General Electric was founded in 1892 through the merger of Edison General Electric and Thomson-Houston Electric Company. It is now a global conglomerate with interests in healthcare, aviation, renewable energy, and other sectors. The company established its first research lab in 1900 and has since acquired over 600 companies and filed thousands of patents. Jack Welch significantly grew GE during his 20-year tenure as CEO from 1981-2001 through acquisitions and an emphasis on research and development.
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General Electric was founded in 1892 through the merger of Edison General Electric and Thomson-Houston Electric Company. It is now a global conglomerate with interests in healthcare, aviation, renewable energy, and other sectors. The company established its first research lab in 1900 and has since acquired over 600 companies and filed thousands of patents. Jack Welch significantly grew GE during his 20-year tenure as CEO from 1981-2001 through acquisitions and an emphasis on research and development.
General Electric was founded in 1892 through the merger of Edison General Electric and Thomson-Houston Electric Company. It is now a global conglomerate with interests in healthcare, aviation, renewable energy, and other sectors. The company established its first research lab in 1900 and has since acquired over 600 companies and filed thousands of patents. Jack Welch significantly grew GE during his 20-year tenure as CEO from 1981-2001 through acquisitions and an emphasis on research and development.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
General Electric was founded in 1892 through the merger of Edison General Electric and Thomson-Houston Electric Company. It is now a global conglomerate with interests in healthcare, aviation, renewable energy, and other sectors. The company established its first research lab in 1900 and has since acquired over 600 companies and filed thousands of patents. Jack Welch significantly grew GE during his 20-year tenure as CEO from 1981-2001 through acquisitions and an emphasis on research and development.
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A CASE STUDY ON GENERAL
ELECTRIC
PRESENTED BY: Flora Emokhor
COURSE: Multinationals & Industrial Relations MATRIC NO: 099023181 DATE: April 2011 BRIEF HISTORY • In 1876, Thomas Alva Edison opened a new laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey. Out of the laboratory was to come perhaps the most successful invention of all- a successful development of the incandescent electric lamp. By 1890, Edison had organized his various businesses into the Edison General Electric Company. Brief History Cont’d • In 1879, Elihu Thompson and E.J Houston formed the rival Thomson-Houston company. • Mergers with competitors and the patent rights owned by each company put them into dominant positions in the electrical industry. As businesses expanded, it became increasingly difficult for either company to produce complete electrical installations relying solely on their own technology. In 1892, these two major companies combined to form the General Electric Company • General Electric in the early 1900’s was an old line American industrial giant and Manufacturing company • Through 600 acquisitions, mergers and reorganizations, and disposals GE has grown to be one of the biggest corporate organizations in the world with interests in diverse fields including Computers, Plastics, Electricity, Medical imaging equipments, Aircraft jet engines just to mention a few. GE TODAY • General Electric with its headquarters in Turnpike New Jersey, now operates in more than 160 countries and employs about 300,000 people worldwide. In 2009, GE delivered solid results despite the tough economic climate with earnings of $11.2 billion; more than half of this revenue came from the company’s operations outside the United States of America. Industrial cash flow from operating activities for the year remained strong at over $16.6 billion. • GE is the only company listed in the Dow Jones Industrial Index today that was also included in the original index in 1896. GE TODAY CONT’D COUNTRIES OF OPEATION ASIA AFRICA EUROPE EUROPE CONT’D AUSTRALIA MIDDLE EAST China Algeria Austria Netherlands Australia Bahrain India Angola Belgium Norway New Jordan Zealand Japan Egypt Czech Poland Kuwait Republic Korea Ghana Denmark Portugal AMERICA Lebanon Pakistan Kenya Finland Romania Canada Oman Indonesia Nigeria France Russia US Qatar Cambodia South Germany Spain Argentina Saudi Africa Arabia Malaysia Greece Sweden Brazil UAE Philippines Hungary Switzerland Chile Singapore Ireland Turkey Mexico Thailand Israel United Kingdom Peru Vietnam Italy Venezuela HERITAGE OF RESEARCH • Over the years GE has been able to maintain its competitive edge through a heritage of research and development. It started in a barn in 1900 when General Electric Company was only eight years old. The space housed some of the company's first breakthrough technologies and big ideas that would later ignite the world's imagination. • Charles Proteus Steinmetz, already a distinguished industrial scientist, was hard at work as GE's chief consulting engineer. After years of persuasion, Steinmetz convinced the GE leadership that the company would need a research laboratory to maintain its edge in lighting and electricity and also finding new areas to grow. • Elihu Thompson, a founder of the company, summed up the mission of the lab: "It does seem to me therefore that a Company as large as the General Electric Company, should not fail to continue investing and developing in new fields: there should, in fact, be a research laboratory for commercial applications of new principles, and even for the discovery of those principles." • Charles Coffin, GE's first CEO, agreed and the GE Research Laboratory was born in the carriage barn in Steinmetz's back yard. Willis Whitney, a young chemistry professor from MIT who had been conducting experiments for GE, was invited to become the first director. HERITAGE OF RESEARCH, CONT’D • One of the earliest projects of the new lab was to defend the company's primary asset — incandescent lighting — through innovation. In 1908, GE scientist William Coolidge invented the ductile tungsten filament that made the GE incandescent lamp significantly more durable than the original design. The invention secured GE's technological leadership in the market and epitomized the role of the GE research lab — bringing innovation to the marketplace. • Over the years, the research lab has brought many new technologies to GE's customers. Along the way, GE scientists have amassed thousands of patents (2,370 have been filed till date), and two Nobel prizes: Irving Langmuir won the Nobel prize in Chemistry in 1932 and Ivar Giaever won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1973. • Today, GE Global Research consists of more than 3,000 employees working in four state-of-the-art facilities: Niskayuna, New York (a few miles from the original barn), Bangalore, India (opened in September 2000), Shanghai, China (opened in October, 2003), and Munich, Germany (opened in June, 2004). In 2009 GE’s R&D budget was $5.7bn. PRODUCTS AND SERVICES • Appliances/Consumer Electronics GE is one of the largest manufacturers of major appliances in the world, producing; compactors & garbage disposal units, cooktops, dehumidifiers, dishwashers, filters, dispensers and softeners, freezers, microwaves, ranges and stoves, refrigerators, air conditioners, washers and dryers, water heaters, wine refrigerators and beverage centers. • Aviation GE is the world's leading provider of aviation services and the leading producer of jet engines. They supply the world with engines for commercial, corporate, military and marine industries. In 1969 Neil Armstrong took the first step on the moon with boots made from GE silicone rubber. • Electrical Distribution GE provides a wide assortment of integrated equipment and systems to ensure safe and reliable power delivery. Electrical distribution and control solutions manage power in a variety of residential, commercial and industrial applications. • Energy GE electrifies the world by providing energy products and services to more than 120 countries. With coal, oil, natural gas, nuclear energy, water and wind technologies they deliver solid productivity returns and significant environmental benefits. PRODUCTS AND SERVICES CONT’D • Finance – Business GE Commercial Finance serves clients in over 35 countries by providing loans, operating leases, financing programs, commercial insurance and equipment leasing to help global business grow. • Finance – Consumer GE Money is a leading provider of credit services, offering credit, loans, mortgages and more. They serve consumers, retailers, auto dealers and mortgage lenders worldwide. • Healthcare GE provides medical technologies and services for patient care. From medical imaging and information technologies to diagnostics and drug discovery, they help clinicians around the world re-imagine new ways to help their patients live longer fuller lives. • Lighting They provide a range of innovative products for consumer, commercial and industrial markets. • Oil & Gas GE provides global technology-based products, services and complete solutions to the oil and gas industry. • Rail GE is the leading supplier to the world's railroads, pioneering locomotive and railroad management technologies that are economically advantageous and ecologically sound. • Software & Services GE is a global provider of software, hardware, services, and expertise in manufacturing; remote monitoring and diagnostics; and customer vertical solutions. • Water For over 100 years, GE has been a leading global supplier of water treatment, wastewater treatment and efficient process systems solutions. GE LEADERSHIP • GE's leaders through the years have built a diverse portfolio of leading businesses; a stream of powerful company-wide initiatives that drives growth and reduces cost; financial strength and Controllership that allow it to capitalize on opportunities through numerous cycles; and a set of common values that allows it to face any environment with confidence. Below is a list of the imminent and past leadership of GE. GE LEADERSHIP CONT’D NAME PERIOD Jeffrey Immelt 2001-date John F. Welch, Jr 1981-2001 Reginald H. Jones 1972-1981 Fred J. Borch 1967-1972 Gerald L. Phillipe 1963-1967 Ralph J. Cordiner 1958-1963 Phillip d. Reed 1945-1958 Owen D. Young 1942-1945 Gerard Swope 1922-1940 E.W. Rice 1913-1922 Charles A. Coffin 1892-1912 GE LEADERSHIP – JACK WELCH • The growth of GE into one of the largest corporate organizations in terms of Market capitalisation can be mainly traced to the leadership of one man John Francis Welch, popularly known as “Neutron Jack” by friends and admirers. • Welch at 45 became the youngest CEO GE had ever had, this position he maintained from 1981-2001 when he retired. Within this period his radical methods and change management principles transformed the face of the corporate world. • Welch led the company to massive revenues. In 1980, the year before Welch became CEO, GE recorded revenues of roughly $26.8 billion; in 2000, the year before he left, they were nearly 130 billion. Through its strong earnings and future growth estimates it was valued at $400 billion at the end of 2004, the world’s largest corporation up from America’s tenth largest by market capitalization in 1981. GE CSR INITIATIVES GE has been at the forefront of corporate social responsibility in all the countries they operate via their corporate citizenship programmes. Find below a some of their corporate social initiatives; • GE donated $2.5m to the relief efforts in Haiti • The John F. Welch Leadership Center- Worldwide, GE invests about $1 billion annually on training and education programs to develop some of the best leaders and some of the most widely practiced business techniques. The centerpiece of its commitment to excellence in leadership development is the John F. Welch Leadership Center at Crotonville, New York, the world's first major corporate business school. • Health Initiatives- Every year, physicians from the University of Ottawa Heart Institute travel to Canada's remote Arctic with GE's Vivid i cardiovascular ultrasound system to help heal the hearts of the local Inuit population. CONCLUSION • GE has supplied over 100 gas turbines in Nigeria in an effort to improve power generation. With their custom solutions in the oil & gas, energy and healthcare industries GE has fostered growing relationships with both the government and private business sectors, helping the country reach its potential. • The future for GE is very bright with strong earnings capability. In 2010, GE ranked #1 in healthcare and #19 overall on Fast Company's list of the world's top 50 most innovative companies. They were also named in Ethisphere's list of the world's most ethical companies. • With their heritage of research and development and strong leadership, the world is open for GE to conquer.