Thread regarding General Electric Co. layoffs

GE needs to start making the right moves before it's too late

GE has real problems based on the actions of Immelt and the board (I have voted against all of them for the past several years). Digital Industrial is a worthy goal but the business should have shown it could make money at it before announcing to the world that you are counting on it for growth. Additive 3D printing technology is a big factor for the future but it makes no money now and won't for a few years. Why add more oil companies to the portfolio? Clearly a loser as long as fracking is available to drive oil costs lower every time there is a surge in price. Keep focused on renewables. Getting rid of all the Capital businesses greatly reduced the cash flow that keeps the veins filled and heart pumping. Now the industrials have to make up for it and don't know how (hopefully they will learn fast). And what happened to all the $ from the sale of the Capital businesses? Did everything go at a loss? I did not disagree with the reduction but that was an absolutely a huge mistake if so.

I would not begrudge the huge salaries and incentive packages that our corporate officers make if they could drive the company in the right direction. Obviously they did not. I don't know how Immelt can sleep at night knowing what he did to the business at a huge profit for himself. I know many in the executive ranks. There is a feeling of entitlement there that is unhealthy for the business. They don't walk the talk. That has to change.

Hopefully under the leadership of Flannery, the business will make the right moves. He has to be humble and one of the first orders of business has to be addressing the huge corporate overhead. I think Boston was a good step. Not because of being centered in a technology region but more because the move reduced the executive ranks at the top. Need to rid the business of a lot of very expensive dead wood and focus on the areas that are making money. GRC has already been whacked big time and I think Crotonville also needs to be greatly trimmed. Classes there are regarded as a boondoggle. I've been there several times and primarily recall the white house where the alcohol flows freely, not the things we learned in class. The investment allocations are extremely lop sided right now. An excess of the $ available are going to unproven digital and additive technologies and our businesses are getting behind the competition in other areas because they can't invest. This will lead to loss of revenue in the future. Where I work now, revenue is $200M+ per year with consistent year over year growth and op profit of 30%+. This year our investment budget is < $1M. How can you stay ahead of the competition with that kind of investment?

Bottom line is that Flannery has to a lot of hard things to lead the business to solid revenue in order to regain investor confidence. Best of luck to him and I'll be helping in anyway possible. My pension, a good chunk of investments, and my pride in the business count on it.

Really good commentary by @PgOKoD8-2bwy, thought it deserved a thread.

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Post ID: @OP+PkwGQfO

8 replies (most recent on top)

If there is to be another oil boom before demand goes into a steep decline then the acquisition of baker might not be so bad.....depends upon how long that lasts for. If oil remains depressed for evermore then the acquiesce is going to hurt.

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Post ID: @1owx+PkwGQfO

GE seem to be laying people off like crazy. Hope they know what they're doing as some comments here suggest they don't.

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Post ID: @1wmn+PkwGQfO

Buffett's exit a few months ago was an indication of what's to come: MORE EXITS. People vote with their money and they are betting against GE. It's sad, I do not see how we can fix this.

I really do not think it's only our management's problem - I think the economy is undergoing a secular shift and we are trying to figure out how to survive.

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Post ID: @ahx+PkwGQfO

On VW's electric move: @Pk5179y or www.thelayoff.com/t/Pk5179y

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Post ID: @aua+PkwGQfO

Oil? VW, the biggest car maker in the world, is switching the entire fleet to electric (by 2030)... So, in 12 years, try to predict demand for oil?

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Post ID: @smi+PkwGQfO

Excellent post - this is why I love coming here... Thank you OP.

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Post ID: @bve+PkwGQfO

Exactly my point. Why waste money buying oil companies. Buying baker Hughes will be seen as a huge mistake. All their experienced people have gone and it's just the deadwood left.

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Post ID: @ory+PkwGQfO

GE is left to the pity of special interest groups who protects and promotes each other. Many of these groups cheered the actions of mr. Immelt and the board while it was obvious that many of the decisions he took would undermine the company success. Alstom deal was sold as a big success which added 30000+ prople on to the payroll many of whom did not have any tangible work to do.

GE is at a dilemma where it sees the digital automation as future but it heavily depends on the executives that has very weak understanding of what digital IOT is. One top company technology officer discovered the CLOUD just few years ago after a meetibg with HP CEO and happily wrote about her euroka moment to all employees. Many CLOUD implementations actually had started for more than 15 years ago and you can imagine the feelings we had going through the executive GE officers email.

Many cost saving design implementations saved few millions here and there but the cost of quality to the company was in the billions dollars and wiped out the profits.

The company has to return to its roots to seek and promote the people who can contribute to the bottom line and eliminate the special interest groups if it wants to stay. The special interest groups if they are let as is will surely sunk the company.

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Post ID: @jln+PkwGQfO

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