GE’s Talent Machine: The Making of a CEO - Case Study Report of Findings and Recommendations For: Professor Ernest Jewell MGT 500 Human Behaviorin Organizations 11/28/2011 Table of Contents Executive Summary 1 Analysis 2 Human Resource Management for Growth 2 Communication 3 Recommendations 4 The Vitality Curve 4 Recruitment 5 Executive Brands 5 Lessons Learned 6 Meritocracy 6 Recruiting 6 Communication 7 Executive
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GE’s Talent Machine: The Making of a CEO General Electric (GE) is a true global company with attendance in more than 100 countries. Clearly‚ with a workforce of more than 320’000 employees‚ GE also has to have proper human resources processes established. Its energetic Business Operation Model and sophisticated and evolved human resources strategy are results of the steady growth over more than 130 years of corporate history. Since its incorporation in 1878‚ many CEOs have shaped the company’s products
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General Electric -Talent Machine | | Human Resources | General Electric (GE) is a true global company with presence in more than 100 countries. Clearly‚ with a workforce of more than 320’000 employees‚ GE also has to have proper human resources processes established. Its dynamic Business Operation Model and sophisticated and evolved human resources strategy are results of the steady growth over more than 130 years of corporate history. Since its incorporation in 1878‚ many CEOs have shaped the
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1. Introduction General Electric (GE) was founded 1878 by Thomas Edison. This American company is nowadays very well-known due to its multinationality‚ to its conglomeration of corporations and also to its excellent performance on the segments in which operates (infrastructure‚ capital finance and media). However‚ over the years this firm has also been outstanding when it comes to Human Resources (HR) practices having previously been referred to as a CEO factory. This report will be performed
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how has GE been able to create a surplus? What philosophy policies and practices have made it a “CEO factor6y” as Fortune and Economist call it? Really producing sufficient quality top executives is very difficult task for companies‚ but if we see case of General Electric‚ it was producing managers not only for own‚ GE was producing these executives in enough quantity to meet the need of industry. The philosophy adopted by GE includes some techniques‚ policies and practiceswhich enable GE to fill
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BREAKTHROUGHS : THE EVO PROJECT GE BUSINESSES JACK WELCH PROCESS ORIENTED Effective operations management Timely acquisitions and clever deal making Financially based strategies Efficiency driven JEFF IMMELT MARKETING ORIENTED Market value of technological advancements Organic growth – given top priority Technology leadership Commercial excellence Global expansion Marketing driven Long term‚ research- based approach to his tasks Immelt is transforming GE from a process and acquisition
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development is a heavy priority for GE. The company put a great emphasis on building leaders. Four successive CEO each made contributions to the development of management talent. The CEO Cordiner implemented a decentralization practice that broke the company into various departments. The new company structure was more manageable but required more delegation. As a result of the decentralized structure‚ GE put a great emphasis on developing organizational learning. GE spent a lot of money on management
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CEO Jeffrey Immelt and the reinvention of GE 8 July‚ 2014 It has been 13 years since Jeffrey Immelt took the reins of American colossus General Electric from the legendary Jack Welch. Having weathered the early years‚ besieged by a storm of economic and business challenges‚ Immelt is at last taking steps to realise his own vision for GE – which includes moving away from finance‚ and becoming a more agile and globalised company‚ focused on its core identity as a maker of industrial equipment
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11 Pure Competition in the Short Run McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies‚ Inc. All rights reserved. Four Market Models • Pure competition • Pure monopoly • Monopolistic competition • Oligopoly Pure Competition Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly Pure Monopoly Market Structure Continuum LO1 Four Market Models Characteristics of the Four Basic Market Models Pure Characteristic Competition Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly Monopoly Number of firms A very large
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Coeus’s analysis of Harvard Business School’s case study of Jack Welch’s two-decade leadership at GE. During his tenure Welch completely transformed the corporate culture of GE from an inefficient bureaucratic organization to a lean and efficient organization. At his departure from GE in 2001‚ the firm had been named Fortune’s “ Most Admired Company” three years in a row. Our analysis will discuss the steps that Welch undertook to complete this transformation. Welsh vision for GE when
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