work in the field, adapting entrepreneurial theory and practices from the business school to a conservatory setting.听