Case Study: Immelt and the reinventing of General Electric Posted on July 29‚ 2011by Bruno Mognayie This case study was part of a strategy assignment taken at the SDA Bocconi School of Management. I’d like to thank my fellows Gouri Wagle‚ Felipe dell’Oro‚ Andrea Masina‚ Paolo Cerchiario‚ Ashna Suri-Sasmal and myself for the insights that contributed to put through this work. The issue: In September 2009‚ Ge’s Board of Directors reappointed Jeff Immelt as CEO. My team was asked to prepare a memo
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Company Business Plan Subject: Management Principles. Submitted to: Madam‚ Rabail Abbasi. Submitted by: psabro. Date: 10/18/2012 Business Name: www.learningmadeeasy.com I don’t own above domain name it’s merely a suggestion. Mission Statement Education should be free‚ just like knowledge or experiences which we share with each other‚ which makes our lives pleasant. “Our mission is to provide Quality Education‚ free and which is easily accessible‚ and our customer can study whenever
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Corporate Culture Culture refers to the fundamental values and norms that a group of peoplesuch as an ethnic group‚ a nation‚ a corporation‚ or some other organization or professionholds or aspires to hold. Every culture distinguishes itself from others by the specific ways it prefers to solve certain problems‚ such as those that arise from relationships with other people‚ from the passage of time‚ and in dealing with the external environment. Groups of people have "typical" cultural traits that
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The Jack Welch Era at General Electric Abstract John Francis “Jack” Welch Jr. was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of General Electric Company between 1981 and 2001. He was responsible for building a tremendous reputation for his company and the leadership that helped him achieve that. With combination of ruthless focus and contradictory commitment to staff involvement‚ Welsh delivered the growth figures that
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Competitive Exposure GM’s Case Study 3 Question 1 - Why is GM worried about the evolution of the JPY? * The Japanese automakers were one of the main competitors of General Motors because their main advantage came from having large portions of their cost structure denominated in Yen‚ which meant that they were liable to achieve significantly reduced costs in the face of currency depreciation. This reduced cost would comprise of lower cost of productions‚ thus leading to a rise in the Product
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A world in which Government‚ Economics (Industry) and Religion are separate from each other and perform their own specific function in society‚ would be my “Happy Place”. The interdependence of these three aspects has led to a world that is divided not only on grounds of religion but also on how businesses should operate in terms of maximizing profit yet maintaining stakeholder interests. Government and Politician’s role in society should be to make policies and decisions that target the social
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Business Analysis II: General Electric Company Financial Analysis Cristina Mota Crespo University of Phoenix MGT/521 Management September 26‚ 2012 Prof. Elsie Jimenez-Galarza General Electric Company Financial Analysis This essay is continuation of the financial evaluation from last week; we had to choose a company among the Fortune 500 in my case I chose GE Company. This Finance is about the study of money‚ it helps managers and senior leadership in an organization
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General Electric (“GE”)‚ similar to many major corporations in the 1980s and 1990s‚ underwent a restructuring phase in line with the McKinsey Restructuring Pentagon. Through this restructuring‚ General Electric implemented a portfolio-planning model to manage the ever-increasing demands of a company involved in over 190 businesses. Ultimately‚ this model allowed GE to formally??? GE set lofty goals of increasing earnings per share 25% faster than the growth of GNP. In order to achieve this the
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Case Discussion Questions 1. GE used to prefer acquisitions or Greenfield ventures as an entry mode rather than joint ventures. Why do you think this was the case? According to our textbook‚ a firm can establish a wholly owned subsidiary in a country by building a subsidiary from the ground up‚ the so-called Greenfield strategy‚ or by acquiring an enterprise in the target market. Acquisitions have three major points in their favor. First‚ they are quick to execute. By acquiring an established
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company we decided on for our financial analysis is General Electric. At first we were looking at Starbucks‚ as it is a rapidly growing multinational corporation‚ but after some research we discovered that the earnings per share growth of Starbucks is 40.2%. Therefore Starbucks did not meet the requirement set at 50% EPS growth to be considered a truly “rapidly growing company”. We then continued our research and were able to find that General Electric has current EPS growth at 59.6%‚ which meets the
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