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General Electric. " I never perfected an invention that I did not think about in terms of service it might give others" - Thomas Alva Edison, GE Founder. It all started with the flicker of a light bulb and soon enough GE was off and running…
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"I never perfected an invention that I did not think about in terms of service it might give others"- Thomas Alva Edison, GE Founder • It all started with the flicker of a light bulb and soon enough GE was off and running… • In 1890, Thomas Alva Edison established the Edison General Electric Company in Menlo Park, New Jersey • At the same time Charles A. Coffin was growing his business, The Thompson Company • It was increasingly difficult for Edison and Coffin to remain competitive based their own technologies The two companies united in 1892 and formed The General Electric Company
Key Facts About GE • Headquarters • Fairfield, Connecticut • Number of Employees • Over 315,000 • Locations • Over 160 Countries • Symbol on Stock Exchange • GE • Number of Shareholders • 4 Million • Number of Shares Outstanding • 10 Million • Historical Number of Share Splits • 9
Reginald H. Jones • Chairman & CEO, 1972 – 1981 • Managerial qualities:‘Intellectual breadth, strategic capability, social sensitivity, political sophistication, world-mindedness, and above all, a capacity to keep their poise amid the cross-currents of change.’ • Relationship between business and government Today…GE spends 7.5MM on lobbying
Jack F. Welch Jr. • Chairman & CEO, 1981 – 2001 • On Six Sigma Welsh said, “...it is the way we work.” • Customer-Focused Methodology to Improve Quality Through Defect Reduction • Today…Rigorous Employee 6σ Certification
Jeffrey R. Immelt • Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, 2001 – Present Today… • New Frontiers & Strategic Alliances for GE • NBC-Universal acquiring interest in Telemundo network • GE and Honda form GE Honda Aero Engines LLC, design small (private) jet engines
Perceived Drivers forChange • Globalization • Technology • Innovation • Diffusion of technological know-how • Regulatory influences and government policy changes
Must produce no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities. An "opportunity" is defined as a chance for nonconformance, or not meeting the required specifications; GE strives to be flawless in executing their key processes. 6 Key Areas Critical to Quality Defect Process Capability Variation Stable Operations Design for Six Sigma Action At Work:Six Sigma Product Standard
Four Objectives of Work Out Meetings • Create a New Paradigm for GE • Empower Employees • Eliminate Unnecessary Work • Build Trust
Action Fosters Business-Wide and Personal Growth • Toastmasters is an international organization dedicated to improve/ facilitate communication within an organization • 4 Goals of Sessions • Deliver great presentations • Easily lead teams and conduct meetings • Give and receive constructive evaluations • Be a better listener
The$1BillionGE Talent Factory • Program began in 1919—oldest training program of its kind • Engineering • Finance • Info Management • Operations • Sales and Marketing • Several assignments within discipline • Acquire broad overview of GE • Develop leadership/ professional skills
The Ultimate Driving Machine… Just Got Better GE’s Advanced Materials has teamed up with BMW to design and produce lightweight, durable, chip resistant fenders for their high performance 6 Series
Revenue Growth 2001-2003 **Values in millions of dollars
Net Earnings Growth 2001-2003 **Values in millions of dollars
Main Competitors • ALSTOM • specialize in energy, ship buildings and marine systems and transport infrastructure. • Headquarters in Paris, France • Acquired ABB (Asea Brown Boveri, a leading competitor to GE) • A force to be reckon with; would be GE’s ultimate competitor
Main Competitors • Siemens • electronics and electrical engineering company • 6 groups:- Automation and Control, Information and Communications, Medical, Power, Transportation, and Lighting • provides industrial automation and control, information and communications, lighting, medical, power transmission, and transportation products and services • Headquarters in Munich, Germany • Subsidiaries headquartered in New York • Very similar to GE; strong brand name equity, has business operations in over 190 countries
5 Forces Model • Rivalry among competitors • ALSTOM and Siemens, in particular • Creating competitive advantages to gain bigger market share • Acquisitions, mergers and joint-ventures • Battle for innovation and technological improvements
5 Forces Model • Potential of New Entrants • Adaptac (1981) and Adept Technology (1983) • Late bloomers, but slowly gaining market share • Does not pose too much of a threat to GE, ALSTOM or Siemens for now • Tough for new entrants to pinch a sizable chunk of market share from GE, ALSTOM or Siemens
5 Forces Model • Suppliers • Materials, parts, components, other resources • Vertically integrated (GE Advanced Plastics, GE Consumer and Industrial Manufacturing) • Has to be aware of suppliers that might integrate forward
5 Forces Model • Substitutes • Has many substitutes that might pose a threat • Very well-diversified which means that GE is spreading the risk of failure in every market • Eg. GE’s NBC-Universal’s substitute are pirated VCD’s or DVD’s • Buyers • Similar to its substitutes, GE has a broad line of buyers, ranging from consumers to large corporations • Eg. GE Healthcare’s buyers are hospitals and pharmacies.
Performance/Product Quality Product Range
GE’s SWOT Analysis • Strengths • Global strength and recognition • 5th in Fortune 500 list, operating in more than 160 countries • Excellent management • Proven leadership and business model • Confident investors – raising capital • Diverse product range • Long Term (GE Aircraft engines) • Short Term (GE Lighting, Plastics, NBC) • Financial Services (contributes to 40% of GE’s revenue) • Spreading the risk of failure in every market and not just one
SWOT Analysis • Weaknesses • Company size/ acquisition restriction • Eg. GE’s planned acquisition of Honeywell International, a diversified technology and manufacturing company, specializing in aerospace products, was rejected by the EU • Energy Segment • Underperforming, no signs of near future recovery • Flexibility • Large and diverse businesses might overstretch the company and reduce reaction times to shifts in targeted markets
SWOT Analysis • Opportunities • Research and Development • Immense capital allows GE to contribute a lot to R&D for product development and improvement • Increased geographic growth • Global expansion = more opportunities (Eg. China) • Merger between NBC and Vivendi • Further opportunities in the media business • Improved customer services • Adopted a new customer focus initiative
SWOT Analysis • Threats • Exposure to global economy • Economy slowdown would affect GE, since 40% of the revenue is generated overseas • Exposed to currency fluctuations • Intense scrutiny after Enron • More transparency and disclosure; skeptical investors • Public image of all large companies suffered • Competition • Constant change in technology heats up competition • Very diverse:- tough to be the best in all industry
Key Competencies • Competence • Great and proven leaders • Eg. Jeffrey R Immelt, Jack Welsh, Reginald H. Jones • Expertise • More capital can be invested in R&D • Core Competence • Innovative • Desire to strive for perfection (6 Sigma)
Key Competencies • Distinctive Competence • Ability to respond to the drivers of change by understanding the important global trends • Acquisition of rivals and other companies
Recent News • GE’s $900 million acquisition of InVision Technologies • March 15, 2004, GE made it public • September 16, 2004, FTC gave approval but deal is still not finalize
Recent News • Advertising Campaign • Genworth, a financial company part of GE, has signed a 5 year contract to license the GE logo and use the slogan, “Built on GE heritage” • Genworth is planning to allocate $30 million into advertising this coming year
Recent News • October 11, 2004, Senate passed a $136 billion corporate tax package that cuts taxes for businesses • Includes $76.5 billion in new tax relief for the manufacturing sector • Includes $42.6 billion in tax relief for multinational companies • Additional capital from the tax break could be used for reinvestment, increase dividends, etc
Conclusion • GE recognizes that part of being successful and well-respected is being socially responsible as well • Has huge potential to remain successful without any major threats from competitors • “Staying Power” • Will only continue to expand