First of all, make profit. Profit is the core goal of a company. No company could survival with loss in this fierce competition environment. In this point of view, Jack Welch did an extraordinary good job by increasing the net earning of GE from 1.7 billion to 12.7 billion between 1981 and 2000. What’s more, most of the index including market value, ROS and ROE were showing the great performance of the company’s profit growth. Not to mention whether the management style is bad or not, the profit growth could convince the broad to keep you in.
Secondly, make employees loyalty. Unwilling to promise employees a job for life, convinced as he was that the job-for –life commitment that GE had made in the past had kept too much deadwood around, Welch understand that he had to provide new motivation to employees to work harder and to trust the company. The way to do is to give workers a sense of empowerment, a kind of the feeling that they are the “owners” of their businesses, not just simply sitting in front of the faceless machine. Believing so, Jack Welch began to take some measures to maintain the loyalty of employees and most important, to motivate them to establish a sense of