...and current operating results, and the economic, social, and political forces that affect it most. B.Present a brief SWOT analysis (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats). C.Discuss the factors it will need to predict, plan for, and adjust to in the future. INTRODUCTION GE is an American Multinational corporation established in 1892 by the amalgamation of Thomas Alva Edison’s Edison General Electric and Thomson-Houston Electric Company .GE at present operates at the same time in five varied business segment namely: Media (as NBC Universal in cable and film), Energy (e.g. oil and gas), Infrastructure (e.g. Aviation and Healthcare), Home and Business Solutions(Appliances platforms) and Finance ( as GE Capital commercial and consumer finance). GE now has businesses in about 160 countries and approx. 300,000 human resources worldwide. The company’s head office is situated at Connecticut, USA. General Electric is one of the world’s leading diversified business firm widely known for its high quality, advance and technical expertise, leadership, and brand name. Under Welch’s (CEO of the company) leadership, it has undergone enormous reorganization efforts (i.e. divestitures, acquisition, influential GE’s culture) – the support for its accomplishment today. As a international corporation GE has had a contentious history with view to air and water pollution late 1940s and had forever been a goal of condemnation...
Words: 1888 - Pages: 8
...[Type text] PREFACE As a part of my syllabus of PGDM programme in Final year, I was assigned some Practical and theoretical project work. Study of management will be immaterial if it is not coupled with study of financial aspect of the business. It gives the student an opportunity to learn the connection between comparison & execution to test & verify application of theories & help in the comparison of management theories and practice. The study gives a chance to know about the profitability and financial position of the firm. I have chosen General Electrics which is a $14.2 Billion Global company in Information Technology Services, R&D Services, and Business Process Outsourcing. This report contains the analysis of the 8 years data of the company. In the Scenario Analysis of the company we have included the company’s industrial GDP, its Market Share, Market Capitalization, Market Growth, HR policy etc. some other reason of choosing this segment are; Highly versatile & innovation oriented sector Large number of employees are working Highly challenging job opportunities High growth opportunities Work on international project Platform to show the difference dimension of talent 2 [Type text] [Type text] ACKNOWLEDGEMENT With a sense of gratitude and respect, I would like to extend my heartiest thanks to all of those who provided help and guidance to make this project a big success. No Project is ever the outcome of single individual‘s talent or effort. This work is...
Words: 19583 - Pages: 79
...STRENGTHS Global recognition: General Electric has ventured into the world market thus gaining global recognition for its unique goods and services. In the year 2009, Forbes magazine ranked GE as the world's largest company. Hurbert (2007) notes that General Electric's brand is the world's most recognized brand. This kind of recognition has given it a competitive edge over other companies due to its ability to attract more customers. Global strength and competitiveness:The Company’s products have been recognized for their quality and the company is known for meeting customer-specific needs (General Electric, 2009). As a result, it has attracted numerous clients including corporations and government agencies and its competitive position is quite favorable. GE is the biggest lender in many of the countries where it invests with exception of the United States (Hurbert, 2007). Its power generation equipment generates a quarter of the world's electricity everyday. Excellent Management: GE utilizes a unique management style, whereby business operations are divided into business units. Each business unit plays a distinct role within the company and has its own independent management. Examples include GE Commercial Finance, GE Equipment Services, GE Energy, GE Insurance, and GE Consumer Finance among others. This kind of management style increases productivity due to the high level of accountability and efficiency that business unit managers are expected to maintain. Diversified...
Words: 1057 - Pages: 5
...CASE ANALYSIS OF GE COMPANY NAY LIN 4MBA-41 History , development and growth of GE Company GE is a multinational conglomeration organization that originated in the United States. It is incorporated in New York and the headquarters are based in Fairfield, Connecticut. The company operates in several areas including Energy, Technology Infrastructure, Capital Finance and products in the Consumer and Industrial category. The company was created by Thomas Edison, the inventor of the light bulb. The company is often considered the most successful conglomerate in the world. The basis for this is that it reached its conglomerate status before this became a common practice for companies. Since its inception, the company has continued to grow, expand and innovate in a variety of industries and fields including things that range from electric fans to airplanes. The company was ranked the 26th largest company and the 14th most profitable one in America in 2011. This was based on gross revenue but another list ranked the company 4th among the Forbes Global 2000 by considering more detailed metrics. It has also been listed as the 7th best company for leaders and 15th most admired company by Fortune in 2011/2012, number 5 for best global brand by Interbrand, and by Fast Company as the 19th most innovative company. Vision: 'We bring good things to life'. Mission: General Electric Mission Statement from their Core Values: "Passionate, Curious, Resourceful, Accountable, Teamwork...
Words: 1707 - Pages: 7
...Managerial Analysis General Electric Company (GE) . Principles of Management (MGT 1120) Name: Caleb M Bruce Date:11/30/2015 Company Background 1. General Electric Company (GE) international headquarters is located in Fairfield, Connecticut 06828 at 3135 Easton Turnpike. Being among the largest multinational corporations, it conducts business internationally in Angola, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Indonesia, Korea, and the United States of America as well as in six of the seven continents and in over 170 countries worldwide. 2. General Electric Company offers many products and services. GE provides financing to and for other growing organizations. This organization is key to the infrastructure of the global economy by providing billions of dollars to funding of other organizations. This organization also builds and produces appliances such as clothes washers, and dryers, dish washers, refrigerators and much more on an everyday consumer level to a corporate consumer level. They also are a big influence in lighting from how the electricity is transferred, to the bulb itself. They also produce power systems so large or home facilities can operate. Mainly with electric providing power generator support. Ge makes extensions into their aviation and automotive fields by building engines for the forms of transportation. 3. One of the original founders of GE is Thomas Edison in the year 1890. Entrepreneur Thomas Edison brought multiple of his companies together...
Words: 2415 - Pages: 10
...Dion Giannoukos Monica Chartier Khushboo Thakkar Jaya Singhal 2/17/16 – GE Health Case Analysis The Omega Ultrasound System would be the best choice to green light for the Healthymagination initiative. After assessing all the potential products, we determined that the lack of concrete metrics, difficulty or uncertainty in measuring outcomes, or clinical relevance to the Healthymagination goal rendered the TEEMax, UltraLipo, and HepEcho unfit for launch. We’ve outlined justification for this decision in (Figure 1.), but we believe the Omega system provides the greatest opportunity for meeting Healthymagination standards with the best chance of obtaining definitive evidence to support the certification. The midwives in Indonesia play a central role in Indonesian’s strategy to improve material and child health planning services. 54% of midwives are permanent civil servants (PNS) serving rural areas. Given the significantly lower cost of a midwife assisted birth compared to in a hospital setting with an OB/GYN, a 2010 reported that a midwife would deliver a mean of 64 child births/year. In 2000, the UN initiated the Millennium Development Goals for several countries which included Indonesia. One of the major goals for this initiative was to reduce infant mortality and defects in these countries. Indonesia ranks 100 out of 175 countries, and has an estimated infant mortality rate of 22.4 deaths/1000 live births (United States has 5.87.) The case outlined how midwifes in the...
Words: 1010 - Pages: 5
...Question #1 How difficult a challenge did Welch face in 1981? How effectively did he take charge? When Jack Welch took over as CEO of GE in April 1981, the world was in a recession. GE needed to be restructured, and this involved restructuring, reduction of its payroll and modernization. Jack Welch adopted a strategy of “Fix, Sell or Close”. This strategy enabled GE to exit unprofitable businesses and restructure loss-making businesses into profitable businesses. Jack Welch’s management technique adopted the following philosophy • Empowering employees at all levels of the organization • Goal setting to ensure every employee was accountable for his/her actions • Communicating his new goals and visions through the entire organization Empowering Employees: GE was ridden with bureaucracy, as a result employees found great difficulty in communicating with one another. Welch addressed this issue by eliminating whole layers of management, consolidating overlapping jobs and business units, and forcing employees at every level to take more responsibility for their own work. Goal Setting: Welch had a philosophy called based on opportunism, whereby GE employees were given far fetched goals, and permitted to do whatever it took to reach the target. This imbibed a more aggressive culture in the entire organization Communication: Jack Welch removed unnecessary communication filters to ensure his vision was communicated effectively throughout the organization...
Words: 481 - Pages: 2
...generators, jet engines, and home appliances, to financial services and even television broadcasting (GE owns NBC, one of America’s big three network broadcasters). This giant company with revenues close to $180 billion is no stranger to international business. GE has been operating and selling overseas for decades. During the tenure of the legendary CEO Jack Welch, GE’s main goal was to number 1 or 2 globally in every business in which it participated. To further this goal, Welch sanctioned an aggressive and often opportunistic foreign direct investment strategy. GE took advantage of economic weakness in Europe from 1989 to 1995 to invest $17.5 billion in the region, half of which was used to acquire some 50 companies. When the Mexican peso collapsed in value in 1995, GE took advantage of the economic uncertainty to purchase companies throughout Latin America. And when Asia slipped into a major economic crisis in 1997-1998 due to turmoil in the Asian currency markets, Welch urges his managers to view it as a buying opportunity. In Japan alone, the company spent $15 billion on acquisition in just six months. As a result, by the end of Welch’s tenure in 2001, GE earned over 40 percent of its revenues from international sales, up from 20 percent in 1985. Welch’s GE, however was still very much an American company doing business abroad. Under the leadership of his successor, Jeffrey Immelt, GE seems to be intent on becoming a true global company. For one thing, international revenues continue...
Words: 913 - Pages: 4
...Professional Development Plan HRM/326 Professional Development Plan Introduction General Electric has always been a pioneer in technological advancements. In order to succeed in business and be successful GE periodically performs a Need Analysis on areas the company has earmarked for improvement. A Team Concept has been adopted as the most efficient means of exchanging ideas and implementing change. It helps employees develop an understanding of buy in and also allows each to feel important. Inspiring motivation at every level of the company creates an environment of diversity and equal treatment. Leadership, mentorship, and training programs help develop the tools necessary for achieving company goals and tasks. Team B will discuss the methods of analysis used and the learning process required. A evaluation criteria will be used to determine the outcomes. Need Analysis General Electric need analysis provided a more detailed examination in determining if the current training is achieving the business objectives, identify the areas requiring training, and determine whether or not GE employees have the knowledge, skills, and ability to support the business strategy and competitive advantage. General Electric employees are measured by what they can accomplish and how he or she leads to meet individual development and the objectives of the business. General Electric offers a range of learning platforms and training courses to its employees. Among these courses...
Words: 2653 - Pages: 11
...on the data that is gathered. General Electric has provided billions in financing so business can build and grow their operations and consumers can build their financial futures (GE 2013.) GE works towards the satisfaction of consumers through reliable resources used in the everyday life. This paper provides information on the different resources that GE uses. These resources consist of comparative analysis and ratio analysis that help measure profitability and liquidity. General Electric Ratio Analysis GE’s ability to pay its debts as the debts come due is ratio analysis. GE’s consolidated ratio position is adequate. GE consolidated ratio position is adequate. GE’s ratio is supported both by the firm’s consistent earnings track record and its ability to quickly divest business or assets to fit its strategic goals. Consolidated cash and equivalents were $8.3 billion. On a consolidated basis GE had a total of around $56 billion of contractually committed lending arrangements. General Electric, a triple-A rated, frequent borrower, is in a stable position with regards to ratio. Its issuance policy is not based on market outlook but rather on a planned program of issuance to support its ongoing financial businesses and its addition of assets. Horizontal Analysis Horizontal or trend analysis is used to evaluate a company’s financial data over a period of time and it determines if the company has had an increase of decrease in sales. According to General Electric consolidated...
Words: 1341 - Pages: 6
...Electric Analysis MG 495 Park University A. Money F. Thomas Analysis of the General Electric Company INTRODUCTION The General Electric Company (GE) is ranked among Fortune 500 as the 6th largest firm in the U.S. by gross profit as well as the 14th most profitable, #7 for executives, #5 best global brand, #82 green companies, #13 most respected companies and #19 most innovated firms. GE divisions include GE Capital, GE Energy, GE Technology Infrastructure and GE Home and Business Solutions. Through these divisions, GE is able to participate in a wide variety of markets, from industrial to lending and insurance. It sells a variety of products like lighting, industrial automation, medical imaging, motors, railway locomotives, jet engines and transmission/distribution of electricity. The company is headquartered in Fairfield, Connecticut and incorporated in Schenectady, New York. It employed 301,000 (131,000 in the U.S.) people as of December 2011. (http://www.ge.com/ar2011/pdf/GE-20120224-10K-20111231.pdf) The company recorded revenues of $142.24 billion during the financial year ended December 2011 (FY2011) this is a 4.58% decrease from FY2010. The decrease in net sales for FY2011 reflects the impact of the current economy here in the U.S. The operating profit of the company was $14.07 billion in FY2011, an increase of 8.9% over 2010. The net profit was $1.45 billion in FY2011. (http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/ge/financials) ...
Words: 1502 - Pages: 7
...ID number: 0971546 Paper in: MBA 23901 Corporate Strategy and Global Business Policy - GE Wind Strategy Study - Date turned in: 05.01.2014 For: BI Norwegian Business School-Fudan University MBA Programme 05.01.2014 Content Table of Contents Content ............................................................................................................................ i Introduction .................................................................................................................. ii 1. Industry Analysis ................................................................................................ 1 2. Competitive Analysis ......................................................................................... 4 3. Value chain analysis ........................................................................................... 7 4. Strategy core analysis ........................................................................................ 8 5. Advantages and disadvantages ...................................................................... 9 6. Conclusion .......................................................................................................... 10 7. Reference ........................................................................
Words: 4576 - Pages: 19
...Corporate Strategy Analysis: General Electric Co. (1981–present) Stanislav Bucifal Australian National University July 2009 Corporate Strategy Analysis: General Electric Co. (1981–present) Stanislav Bucifal Introduction The General Electric Company (GE) is widely regarded as one of the world’s most successful corporations of the 20th century. This paper aims to critically analyse the corporate strategy of GE during the period from 1981 to present under the leadership of two very different but equally influential CEOs—Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt. The essay is organised in four sections. The first section describes GE’s corporate strategy from 1981 to 2001 with Jack Welch as CEO, followed immediately by a critical analysis of Welch’s strategic approach in the second section. The third section then describes GE’s corporate strategy from 2001 to present with Jeff Immelt as CEO, followed again by a critical analysis of Immelt’s strategic approach in section four. 1. The Jack Welch period (1981–2001) When Jack Welch took up his post as GE’s CEO in 1981 he embarked on a radical transformation of GE’s strategy, ushering in a new era of performance management and internal efficiency. Welch’s profit guidance aimed for earnings growth of 1.5 times to double of the GDP growth rate and his management philosophy found its articulation in GE’s slogan—Speed, Simplicity, Self-Confidence (GE 1995). These values would reflect not only in the organisation’s systems...
Words: 4555 - Pages: 19
...Corporate Strategy Analysis: General Electric Co. (1981–present) Stanislav Bucifal Australian National University July 2009 Corporate Strategy Analysis: General Electric Co. (1981–present) Stanislav Bucifal Introduction The General Electric Company (GE) is widely regarded as one of the world’s most successful corporations of the 20th century. This paper aims to critically analyse the corporate strategy of GE during the period from 1981 to present under the leadership of two very different but equally influential CEOs—Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt. The essay is organised in four sections. The first section describes GE’s corporate strategy from 1981 to 2001 with Jack Welch as CEO, followed immediately by a critical analysis of Welch’s strategic approach in the second section. The third section then describes GE’s corporate strategy from 2001 to present with Jeff Immelt as CEO, followed again by a critical analysis of Immelt’s strategic approach in section four. 1. The Jack Welch period (1981–2001) When Jack Welch took up his post as GE’s CEO in 1981 he embarked on a radical transformation of GE’s strategy, ushering in a new era of performance management and internal efficiency. Welch’s profit guidance aimed for earnings growth of 1.5 times to double of the GDP growth rate and his management philosophy found its articulation in GE’s slogan—Speed, Simplicity, Self-Confidence (GE 1995). These values would reflect not only in the organisation’s systems and processes...
Words: 4555 - Pages: 19
...GE Oil and Gas General Electric is a diversified industrial corporation. The company maintains a huge variety of products and services such as aircraft engines, oil and gas production equipment, power generation, household appliances, medical imaging, business and consumer financing and industrial products. The company primarily operates in North America, Europe, Asia, South America, Australia and Africa. GE headquarters is located in Fairfield, Connecticut and employs approximately 307,000 people (General Electronic SWOT Analysis, 2014). GE’s oil and gas business has been the focal point of the company for the last few years; at least since 2011. The company has put together a $17 billion division to take advantage of global demand for new energy resources. GE has built up its oil and gas business by doing more than $14 billion worth of acquisitions since 2007 and putting one of its most promising young executives, Lorenzo Simonelli, in charge of the unit. According to Simonelli, the current plunge in oil prices is giving GE cause to question if they should switch focus onto one of its other businesses. The oil’s plunge to approximately $60 a barrel from $100 a barrel has thrown the company’s economic assumptions into question. (www.wsj.com). Oil & Gas is GE’s fastest growing business. It competes in high-growth markets and creates products like the recently launched first subsea compressor that utilizes GE’s broad technical capabilities. Measurement and Control, a division...
Words: 795 - Pages: 4