Jack Welch was the CEO of GE for 20 years, transforming it into a highly profitable global corporation. Some key lessons from his career include:
1) Establish a clear mission and values for the company and reward employees who embody them while removing those who don't.
2) Relentlessly upgrade your team through coaching and evaluating employees. Make tough decisions even when unpopular.
3) Hire energetic people with integrity, intelligence, and passion. Look for those who can energize others and execute on decisions.
4) Embrace change and seize new opportunities. Remove employees who resist change. Survive crises by accepting they will be worse than expected and using them to drive
Jack Welch was the CEO of GE for 20 years, transforming it into a highly profitable global corporation. Some key lessons from his career include:
1) Establish a clear mission and values for the company and reward employees who embody them while removing those who don't.
2) Relentlessly upgrade your team through coaching and evaluating employees. Make tough decisions even when unpopular.
3) Hire energetic people with integrity, intelligence, and passion. Look for those who can energize others and execute on decisions.
4) Embrace change and seize new opportunities. Remove employees who resist change. Survive crises by accepting they will be worse than expected and using them to drive
Jack Welch was the CEO of GE for 20 years, transforming it into a highly profitable global corporation. Some key lessons from his career include:
1) Establish a clear mission and values for the company and reward employees who embody them while removing those who don't.
2) Relentlessly upgrade your team through coaching and evaluating employees. Make tough decisions even when unpopular.
3) Hire energetic people with integrity, intelligence, and passion. Look for those who can energize others and execute on decisions.
4) Embrace change and seize new opportunities. Remove employees who resist change. Survive crises by accepting they will be worse than expected and using them to drive
Jack Welch was the CEO of GE for 20 years, transforming it into a highly profitable global corporation. Some key lessons from his career include:
1) Establish a clear mission and values for the company and reward employees who embody them while removing those who don't.
2) Relentlessly upgrade your team through coaching and evaluating employees. Make tough decisions even when unpopular.
3) Hire energetic people with integrity, intelligence, and passion. Look for those who can energize others and execute on decisions.
4) Embrace change and seize new opportunities. Remove employees who resist change. Survive crises by accepting they will be worse than expected and using them to drive
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WINNING
JACK WELCH
presented by: Faiza Saeed Bhatti
INTRODUTION
it's based on stuff that's been applied in the trenches.
Welch worked for GE forty years, climbing his way through the ranks until he led as chairman and CEO. Under his leadership, the corporate giant surged forward in both profits and global dominance. CONTINUE It's contagiously exciting. This guy loves to win and shows the rest of us how he and a multitude of others have won. it's not filled with "the same old stuff". Even the principles you've heard before are presented through his own interesting experiences. Welch traveled the world in his retirement, doing over 150 question and answer sessions with groups of thirty to five thousand. Attendees could blast him with any questions they wanted to. MISSON &VALUES
How do you plan on winning at this business?
Answer that question, and you have your mission. Values are the behaviors you plan to exhibit in achieving your mission. In order to make your mission and values actually impact your organization, you've got to reward those who practice them and punish those who don't. Many people were fired from GE because they didn't fit with GE's mission and values. (pp. 20,21) Favorite Quote: "...integrity is just a ticket to the game. If you don't have it in your bones, you shouldn't be allowed on the field." (p. 14) DIFFERENTIATION In professional sports, athletes who perform best are rewarded lavishly. Those who don't play well are paid the minimum salary and eventually fired. Businesses should operate the same way. It may seem cruel and Darwinian, but in the long run, people are happier doing what they're good at. If they're not excelling, you're ultimately doing them a favor by moving them out of an environment where they know they're a drag on the organization. They'd be happier some place else. . LEADERSHIP Welch lays out eight rules of leadership which always worked. Rule #1 - Relentlessly upgrade your team. In every encounter with them, "evaluate, coach, and build self- confidence." Rule #2 - Instill the vision. Rule #3 - Spread energy and optimism. Rule #4 - Establish trust by being candid, transparent and giving credit where it's due. Rule #5 - Make the unpopular decisions. Rule #6 - Probe and push. Make sure your "questions are answered with action." Rule #7 - Inspire risk-taking and learning by doing both yourself. Rule #8 - Celebrate! When Welch speaks to groups, he often asks the question, "Do you celebrate enough?" The response? "...almost no one raises a hand." (p. 78) HIRING First, candidates should pass three screens: Screen #1: Do they have integrity - telling the truth and keeping their word. Screen #2: Are they intelligent - having enough curiosity and "breadth of knowledge" to lead other smart people. Screen #3: Are they mature - able to handle stress and setbacks, respect other's emotions, be confident without being arrogant and have a sense of humor. Second, look for four E's and a P. Positive Energy - thriving on action, relishing change, making friends easily, loving work, play and life. Can Energize Others - "It takes a deep knowledge of your business and strong persuasion skills...." Has Edge - the ability to make tough decisions, even when all the information isn't in. Can Execute - to take the decision and make it happen, overcoming all obstacles to complete the task. Passion - They're excited about their work, learning and growing, and helping those around them win. On hiring a senior level leader. Four additional traits: Authenticity - bold and decisive, yet real and likeable - not phony, not playing a part that's not them. "The ability to see around corners" - a visionary who can see the future and anticipate what most don't expect. A knack for surrounding themselves with people smarter than themselves. "Heavy-Duty Resilience" - someone who's been knocked down and beat up badly, but bounced back to run even harder. The number one question to probe in an interview: "...why the candidate left his previous job, and the one before that." This "tells you more about them than almost any other piece of data." (p. 96) MANAGING PEOPLE 1. Give HR (Human Resources) "power and primacy." Who are the best HR types? "Pastors and parents in the same package." 2. Rigorously evaluate with a proven system. 3. Motivate and retain with money, recognition and training. 4. Confront difficult people issues, from trouble- makers to big-headed stars, with candor and action. 5. Spend half of your time evaluating and coaching the middle 70 percent - those who are neither disrupting nor shining. 6. Have as flat an organizational chart as possible. The more layers, the more vices. Everyone should be crystal clear on who they report to and what their responsibilities are. DEAL WITH CHANGE In this era of change, you change or die. Here's how to make change more palatable. 1. Make sure everyone in your company knows why you're changing. 2. Hire and promote only those who deal well with change. Many will call themselves "change agents," but you know the real deal when you discover someone who reacts fearlessly in the face of the unknown. 3. Get rid of those who resist change. 4. Seize opportunities, even if they're brought about by someone's misfortune. Buy real estate when prices plummet. Be there when a company fails, to see if pieces can be bought up at a bargain price. Purchase undervalued companies in a country that's going through recession. It takes a strong stomach to ignore the nay Sayers; but it can lead to great profits. CRISIS MANAGEMENT To handle a crisis, make the following assumptions: It's worse than you first imagined. Everyone will eventually find out everything. The media will portray you in the worst possible light. As a result, processes and people must change. Blood will be on the floor. You will survive, smarter and stronger. STRATEGY "In real life, strategy is actually very straightforward. You pick a general direction and implement like hell." "If you want to win, when it comes to strategy, ponder less and do more." (p. 166) First, come up with a "Big Aha" - a way to gain a "sustainable competitive advantage." It's an idea, an insight on how to win. It could be developing a new product, or making an old product unique. Second, put together the team that can make it happen. Third, "relentlessly seek out" the best ways to achieve your "Big Aha," leaving no stone unturned. Look both inside and outside of your company. Be "boundaryless," having "an obsession with finding a better way - or a better idea - whether its source is a colleague, another GE business, or another company across the street or on the other side of the globe." (p. 185) Adopt, adapt and continually improve upon them. Exhibit an "unyielding emphasis on continual improvement." (p. 167) START-UPS First, put your best people at the helm and give them plenty of resources to make it happen. Second, encourage it with much fanfare from the top. Third, get off their backs and give them the freedom to make their own decision Quality Improvement GE adopted the quality improvement program Six Sigma in 1995. He believes that it is tops in improving efficiency and productivity, lowering costs, reducing defects, building customer loyalty and building great leaders. Find the Right Job "Every time I ask successful people about their first few jobs, the immediate reaction is almost always laughter." p. 255 First, get a job and learn something about yourself. What do you like or dislike about it? What are you good at and bad at? Second, get another job that's more in line with the strengths and desires you discovered in your last job. Third, repeat the process until you find yourself in a job you love. How to Get Promoted Do more than you're asked. Perform beyond all expectations. If you can, expand your job in such a way that your boss and colleagues all look better. Manage those below you in such a way that when they're asked about you, they'll say that you are fair, you care and you were willing to show tough love. Help the leadership to champion new initiatives. Find the right mentors. Some may be mentors for weeks, others for years. Some may be older, others younger. Some bosses, some subordinates. Welch had dozens of informal mentors throughout his career. Learn from the business media. Welch learned tons about business throughout his career by devouring every business magazine and newspaper he could get his hands on. Be positive and fun, not a negative bore. Don't buck the company values. How to Deal With a Bad Boss Ask yourself why he's acting like a jerk. For example, is he a jerk to everyone, or just to me? Most workers overrate their job performance and how well- liked they are among colleagues. Look honestly and objectively at your own attitudes and performance for clues. Meet privately with your boss to ask him frankly what is wrong. If something surfaces, commit yourself to a plan for improvement. Nine out of ten times, complaining to the boss's boss will only hurt you. If the boss will be around for the foreseeable future, ask yourself, "Is it worth it?" If not, seek employment elsewhere. If you stay, you forfeit the right to complain. You're there by choice. On Balancing Life and Career Your boss may be concerned about your personal life, but he's also concerned about the company winning in a competitive work environment. Your strong performance at work should grant you a hearing when you ask for accommodations related to your life outside of work. Thank you