Why Even A $139 Billion Bailout Couldn't Save GE

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июл 2024
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    13 years ago, GE was the largest company in the world stretching across dozens of industries and sectors. But, they were also the company with the most amount of debt in the world. In fact, GE had over half a trillion dollars worth of debt going into the financial crisis. As you would guess, they got destroyed by the recession and the federal government actually bailed them out. And the bailout wasn’t $10, $20, or even $30 billion. The bailout was a disgusting $139 billion. Despite the bailout, GE is still doing worse than ever. They’ve sold off the vast majority of their businesses and they’re only left with healthcare, aviation, and energy. And GE is planning on spinning off healthcare and energy within the next few years as well. So, GE will only be left with the aviation industry. This is not exactly a bad thing given that GE has a respectable position within the aviation industry. However, in comparison to their peak, this is nothing. This video explains why GE had such a monumental collapse and what happened to GE.
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    Timestamps:
    0:00 - The State Of GE
    1:27 - House Of Cards
    5:42 - Bubble Pop
    7:47 - The Reckoning
    10:20 - Recovery
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Комментарии • 634

  • @martinwalker9234
    @martinwalker9234 Год назад +316

    I worked for Alstom Power for 30 years as a steam turbine maintenance engineer; GE bought Alstom Power in 2016 and turned the business into a nightmare for employees and customers. The last straw was when they sent me on a turbine outage (which would normally be manned up by four or more experienced engineers) as the outage manager, planning engineer, lifting specialist, permit holder, day-shift supervisor and technical service engineer. I didn't even attempt it, I resigned on the first day of the outage and retired. I heard the 36 day outage took over 3 months to complete and lost GE millions.

    • @markfryer9880
      @markfryer9880 Год назад +63

      So they expected you to leap into a crisis situation solo, instead of being part of a hot shot team of 4 or more people? Sounds to me like that job was allocated by a bean counter who was only looking at the immediate response costs and not the contractual penalties clauses for failure to provide service. You did the right thing! Sticking around on that job would have cost you your reputation and quite possibly your health for being pinned as the scapegoat.

    • @triadwarfare
      @triadwarfare Год назад +6

      2016? GE still had capacity to buy after the financial crisis?

    • @MiGujack3
      @MiGujack3 Год назад +6

      @@triadwarfare bad old habits stay huh

    • @mglee1431
      @mglee1431 Год назад +4

      I understand you. It was the same situation done to my ex-company, a offshore equipment manufacturer, a lot of the experienced technical & engineers left due to such situation.

    • @AyratHungryStudent
      @AyratHungryStudent Год назад +2

      Can you explain why it pissed you off?
      Were you able to do it by your own? Was it dangerous for you? Or was it just that you thought it was a stupid decision?

  • @braddeyoung8701
    @braddeyoung8701 Год назад +228

    I worked at GE for 23 years and this video does a great job of explaining the recent downfall of GE. But I disagree that it was all a unforseen mistake by Jack Welch and the board of directors. I think they knew exactly what they were doing(running the company into the ground)and made a massive boat load of money for themselves.

    • @nickl5658
      @nickl5658 Год назад +23

      slash and burn method.

    • @CHMichael
      @CHMichael Год назад +25

      They walked away with a mountain of money - funny how managers makes money while the company died.

    • @archiebunker7688
      @archiebunker7688 Год назад +4

      Immelt made the most fatal mistakes acquiring companies for way more than they were worth and liquidating too soon at a discount like Baker- Hughes and then the GE Capital with all the risky long term insurance liabilities and comprising almost half the company was nearly total meltdown back in 2008. Transportation was the star darling at the 2010 annual shareholders meeting but that had to be a sacrificial lamb in 2019. They had better choices than 2 Jet Jeff to replace Welch- John Rice was top shelf so was Dave Calhoun who went to lead Nielson Ratings but now CEO at Boeing, also Bob Nardelli - yes Bob screwed up at Home Depot but did a good job leading Chrysler. Jeff had so many hopes on the internet of things ( IOT) but forgot the day to day and appreciate or listen to the employees.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад

      Agreed. They knew exactly what they were doing.

  • @harshsparikh
    @harshsparikh Год назад +466

    People like you are literally giving us vital information for free while media focuses on stupid things. Thanks a lot.

    • @TheFlapjack48
      @TheFlapjack48 Год назад +14

      I reiterate this sentiment

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +11

      Thanks Harsh!

    • @drek273
      @drek273 Год назад +17

      Seriously. I get more info on RUclips than any media outlet combined

    • @SioxerNikita
      @SioxerNikita Год назад +2

      Well the media focuses on what sells

    • @kozad86
      @kozad86 Год назад +2

      You do realize he's just distilling info from the media you just whined about, right?

  • @18000rpm
    @18000rpm Год назад +139

    The problem with rank-and-yank employee policy is that it turns every employee against each other. Instead of cooperating, everyone is competing in a cutthroat work environment.

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 Год назад +2

      Yep. Jack Welch had a lot to answer for

    • @tonycrabtree3416
      @tonycrabtree3416 Год назад +5

      And managers still played favorites.

    • @mglee1431
      @mglee1431 Год назад +1

      Ya, exactly

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад +1

      Yes it becomes very toxic very quick.

  • @TarunKumar-uo5gn
    @TarunKumar-uo5gn Год назад +85

    The biggest mistake he made was making Jeff Imelt the CEO instead of Ranaldi who was a brick and mortar veteran. The surest way to sink a company is to make a marketing person the CEO who only spews bullshit

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor Год назад +10

      Our state manager is like a salesman. The company has MULTIPLE issues but I come into the office to ask a question about a product that has to go out soon and I've got piles of other work to do. Get a big false hype up talk about some customer (car racing team) and we might be able to get free passes off them! Car race is in another state and I'm work 63-65 hours a week, 6 days. I just want to know what part has to go with this product, and get outta there.... Anyone from a marketing or sales BACKGROUND just CAN'T STOP hyping stuff and LYING....

    • @archiebunker7688
      @archiebunker7688 Год назад

      Dave Calhoun was a super guy who went to Nielson Ratings but now CEO of Boeing. Bob Nardelli was a good choice too aside from his blunder at Home Depot but he did ok at Chrysler. I like seeing his commentary on Fox shows like Maria Bartiromo.

  • @quito787
    @quito787 Год назад +364

    It’s good you mentioned the Rank and Yank practice of GE. Microsoft also had a similar practice they called Stack Ranking. Netflix also has its Keeper Test. All these BS labor practices are destructive in nature and any company doing something similar will end up with a workforce that does nothing but focus on surviving for the paycheck. They will not result in a strong innovative company, just a highly toxic and political one.

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +36

      Yeah, super toxic for sure

    • @OopsFailedArt
      @OopsFailedArt Год назад +13

      Agreed. Now, I would caution that I’ve worked in companies (management) where we also had stank ranking. However, firstly, there was a ton of discretion around this.
      Secondly, the focus was merely to find the people that needed extra help. Yes from there we found that occasional person that after years of efforts from management still never rose out and eventually left the company but it was done as a last resort and with great regret. It was the best I’ve ever seen these ranking systems used.

    • @jimk8520
      @jimk8520 Год назад +24

      @@OopsFailedArt Thats always how/why it starts. Given enough time, bean counter intervention will always morph this practice into it’s evil twin.

    • @profdc9501
      @profdc9501 Год назад +8

      When employment becomes a popularity contest, a company will produce nothing but anxiety and conformity.

    • @frankchan4272
      @frankchan4272 Год назад +4

      Many companies are practicing this now. They the good people just enough to do the basic work then release them to have lower people to do the work so we have the data breaches in IT as new people don’t know.

  • @RyouEmerald
    @RyouEmerald Год назад +98

    As someone who used to work for GE, for sure they did nothing but make bad choices.

    • @houseofhas9355
      @houseofhas9355 Год назад +3

      It's part of their niche. Bad company for bad customers lol

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +2

      Hahaha, thanks for the inside scoop

    • @bruce-le-smith
      @bruce-le-smith Год назад +2

      who decided to stay in aviation but get out of health and energy... looking forward to a future video on that decision!

    • @bobdaniels3692
      @bobdaniels3692 Год назад +3

      @@bruce-le-smith lol they got out of the better industries

    • @bruce-le-smith
      @bruce-le-smith Год назад +1

      @@bobdaniels3692 right? if i was looking for innovation and exponential returns it would be in health

  • @sunilsiv
    @sunilsiv Год назад +36

    Really funny, to see this report! For several decades, the top business schools around the world portrayed Jack Welch as an iconic and the greatest business leader. They discussed several case studies on his “success” at GE! Many from these business schools, who modeled their own careers imitating Jack Welch were guaranteed success and showed quick results. Some today lead the biggest business establishments in the world. I wonder what they would have to say when they see the decline of GE and their current status.
    Everyone was taught that Jack himself demanded high performance and integrity from his subordinates. However, when details of the “sweet deal” Jack had made for himself for GE to pay for post-retirement life were exposed, he brought disgrace to himself! So, this does not surprise me!

    • @Camelotsmoon
      @Camelotsmoon Год назад

      Maybe that's why half of the largest American mega corps are doomed for failure nowadays. All their leaders modeled themselves after a short term thinker.

  • @anthonywilliams4100
    @anthonywilliams4100 Год назад +78

    I was so saddened when GE sold off its transportation (Rail and Marine) business back in 2019 as my Dad was a retired UP engineer, dad always preferred GE over Electromotive engines, and as a kid I always wondered how the same company could make things as small as a light bulb and as large as a locomotive. Greed always gets you a big 0 in the long run.

    • @cz2604
      @cz2604 Год назад +4

      These decisions are made by executives. Do you think they ended up with big 0?

    • @mohammadnoormauludadnan1847
      @mohammadnoormauludadnan1847 Год назад

      I've bought 4 led bulb thinking of these bulb a good cost savings, bulb dead even low hours in used.. quality is no where to be found . Now I've just buy china bulbs.

    • @opiumextract2934
      @opiumextract2934 Год назад

      Where did your dad work? I have been conductor for UP for almost 20 years

    • @phillipcollins9290
      @phillipcollins9290 Год назад

      Sad, especially as they knocked GM out of the number one slot as regards diesel locos. South Africa has large numbers of GE locos; in fact we bought GE before we bought GMs

    • @archiebunker7688
      @archiebunker7688 Год назад

      GE Transportation was a solid business and was the star darling when Immelt hosted the 2010 shareholders meeting in Erie. His ineptness at running the company led to that business being a sacrificial lamb to Wabtec but the business is still basically GE except for the name change. I worked there 40 years and got out before the sad spinoff.

  • @ColdLance
    @ColdLance Год назад +100

    GE was a customer of my business and their procurement was some of the worst I had seen. The contracts they tried to push onto use were insane and in the end their terms were so prohibitive we ended up not selling then the products. Insane business practice.

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +6

      Sorry to hear that David

    • @kellyowens4728
      @kellyowens4728 Год назад +3

      @@LogicallyAnsweredI wish you do another video on them they are worst than you present them. But you did a better and more truthful job than anybody I have seen. What David is talking about happened frequently with companies like flour Daniel that helped build GE plants and do contractors work and maintenance work etc, Duke Powers. They was also known for many things such as not paying their contracts on time and using the money to occure interest. The list goes on and on . I might know of some other interesting things about them if you wanted to contact me.

    • @trevorkavanaugh88
      @trevorkavanaugh88 Год назад

      You mean net 180 isn’t the industry standard!

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 Год назад

      Hardly the first company to try and use their leverage of scale. Good you guys refused.

  • @profdc9501
    @profdc9501 Год назад +58

    Jack Welch was one of the primary beneficiaries of the cult of the CEO. That somehow, through shear force of personality and character, a single person could turn around a company and make it poop gold. If you see someone like this in charge of your company, who spends so much effort promoting themselves, run away, don't walk.

    • @vivekp4854
      @vivekp4854 Год назад

      Elon

    • @jeffrybassett7374
      @jeffrybassett7374 Год назад +4

      @@vivekp4854 The difference is Elon cares about his company. Welch just saw GE as a giant piggy bank.

    • @swampghost8256
      @swampghost8256 Год назад

      Jeff Imelt tanked GE after he took over from Welch !

    • @brunopadovani7347
      @brunopadovani7347 Год назад

      @@vivekp4854 No. Musk creates businesses. Guys like Welch take existing businesses, built by others, and destroy them

    • @philthornton1382
      @philthornton1382 Год назад +4

      @@jeffrybassett7374 Elon cares about pushing his stock prices up, not profitability

  • @Bylov6812
    @Bylov6812 Год назад +90

    I didn't know GE had this many problems. There's a limit to how much of a "megacorp" you can sustainably try to be. What's rotten needs to be burned and reborn from ashes. It's a shame that it's written in the law that a company HAS to satisfy shareholders, every company that focused on shareholders 100% always, always tumbled. Healthy balance and probably even making a company private would give the next executive leader the power to change up stuff. But honestly, who will take the helm of GE and turn it around? Nice video as always.

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +3

      Thanks man!

    • @TheBooban
      @TheBooban Год назад +5

      There is no limit how mega a mega corp can be. Japan has Zaibatsu. Korea has Chaebol. You know Samsung makes electronics. They also build ships. India has Tata. Tata makes everything and even have IT consultants in every tech company.
      The capitalistic shareholder system isn’t a bad idea. Its like voters. There are certain assumptions that a president must try to please voters every 4 years. We know that that leads to a weak President. But voters and shareholders aren’t stupid. Just need a good leader who has the balls and talent to follow through on the promises. Voters and shareholders would except visionary, capable leaders. It’s these sniveling wimps we despise.

    • @Bylov6812
      @Bylov6812 Год назад

      @@TheBooban Fair point. However, how often do these megacorps abuse their new gained money to take charge of the governments and defacto control them for their benefit and growth? I certainly can say that Chaebols are not doing any favors to SK. They make cool stuff, but when they grow too large for government to control, what happens to the employees? And any power struggle inside these corporations could overthrow a good, visionary leadership with money and power hungry "leaders".

    • @leeswecho
      @leeswecho Год назад

      There’s a way around this-the first step of which is “interest” funds, such as ESGs. The presence of such shareholders sends the signal to CEOs that “shareholder value” is more than just stock price.

    • @MrDanisve
      @MrDanisve Год назад +1

      Only in america this is law. This is why american companies struggle to make products like a car. That is expensive, and people want it to last and be reliable. US cars are so bad they cannot even dominate domestic marked. Even with goverment protection of 25% tariff on any import car.
      If you look at Germany, Germany cars dominate. In Japan, Japanese cars dominate. Cause they both make quality, so there is little reason for the citizens to buy something else than their own brand.. In US its very different. People want to buy US made, cause of patrotism.. But they end up with a shit product. So many opt out of it.
      US still makes airplanes, but seing how Boeing is falling into this profit trap aswell (Look at the MAX disaster, killed hundreds of people for the sake of saving a few bucks)
      I suspect Boeing to slowly fall aswell, due to them prioritizing profits over quality. Then Europe/China will dominate marked.
      The corporate nature in US is toxic and needs to change if they are to stay competetive with the world. If not they only end up as B-team manufacturers who cannot make quality products that demand a premium price.

  • @kamranhaidertunio1264
    @kamranhaidertunio1264 Год назад +26

    My company has rank and yank policy and I cant even list all the damage it causes. From low self esteem in employees, destructive competition, promoting favoritism in managers and ass kissing in employees, to serious mental health issues - it single handedly achieves all of the above.

    • @heinekensese_
      @heinekensese_ Год назад +2

      I hope you rise from these adversities. Do great brother.

    • @chrissmith3587
      @chrissmith3587 Год назад +1

      Hope you get a better workplace, those companies should die

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 9 месяцев назад

      Unionize and vote for pro-unionization (and pro-tariff) politicians.

  • @davidjma7226
    @davidjma7226 Год назад +8

    GE made a rookie error. They lost sight of their core business. They were brilliant engineering folks - and they got into the financial services sector!! Hello!!

    • @BillLaBrie
      @BillLaBrie Год назад +1

      When you give b-school people free reign, they analyze every business into “financial services.” Nothing is so profitable as lending money-as long as leverage is working for you.

  • @Lost4llen
    @Lost4llen Год назад +44

    This story reminds me of another well-known US company that got rotten due to toxic stakeholders pleasing: Boeing and their insane 737 MAX!

    • @honprarules
      @honprarules Год назад +7

      Add IBM to the list.

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +2

      True that

    • @justcommenting4981
      @justcommenting4981 Год назад

      Yep. What's really funny is they're still doing it. I'd love to see the emails of the c suite following the MAX crash and right now. I'm certain it would be truly ghoulish. They are completely psychotic. Of course they only fly corporate so what do they care?

    • @EDesigns_FL
      @EDesigns_FL Год назад +4

      I was wondering if anyone else was going to mention Boeing. The worst aspect of this company is the ludicrous amount of debt they've concealed in off balance sheet transactions. The billions they spent developing the 787 and other projects are not directly reflected the the company's financials because, like Enron, they isolated the costs and only book them when they sell a plane. This is all done so that management can cook the books so that they can reap unearned bonuses. It's just a matter of time into this house of cards also collapses.

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Год назад

      Also the white House

  • @KingUnKaged
    @KingUnKaged Год назад +222

    Further explanation for Jack's nickname: Neutron Jack's name is a reference to the Neutron Bomb, a cold war era innovation on the nuclear bomb, which would kill every living thing in an area while leaving all the infrastructure unharmed. Jack was said to do something similar in that he would enter a building, disappear all the people, but keep the non-living asset

  • @martinwalker9234
    @martinwalker9234 Год назад +6

    Before I retired I worked with a contractor who used to be part of a company overhauling steam turbine valve actuators...a highly skilled job on a critical turbine component. GE bought the company, immediately cutting the workforce, implementing procedures to speed up the overhaul process and increasing the price charged to customers. Result: overworked Engineers cutting corners to meet targets and angry customers paying more for a substandard product which failed in service. I believe this course of events is common when GE acquires a profitable, successful business and "restructures it".

  • @justinminer1354
    @justinminer1354 Год назад +29

    "why don't employees have company loyalty anymore? 😭😭"

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +1

      Hahaha

    • @jasonallen3678
      @jasonallen3678 Год назад +4

      Right and I laugh every time the media promotes the lie that people dosen't want to work anymore 😂

    • @YenDiki
      @YenDiki Год назад

      WELL, MAYBE THEY JUST DO NOT LIKE TO GET FIRED IN THE NEXT BEST OCCASION...🙄

  • @oscarcapac1786
    @oscarcapac1786 Год назад +39

    Classic example of the consequences of antitrust laws being removed. Those laws were put in place to protect the economy from corporate greed, but also to protect the companies themselves. Since the neoliberal turn in the 80s, there have been much more bankruptcies and economic crisises than during the previous period of 30s through 70s, just because companies' boards are allowed to do stuff that would have been illegal before

  • @MuhammadIrfan-ye5zf
    @MuhammadIrfan-ye5zf Год назад +10

    I was interviewing for a job at GE 2 years ago, thanked God I was rejected.

  • @danielvasquez3758
    @danielvasquez3758 Год назад +5

    Brother!! Glad to see another video!! Happy to see you again and hope you have a great weekend!!

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад

      Thank you Daniel! I really appreciate you watching my videos!

  • @tonymaries1652
    @tonymaries1652 Год назад +5

    I had a short-lived contract as a technical author at one of GE's major sites in the UK. The project had screwed up by not delivering engineering documentation to the customer during the development phase, and when the sh*t hit the pan because project managers were complaining about missing deliverables, the management decided to rectify the situation by bringing in five contract authors from outside the company to sort it out. With a cohesive management team and motivated engineering cadre there would be no reason for this problem to have developed, and once the five of us arrived it was far too late. A few years later another company I work for bid for work on the same site. Their bid was rejected in the early stages before they had invested too much work into it and I told the management about my experiences there. In short I told them that most likely they had dodged a bullet by not getting the work.

  • @alan_clough
    @alan_clough Год назад +6

    Rank and yack seems like a great way to give somebody free training and get rid of them when they start to become profitable.

  • @billyfutch1473
    @billyfutch1473 Год назад +9

    The honest truth was , that Jeff Immelt and to some Jack Welch destroyed GE. Bad decisions and acquisitions by Immelt has made him rich while a once Great Company and workers suffered!

  • @Carguytct
    @Carguytct Год назад +13

    I have only seen a few companies do reverse stock splits for the last 30 years. Every one of them filed for bankruptcy soon after. I have bought and sold GE a few times. When they did their reverse split, I was out.

  • @heavyassaultmode1503
    @heavyassaultmode1503 Год назад +7

    Bottom 10% or even bottom 5% mandated turnover is destructive if you have nowhere near that many underperformers, but it is bad even if you do. My Fortune 100 corp has more than 10% serious underperformers. Some people take longer, often through no fault of their own, to hit their stride and do well. Those are precisely the ones you want to keep. Additionally, why replace underperformers if you can't replace them with anyone better, and in many cases end up replacing them with worse people? An HR exec's office is near mine, and being from different divisions, we talk shop to maintain our sanity. She hates to sign off on terminating an underperformer because the replacement is almost always worse. And it's expensive.

    • @tonymaries1652
      @tonymaries1652 Год назад

      I guess it's a smaller world than the management in companies like GE think it is, and information about a company being bad to work for soon gets around. When HR go to agencies to replace fired staff I would think that they get fobbed off with the less experienced and less capable candidates.

  • @skjoldgames
    @skjoldgames Год назад +10

    Any business that prioritizes profits through layoffs over providing for the people that have committed their lives to that business deserves to fail. A business has only one purpose, to serve people. It serves customers through great products and services, and it serves those within the company with a livelihood. Anything beyond this is destructive to the purpose of a business.

  • @baronvonjo1929
    @baronvonjo1929 Год назад +9

    I went to a career center and GE came in trying to recruit people. The lady who helps us get jobs asked the guy how will the students know that they won't be laid off after a few years like many other employees are constantly.
    He did not like that question at all.
    Working in that industry I found out how many people are laid off at GE cause they just struggle so much.

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад

      Hahaha, his response is hilarious

    • @BlackElf94
      @BlackElf94 Год назад +1

      I work at GE and everyone here measures their time with the company in decades. It is almost unheard of that anyone is ever fired, and many people who leave for greener pastures end up coming back because places like Amazon don't have the great work/life balance that GE offers. When there are "layoffs" usually it just ends up with some of the old guys taking an early retirement, and when the business environment recovers they end up coming back as "rehired pensioners". With the new spinoff of the companies I have never felt better about my prospects as a GE Aerospace employee!

  • @olpkol
    @olpkol Год назад +8

    I think it happened because the company was managed by "financiers" instead of "engineers"...
    Therefore, they did not make a modern railway locomotive in time...

  • @jorgedominguez2007
    @jorgedominguez2007 Год назад

    Very insightful video. Keep up the good work.

  • @krishgupta7898
    @krishgupta7898 Год назад +51

    i don't think that companies going bankrupt is always a bad think i just believe that companies who are not significantly contributing to human society as a whole should go bankrupt as these companies are just wasting the resources and manpower ,these resources need to get back into the market so they can be used more efficiently.

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +3

      Yeah, it’s pretty natural really

    • @comradetovarish7823
      @comradetovarish7823 Год назад

      black rock contributes nothing to society and will most likely outlast Ford

    • @disadadi8958
      @disadadi8958 Год назад +1

      GE still makes decent engines for airplanes and their healthcare department also keeps people alive. I think that contributes to the society positively at least on some level. Definitely more so than tiktok.

    • @notme8232
      @notme8232 Год назад +1

      @@disadadi8958 They also poison rivers, such as the Hudson, which my city drinks from (with significant treatment)

    • @disadadi8958
      @disadadi8958 Год назад +1

      @@notme8232 that's pretty bad not gonna lie.

  • @benlamprecht6414
    @benlamprecht6414 Год назад

    Thanks for yet another excellent video.

  • @Termless
    @Termless Год назад +1

    Great vid as always! have a nice weekend!

  • @GoonerKVN
    @GoonerKVN Год назад +13

    I work for GE now, and there's definitely a change in culture now. Splitting of the business into 3 is going to help a lot, and hopefully take us back to where we belong

    • @Internet_Shenanigans
      @Internet_Shenanigans Год назад +1

      I work for GE Aviation, it's awsome, and I don't see any of these issues that are being talked about here, we are continuing to grow, and I love the workplace. We certainly aren't firing 10% of our employees every year.

    • @Big_AlMC
      @Big_AlMC Год назад +1

      @@Internet_Shenanigans I work in GE Renewables. Please help 😂🥲 its falling apart.

    • @aDDiBrEE
      @aDDiBrEE Год назад

      @@Internet_Shenanigans I work for GE Additive. Its all great actually except we canceled the Chances to hold customer like space x , NASA and Co. Just for aviation. I think this wasnt a good choice

  • @TagmakersCoUk
    @TagmakersCoUk Год назад +7

    This is what happens when you let accountants and MBA's take charge of a business. NEVER allow a bank or an accountant to give you business advice. They will destroy your business.

  • @doujinflip
    @doujinflip Год назад +7

    GE should serve as a warning to those who say capitalism should remain the solidly inhuman pursuit of profit.

    • @DriQ-qo7tp
      @DriQ-qo7tp Год назад

      But, and a big BUT, communism is much much much worse!

  • @graham1034
    @graham1034 Год назад +9

    I totally forgot that GE even made appliances. The first thing that comes to mind for me when thinking about GE is their aircraft engines.

    • @pmscalisi
      @pmscalisi Год назад +1

      The appliances are all made in China anyway in the same factory with other brands. The name really doesn’t mean anything it’s just a label.

    • @graham1034
      @graham1034 Год назад

      @@pmscalisi probably why I don't think about them. They aren't even very competitive in the appliance market other than being cheap.

    • @sutherlandA1
      @sutherlandA1 Месяц назад

      When I think of GE I think of their "corporate handshake"

  • @TheOtherNEO
    @TheOtherNEO Год назад +8

    I've not been able to track the article down, but it was maybe 10+ years ago. What was written at the time was that GE Financial Services was the biggest component of GE and out of that, the bulk of their revenue was from collecting child support from "deadbeat dads".
    Not the best image to show for what is meant to be an engineering firm.

    • @KingOfMadCows
      @KingOfMadCows Год назад

      Most of their revenue came from factoring, where they would buy invoices from companies and collect the payment from the customers.

  • @imdadbasha4294
    @imdadbasha4294 Год назад +3

    I started my career with GE at JFWTC center in India. Went through all the good times of India startup, great learnings at world class facility. There were good analysts who share their views on the progress of GE and that was in Y2001/2. As an youngster was not able catch those analysis and discussions. But you said it all right, it was heading towards a collapse and now I can travel back in time and relate a few events..

  • @Pyrrhic.
    @Pyrrhic. Год назад +42

    GE’s failure was because they doubled down on oil when oil was reaching its peak. This resulted in them suffer when oil prices collapsed. The spin off would also result in more value by each part of the business. The conglomerate discount weights downs GEs valuation.

    • @chomot11
      @chomot11 Год назад +1

      As a former GE employee in the power sector they made the big miss when they did the Alstom acquisition instead of reading the tea leaves and going all in on renewables. Its not all bad as they did buy the wind turbine business from Enron and grew that but their heart was not into it until recently once other OEMs had developed tech and was out competing on price.

    • @jeffrybassett7374
      @jeffrybassett7374 Год назад

      @@chomot11 Also a former employee and I think Logically Answered hit the nail on the head. GE became the giant it was by making and selling things. Then Welch decided to turn it into a bank and insurance company. Anyone who worked for them also understands their obsession with "excess" inventory. Even before the current financial mess they had pared inventory and supply chains so much that the slightest hiccup in supply caused nightmares. At least that's how it was working for Aircraft Engines.

  • @TetrisEtMatatrax
    @TetrisEtMatatrax Год назад +12

    I'm proud to work at GE. Our technologies are the ones making me feel living in an advanced civilization.
    Honestly as a blue collar never had to worry about my position. I know that management does but this is not in my understanding the main driver. The worse brake we have to struggle with is process, standard. We have to comply with so much rules that:
    1- two lifes would not be enough
    2- you can avoid working justified by the rules 100% time
    3- No self decision making resulting in poorly effective teams.

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor Год назад

      You're the only one here happy about GE....

    • @TetrisEtMatatrax
      @TetrisEtMatatrax Год назад

      This isn't a state of mind story. Just my perception from my perspective.

    • @pantera01971
      @pantera01971 Год назад +3

      I work at a non-union GE Aviation plant and every day I see firsthand why this company is in bad shape. They incentivize bad behavior. Here is just one example. Bob and Tom both set up and operate the same CNC cell but on different shifts. Bob always does at least 80% of the set ups and has excellent quality while Tom has just as much time on the set ups but doesn't know what he's doing and is screwing off most of the time. He also has terrible quality. At review time Tom will get a bigger pay increase because he's been with the company longer and he can make junk on more types of machines. The company doesn't care about quality and efficiency, it's not even in their performance matrix, probably because they don't know who does what. Bob soon learns that there is no incentive for performance and will either leave the company to work for someone who cares, or he will stop caring himself and adopt Tom's work ethics. Every company has some issues, but GE is rotten from top to bottom, at least at the plant I work at.

    • @pmscalisi
      @pmscalisi Год назад

      Do you live in China?

    • @TetrisEtMatatrax
      @TetrisEtMatatrax Год назад

      @@pantera01971 we work in a small team relatively independently, so my perspective is different

  • @lindawolffkashmir2768
    @lindawolffkashmir2768 Год назад +1

    My dad worked for GE in Fort Wayne for about 10 years before he died, but back then if you got into GE, you had it made. They had benefits like crazy, they had huge Christmas parties with shows and gifts for the kids, and a decent pension program. Then it all started going downhill. They closed the Winter St. plant, then later on the Taylor St. plant. Finally they shut down the Broadway plant, and left Fort Wayne altogether. The last act was to dismantle their sign. The old buildings are finding new life, though. BAE took over some of the buildings on Taylor St., and the Broadway plant is becoming a condo and specialty shop complex called Electric Works, and the city is dumping billions into it.

  • @altair1405
    @altair1405 Год назад +10

    you could do the same title just with gm

  • @Cedartreetechnologies
    @Cedartreetechnologies Год назад +6

    HP and Trimble also did the "lose X pct per year of your employees" schtick. It's like their senior leadership are all members of the same country club: Club Moron. I mean, if it's good to fire a percent of direct contributors, why not double that for managers, and double THAT for senior leadership?

  • @TheAllAroundShow
    @TheAllAroundShow Год назад +5

    love ur content keep it up

  • @mrbushlied7742
    @mrbushlied7742 Год назад +1

    My father worked at the GE Base Works plant in Providence, RI, for two decades. Soon after NAFTA, GE closed the plant and moved the operation to Mexico. I have no sympathy at all for GE. In fact, I'll glad to see it crash and burn! There's a lesson for us to learn: Allowing Fortune 500 Corporations to relocate their factories to foreign countries where workers get slave wages, giving these companies massive tax breaks, and bailing them out whenever they face bankruptcy does not save them. We must stop privitizing the profits whilst whilst socializing the loses!

  • @a.a.p3254
    @a.a.p3254 Год назад +1

    Excellent reporting!
    Just like Kodak, Pan Am, is Boeing next?
    We all remember the once great American auto industry.
    How sad.

  • @matthewharr6372
    @matthewharr6372 Год назад +1

    This is explains so much as to why nobody I know will stay working at the transformer plant in a nearby city, despite the higher than average pay.

  • @hoshifuyo4494
    @hoshifuyo4494 Год назад +31

    This is an amazing video and i enjoyed every bit of it. And i'm also excited to share my investment experience so far this year. I believe it will help a lot of people here who are confused on how to startup theirs and be productive for the year.

    • @hoshifuyo4494
      @hoshifuyo4494 Год назад

      From my own point of view, you need to invest smartly if you need the good things of life. so far, i've made over $355k in raw profits from just q4 of the market from my diversified portfolio strategy and i believe anyone can do it if you have the right strategy. Mutual funds takes long time, but investing smartly is the key for short term. Most of us tends to pay more attention to the shiniest position in the market to the cost of proper diversification.

    • @emmanuelchikwendu5492
      @emmanuelchikwendu5492 Год назад

      @@hoshifuyo4494 Wow!!!,
      This is super awesome. I'm willing to start saving properly or at least have a good investment. Please tell me more about it. I'm an amateur investor, i have 2 IRAs, I do not like the cookie cutter responses from; Fidelity, Vanguard Schwab, etc 7%-9% year on average. How do you invest?

    • @hoshifuyo4494
      @hoshifuyo4494 Год назад

      My portfolio is very much diversified, so it's not like i have a particular fund i invest in, plus i don't do that by myself. I follow the trades of WINONA ALETHEA LIVINGSTON. She is a popular broker you might have heard of. I can correctly say she's worth her salt as a financial adviser, as her diversification skills are top notch. I
      say so because i see that in her results, as my portfolio grows by averages of 10 to 15% on a monthly basis. Unlike i can say for my IRA which has just been trudging along. My portfolio just mirrors what she trades and not just on some particular industries of my choosing.

    • @emmanuelchikwendu5492
      @emmanuelchikwendu5492 Год назад

      @@hoshifuyo4494 By following trades, do you mean copying her trades, as it is done in etoro? Are you giving her your money or the money says in your account? I have heard about copying trades but have not looked into it. But i have an idea of what it is.

    • @hoshifuyo4494
      @hoshifuyo4494 Год назад

      Yeah exactly. My money stays right in my account. It's all programmatic, plus it's relatively much easier to set up and connect my accounts, than creating a financial plan and drafting investment strategies myself. My account just mirrors her trades in realtime.

  • @jagadishgospat2548
    @jagadishgospat2548 Год назад +7

    Let's hope ge energy does better, for the renewable energy sake.

  • @rest-today
    @rest-today Год назад +3

    Now I understand why a she monster from GE came to work for the USAF back in "83 or 84" where I was just getting started as a young Engineer. She was a living nightmare! An yes, I think GE earned the trouble they got. Thanks for the historical insights.

  • @jessekauffman3336
    @jessekauffman3336 Год назад +8

    Sad part is when companies like this go under the executives are rewarded with millions

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor Год назад +2

      Yeah. Who the hell else can BOTCH something and GET MILLIONS in bonuses. All us average guys GET FIRED when we botch something.

    • @jessekauffman3336
      @jessekauffman3336 Год назад +1

      @@OffGridInvestor exactly

  • @brainthesizeofplanet
    @brainthesizeofplanet Год назад +5

    Another company comes to my mind:
    Boeing
    Once great engineering, then run by beam counters killing 300 people

    • @1MinuteFlipDoc
      @1MinuteFlipDoc Год назад

      it's worse than that. the engineering 'leaders' became the bean counters! the boeing accountants told the mcdonnel engineering leaders not to make the bad decisions!

  • @section7173
    @section7173 Год назад +4

    I'd like to know why so many people in charge of large corporations, politics, royalty, etc look like broken malignant humans?

    • @jeffrybassett7374
      @jeffrybassett7374 Год назад +2

      Because if they're not like that they don't get the job. Sad but true.

    • @warrenerickson4159
      @warrenerickson4159 Год назад

      @@jeffrybassett7374 Agreed, at the company that used to employ me, you moved up the management chain by being the greater a$$hole.

    • @DriQ-qo7tp
      @DriQ-qo7tp Год назад

      "looking like broken malignant humans" is the top prerequisite requirement for anyone to be in charge of large corporations and in politics. Period.

  • @jimbintz2424
    @jimbintz2424 Год назад

    I'd like to see an analysis of stock performance following significant layoffs, any sector.

  • @dewdodu
    @dewdodu Год назад +7

    GE was founded by Thomas Edison and JP Morgen, needless to say, it's been a pretty staple company in the US for over 100 years. Funny how its now known as the Dryer and Washing Machine company.

    • @archingelus
      @archingelus Год назад +5

      Actually as someone outside usa i know GE for their aircraft engine....

    • @ionpopescu3167
      @ionpopescu3167 Год назад

      @@archingelus
      I know them for the m61 Vulcan gun.

    • @archingelus
      @archingelus Год назад

      @@ionpopescu3167 not the nukes?

    • @nedelwre
      @nedelwre 2 месяца назад

      @@archingelus Once upon a time rich people in Asia has big Fridge with GE Brand. Usually last about 30 years

  • @ToolFoolz
    @ToolFoolz Год назад +11

    Why using the citizens money to bailout companies is BS...

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +3

      Facts

    • @Alozhatos
      @Alozhatos Год назад

      Reminds me similar way in Malaysia which Mahathir using tax payer’s money to bailout Proton twice.

  • @thund3rstruck
    @thund3rstruck Год назад +5

    For anyone outside the US, or in the US but unaware of history, GE (General Electric) was the company founded by Thomas Edison in 1892. Edison was a legitimate superstar in his day but his most famous invention was the electric lightbulb. Edison's arch enemy was a man named Nikola Tesla and their most famous battle was over which electrification standard should be mass produced, Edison's Direct Current (DC) or Tesla's Alternating Current (AC). e.g. AC/DC.

    • @Idiosyncrazy
      @Idiosyncrazy Год назад

      and judging by history, now we know that T.A. Edison is also a money hunger prick and doesnt like to lose in a healthy competition.
      so, nowadays, GE falls, and Tesla(motors) is on top and truly making changes (if not one of the contributors) to the world in a positive manners.
      i'd say... serves the a*hole(Edison) right seeing his legacy tumbles through his own legacy that is greed.

    • @nedelwre
      @nedelwre 2 месяца назад

      Edison is quite the showman, to scare people of AC power he arrange to have somebody executed with electricity. Maybe he arrange it to go badly and the person did not die right away. DC power that Edison sells cant be transmitted from far away, every block must have their own big generator that supply nearby buildings

  • @68Fourty72
    @68Fourty72 Год назад +4

    "In some ways General Electric reminds me of Sears, Sears had a massive 'empire' that has been winding down."

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад

      Ah yes great comparison

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor Год назад

      There's a company here in Australia JUST LIKE sears that pays A BIG dividend. And I give it 10 years and it'll be dead. Too expensive for everything they sell. ALL the competition sells similar stuff FAR cheaper.

  • @dl6860
    @dl6860 Год назад +2

    What you described isn't capitalism, it's corporatism.

  • @andrewsmith9179
    @andrewsmith9179 Год назад +6

    One of the good things is that those poor workers got Justice. For losing their jobs for no reason

    • @archingelus
      @archingelus Год назад

      Why they choose to work there in the first place if they know thats how GE treat its employee?

    • @kellyowens4728
      @kellyowens4728 Год назад +2

      @@archingelus This wasn't common knowledge to the public .Every corporation has a marketing and propaganda machine inside the company and outside the company.

    • @archingelus
      @archingelus Год назад

      @@kellyowens4728 well then why don't they quit when they know those propaganda? t he fact that i see so many comments talking about this AND this articles, that means this is NOT a common knowledge that is unknown or we are not talking this at all

  • @CoryRwtfyt
    @CoryRwtfyt Год назад +1

    I used to work for GE right out of highschool and can even see the now closed plant I worked at from my home. A lot of people here won't touch anything from GE.

  • @brianhenderson9470
    @brianhenderson9470 Год назад +2

    My father worked in senior mgt for 36 years. Jack Welch ruined the company.

  • @marcalexander6321
    @marcalexander6321 Год назад +1

    Great video. Technical correct: the name Neuton Jack, came from the reputation he earned. He would fly to a plant, and make visit. Later all the employees would be gone, as though a neutron bomb had gone off. He personally laid off 150,000 workers. But other than that, he was a really nice guy. Not.

  • @dimsi1
    @dimsi1 15 дней назад

    and.... here we are 2 years later, the stock is 360% up since august 2022.... Welcome to corporate America

  • @bryanw8651
    @bryanw8651 Год назад

    Im an appliance tech and currently ge dishwashers from 2014-2021 all suffer from the same problems controlboard issues and anything with rubber leaks. Newer ge ranges have alot of controlboard issues as well. One range i only needed 1 board but could only order it as an assembly with the touchpad console and four boards in total. A $1000 part that we charge ge $680 for an in warranty product. Ge doesnt have many techs where i work but 100% of the time if ge was there b4 me it doesn’t surprise me that they werent able to fix their own product. I work on multiple brands and its not that hard to read a schematic if u need to. Im not really shocked theyre having trouble when there own people cant fix 1 brand. My son had to get xrays done n even the tech at the hospital said the portable xray machine sucked n was always breaking down

  • @samsonvaliaparambil4709
    @samsonvaliaparambil4709 Год назад +2

    If you look at this carefully, you’ll understand it was GE Capital that led to the downfall than anything else. The ravenous and ruthless practices followed by Welch , led to GE losing employee loyalty. That is a tremendous blow, more so when you consider the fact that your employees are your biggest asset. Non related acquisitions can drag you down in a big way. But when you look at the whole tragedy objectively it is the Subprime lending that sank the whole ship than all other sins together.

  • @user-nd7rd8jo6h
    @user-nd7rd8jo6h Год назад +3

    They were notorious for even looking back at resumes when trying to trim to see if people listed wrong employment dates. So if for some reason if your someone who lists dates xx/xx/xxxx instead of xx/xxxx better hope those days are spot on or they will term you for lying on your resume.
    That's why I only do month/year and if possible just year and make sure when questioned "it's to the best extent of my knowledge" which is really the general standard.
    Imagine getting capped because you were off 3 days...

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor Год назад

      If that's their attitude towards employees, they SHOULD BE bankrupted.

    • @user-nd7rd8jo6h
      @user-nd7rd8jo6h Год назад

      @@OffGridInvestor yeah and if they weren't doing shit like that they would yo-yo ppl with firing and rehirings and like not typical contract work style.
      They were terrible though apparently they paid well, if you were one of the lucky ones.

  • @djp3637
    @djp3637 Год назад +1

    After the medical spinoff but before the energy spinoff GE will be very similar to Rolls-Royce.
    Both primarily turbo jet and aviation manafacturing companies with side business in nuclear energy.

  • @n.g.l.
    @n.g.l. Год назад +9

    Note to self: Don’t purchase GE products

    • @LogicallyAnswered
      @LogicallyAnswered  Год назад +2

      Hahaha

    • @alphaomega1351
      @alphaomega1351 Год назад

      Especially if they've sold parts of it to China 🇨🇳. As if we don't get enough crap from there already. 😶

  • @xr.spedtech
    @xr.spedtech Год назад +2

    A company older than my grandparents...
    Time to rest GE ...

  • @tolazytothinkofanamd2351
    @tolazytothinkofanamd2351 Год назад +1

    GE is basically a good summary of wall St. Short term gains over long-term

  • @wanakmar0734
    @wanakmar0734 Год назад +2

    I thought GE was still a great company until i see this video. I still remember a lot of corporate consultants used to cite GE as an example of how a great company should be run. Now i guess with the hindsight the consultants will cite how not to emulate GE way of management. Both ways the coprporate consultants make money by simply BS.

  • @Carlton-B
    @Carlton-B Год назад

    This might explain the worthless GE LED bulbs I bought this spring. I bought a 4-pack of daylight 60W-equivalent bulbs. I started using two of the bulbs that day. One started staying dim after a couple of weeks, and the other started flickering after a couple of weeks, and after a couple of months, the flickering one was flickering uncontrollably most of the time. I replaced it with the third one, which started flickering after a couple of weeks, but it still isn't too bad. I just put in the fourth a couple of days ago because a compact florescent gave up the ghost last week. Since one is already down after less than three months, Another one dim, and another one flickering, I don't think they will last even a year, never mind the five years guaranteed.
    "GE" bulbs are now made by the brand owner, Savant Technologies. "Refresh LED Energetic Daylight" 60w equivalent actual 8.5w. "13 Year Life" 5 year limited warrantee. In case you run into these worthless bulbs, don't get them.

    • @nedelwre
      @nedelwre 2 месяца назад

      Better to get a china brand that has their own brand and considered "on the way up". Plenty of China brand that start as provider of good (sometimes best) stuff at reasonable price that they start to have counterfeit.

  • @kevinsmith856
    @kevinsmith856 Год назад +2

    GE continues to be top heavy. Too many financial managers and other leaders that create endless initiatives that only create "busy" non-value added work. GE has lost focus of offering quality products for a profit. As long as GE's focus is making investors happy instead of customers, bankruptcy is a strong possibility. There are many good employees at GE. The problem is out of touch financial leadership.

  • @_gungrave_6802
    @_gungrave_6802 Год назад +1

    I remember how they used to be the go to company for home appliances as their brand used to mean reliability even if their customer service was always dog shit. The last 3 appliances I bought from them in the late 2000s and early 2010s all failed within a few years. After being burned on GE I switched to Whirlpool and haven't had any issues or complaints about their products in the past 10 years. I will say that Whirlpool's customer service is kind of shit but these days the customer service for basically any company is shit given that they're all fucking robocall centers.
    Oh and I currently have a whirlpool fridge, dishwasher, and a clothes washer/dryer all of which I haven't had to replace for the past decade or so and are still running strong.

  • @abrogers3517
    @abrogers3517 Год назад

    You should make a video about citadel, virtu financial or jp Morgan chase

  • @leeseanlewis7453
    @leeseanlewis7453 Год назад

    I work at GE and there is poor management they have us mandated to work 7 days a week and I have worked that schedule for 3-4 months. They brought in a third shift to “increase productivity “ but it did nothing but drag it down cause they don’t do work and don’t really have management that makes sure they do it. So a possible solution to increasing productivity has done nothing but cause problems

  • @airhogglider
    @airhogglider Год назад +2

    All companies that adopted rank and tank have moved away from it including GE itself. ExxonMobil somehow managed to keep it around.

  • @strawberriesandcum
    @strawberriesandcum Год назад +4

    Bailouts are dumb unless the company has actual benefit to the society, they should let people decide if a company gets a bail out

    • @herrabanani
      @herrabanani Год назад

      many would agree that companies should be built so that they don't have any expectation of getting a bailout if things go south, but when a disaster hits, it's pretty hard for the current policy makers to stick to that

  • @DanoFSmith-yc9tg
    @DanoFSmith-yc9tg Год назад

    Our union hall helped build a brand new GE machine manufacturing facility in Welland Ontario Canada around 2018. GE used the building for about 6 months and moved out, and its still vacant to this day.
    What a waste of money.

  • @IdahoRailfan
    @IdahoRailfan Год назад +1

    GE used to be on top of the railroad industry and was fantastic. But they sold it to wabtec wich used to build and rebuild trains here in boise idaho back in 2013.

  • @jryan5984
    @jryan5984 Год назад

    That Rank and Yank sounds very similar to the Roman Legion Decimation. Minus the lethality 😅

  • @sneakerhead4770
    @sneakerhead4770 Год назад +1

    Paying out all them dividends caught up to them

  • @grayrecluse7496
    @grayrecluse7496 Год назад +9

    I remember GE, being a forever stock 20 year's ago.

  • @bjlbernal
    @bjlbernal Год назад +1

    Rank and yank is bad for business, long-term. Scalp and promote is better for business, long-term. Not having to do either is best for business, but the hardest to achieve.

  • @johnneedle8119
    @johnneedle8119 Год назад +1

    I work at GE now let me tell you their management is extremely poor they really need help in that department they could get trillions but with stupid people in charge nothing will change

  • @shivajisanyal0
    @shivajisanyal0 Год назад

    I worked in GE healthcare for almost 6 years. It was my wrong choice to join GE. Whimsical decisions by the higher management spoil my career in mid age. I was the product manager of the patient monitoring segment. They diluted the entire department all of a sudden,shifted us to a different profile without judging experience,respect and honour. They thought I should be obliged that I can continue my job. It happened to many of my peers. They don't respect anyone ,they know how to do business.The culture is pathetic

  • @user-hw8zy2wf8g
    @user-hw8zy2wf8g 5 месяцев назад

    Before 2007, Jack Welch was treated as the industrial guru whose presense was equivalent to Elon Musk then. The books he wrote was the must-read for intellectual. Now GE? Most of youths never heard of, and no willing to.

  • @sat101
    @sat101 Год назад +2

    Make video on Ford that would be amazing

  • @ManishKumar-lb9ni
    @ManishKumar-lb9ni Год назад

    I have a job from GE Digital. Should i join or not?

  • @ByzantineCapitalManagement
    @ByzantineCapitalManagement 7 месяцев назад

    When you fail no one comes to bail you out, but when a company fails then it's a bailout.

  • @oadka
    @oadka Год назад

    The more I think about this, the more I feel that GE basically pulled a Daewoo
    its weird that despite all this GE makes the world's biggest aircraft engines and is a literal market leader in that segment...crazy

  • @SAg1993
    @SAg1993 Год назад +1

    There is a lot of chatter around GE selling it's aerospace business to Boeing, so bye bye GE.

  • @democracy2.0
    @democracy2.0 Год назад

    Where did the money go? Big corporations getting insane bailouts from the government 😳

  • @Luminousplayer
    @Luminousplayer Год назад +2

    this is what happens when a company tries to meddle into every sector

  • @Moonman63
    @Moonman63 Год назад

    True, ge capital and the long term care insurance business did in ge, but jack welsh’s aggressive focus on shedding un profitable businesses for profitable ones is what saved the company from being broken up by stock holders in the 80s (like what happened to Westinghouse).

  • @sbhatt2895
    @sbhatt2895 Год назад

    There was once big hype around Jack Walsh and great Six Sigma. Nobody talks about that now. Are great CEOs bother about ultimate cost of efficiency . Probably Jack Walsh would an example. I will remember those days when six Sigma methodology was taught to everyone to reduce bug in code.

  • @brunopadovani7347
    @brunopadovani7347 Год назад +1

    So many people revere Jack Welch, but he really started the hollowing out of GE.

  • @aniketprasad3128
    @aniketprasad3128 Год назад +1

    I would not let go energy sector tbh.
    It's the big bet for the upcoming 2-3 decade.