Title: GENERAL ELECTRIC
1GENERAL ELECTRIC
2Overview
- General information
- History of the company
- Financial highlights
- Stocks
- Corporate governance
- Board of directors
- Governance actions
- Corporate governance principles
- Committees
- Management Development and Compensation Committee
- MDCC Responsibilities,
- Key Practices.
- CEO Selection
- Starting the Process of CEO selection
- CEO Candidates
- Advantages of the new CEO
- Other Finalists
- Was the choice correct?
- What was different?
3GE general information
- GE is a diversified technology and services
company dedicated to creating different products
from aircraft engines and power generation to
financial services, medical imaging, television
programming and plastics, - GE operates in more than 100 countries, including
250 manufacturing plants in 26 different nations - GE employs more than 315,000 people worldwide,
including 168,000 in the United States
4GE History
- In 1878 Thomas A. Edison established Edison
Electric Light Company. - In 1892, a merger of Edison General Electric
Company and Thomson-Houston Electric Company
created General Electric Company. - GE was incorporated in New York State on April
15, 1892.
5GE Financial Highlights
- Revenues 131.7 Billion
- Net Earnings 15.1 Billion (1.51 per share),
which is a 7 increase over 2001 - International Revenues 52.9 Billion (40 of
total revenues) - RD Expenditures 2.6 Billion
- Total Assets 575.0 Billion
- Company achieved record earnings and cash
generation in 2001, with 11 increases in
earnings and earnings per share (EPS) and 12
growth in cash flow from operating activities. - "2001 was an especially challenging year," said
GE Chairman and CEO Jeff Immelt. "Despite a
global recession and the September 11 terrorist
attacks, we delivered double-digit earnings
growth. This is a tribute to our great global
team and the strength of the GE business model."
6GE Stocks
- First issue of company stocks was on April 15,
1892 when 1,000 shares of 100 par value were
sold for 100 per share - GE was traded on the NYSE for the first time on
June 23, 1892. There was one trade of 50 shares
at 108 per share - Now the company has
- Shares Outstanding 9.947 Billion
- Number of Share Owners 4 Million
- Dividends 0.19 per share quarterly. Dividends,
paid every quarter since 1899, have increased
every year since 1975.
7GE Stocks
8GE Corporate Governance
- The Board of directors of the company consists of
17 members. - As a result of the 2002 changes, 11 of GEs 17
directors are independent under a strict
definition, with a goal of two-thirds. - At the core of corporate governance is the role
of the board in overseeing how management serves
the long-term interests of share owners and other
stakeholders.
9GE Corporate Governance
10GE Corporate governance
- GOVERNANCE ACTIONS TAKEN BY GE IN 2002 INCLUDE
- GEs test of independence for members of the
Management Development and Compensation Committee
and the Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee is stricter than required by new
regulations - GE has appointed a presiding director who will
lead independent meetings of non-employee
directors at least three times a year. Each
non-employee director will visit two of GEs
businesses each year without the presence of
corporate management so that directors can have
direct exchanges with operating leadership. - The responsibilities of the Audit Committee will
increase, and it will meet at least seven times
per year. - To help further align directors interests with
those of share owners, the equity portion of
directors pay will be in Deferred Stock Units
(DSUs), replacing stock options. DSUs will be 60
of the annual director compensation and will not
pay out until one year after a director leaves
the board. When directors exercise existing stock
options, they will be subject to the same
one-year holding period that applies to GE senior
management.
11GE Corporate Governance Principles
- Role of Board and Management
- GE's business is conducted by its employees,
managers and officers, under the direction of the
chief executive officer (CEO) and the oversight
of the board, to enhance the long-term value of
the company for its shareowners. - Functions of Board
- The board of directors has 8 scheduled meetings a
year at which it reviews and discusses reports by
management on the performance of the company, its
plans and prospects, as well as immediate issues
facing the company. Directors are expected to
attend all scheduled board and committee
meetings. - In addition to its general oversight of
management, the board also performs a number of
specific functions, including. - selecting, evaluating and compensating the CEO
and overseeing CEO succession planning - providing counsel and oversight on the selection,
evaluation, development and compensation of
senior management - reviewing, approving and monitoring fundamental
financial and business strategies and major
corporate actions - Qualifications
- Directors who also serve as CEOs or in equivalent
positions should not serve on more than two
boards of public companies in addition to the GE
board, and other directors should not serve on
more than four other boards of public companies
in addition to the GE board. - Directors will not be nominated for election to
the board after their 73rd birthday, although the
full board may nominate candidates over 73 for
special circumstances.
12GE Corporate Governance Principles
- Independence of Directors
- The board has determined that 11 of GE's 17
directors are independent. - The company will seek to have a minimum of ten
independent directors at all times, and it is the
board's goal that at least two-thirds of the
directors will be independent. - Size of Board and Selection Process
- The directors are elected each year by the
shareowners at the annual meeting of shareowners. - The board also determines the number of directors
on the board provided that there are at least 10.
Between annual shareowner meetings, the board may
elect directors to serve until the next annual
meeting. The board believes that, given the size
and breadth of GE and the need for diversity of
board views, the size of the board should be in
the range of 15 directors. - Board Committees
- audit
- management development and compensation
- nominating and corporate governance and
- public responsibilities.
13GE Corporate Governance Principles
- Independence of Committee Members
- members of the audit committee must also satisfy
an additional NYSE independence requirement. - Members may not directly or indirectly receive
any compensation from the company other than
their directors' compensation. - Self-Evaluation
- the board and each of the committees will perform
an annual self-evaluation. Each November, the
directors will be requested to provide their
assessments of the effectiveness of the board and
the committees on which they serve. The
individual assessments will be organized and
summarized by an independent corporate governance
expert for discussion with the board and the
committees in December. - Compensation of Board
- The nominating and corporate governance committee
shall have the responsibility for recommending to
the board compensation and benefits for
non-employee directors. - The committee believes these goals will be served
by providing 40 of non-employee director
compensation in cash and 60 in deferred stock
units starting in 2003. - At the end of each year, the nominating and
corporate governance committee shall review
non-employee director compensation and benefits.
14GE Corporate Governance Principles
- Succession Plan
- The board shall approve and maintain a succession
plan for the CEO and senior executives, based
upon recommendations from the management
development and compensation committee. - Annual Compensation Review of Senior Management
- The management development and compensation
committee shall annually approve the goals and
objectives for compensating the CEO. - That committee shall evaluate the CEO's
performance in light of these goals before
setting the CEO's salary, bonus and other
incentive and equity compensation. - Access to Senior Management
- Non-employee directors are encouraged to contact
senior managers of the company without senior
corporate management present. - To facilitate such contact, non-employee
directors are expected to make two regularly
scheduled visits to GE businesses a year without
corporate management being present.
15Management Development and Compensation Committee
- The management development and compensation
committee of the board of directors of General
Electric Company shall consist of a minimum of
three directors. - The committee meets at least 8 times a year.
- All members of the committee shall be independent
directors. - The purpose of the committee shall be to carry
out the board of directors' overall
responsibility relating to executive
compensation. - The committee's judgments regarding senior
executive officer compensation are primarily
based upon its assessment of each senior
executive officer's leadership performance and
potential to enhance long-term shareowner value.
16Management Development and Compensation Committee
- The committee relies upon judgment about each
individual, not upon rigid guidelines or
formulas, or short term changes in our stock
price, in determining the amount and mix of
compensation elements for each senior executive
officer. - Key factors affecting the committee's judgments
include - the nature and scope of their responsibilities
- their contribution to the company's financial
results - their effectiveness in leading our initiatives to
increase customer value, productivity and growth
- their contribution to the company's commitment to
corporate responsibility including their success
in creating a culture of unyielding integrity and
compliance with applicable law and our ethics
policies, and - their commitment to community leadership and
diversity.
17MDCC Responsibilities
- The committee shall assist the board in
developing and evaluating potential candidates
for executive positions, including the chief
executive officer, and to oversee the development
of executive succession plans. - The committee shall evaluate at least once a year
the chief executive officer's performance in
light of these established goals and objectives. - The committee shall evaluate the performance of
the company's senior executive officers and shall
approve the annual compensation, including
salary, bonus, incentive and equity compensation,
for such senior executive officers. - The committee has shall review company's
incentive compensation and other stock-based
plans and recommend changes in such plans to the
board as needed. - The committee shall report its actions and any
recommendations to the board after each committee
meeting and shall conduct and present to the
board an annual performance evaluation of the
committee.
18MDCC key practices
- Executive Compensation Program
- Salary,
- Annual Bonus,
- Stock options,
- Restricted Stock Units,
- Contingent Long-Term Performance Awards.
19MDCC key practices
- Stock Ownership Guidelines
- To help demonstrate the alignment of the personal
interest of senior management with the interests
of shareowners, in September 2002, the committee
established the following guidelines for the
amount of GE stock, as a multiple of the
executive's base salary, that should be held by
senior management - Position Multiple Time To Attain
- CEO 6X 3 years
- Vice Chair 5X 4 years
- Senior VPs 4X 5 years
20Starting the Process of CEO selection
- Formally in June 24, 1994
- Agenda of the MDCCs meeting - succession
- Welch discussed 24 candidates (all white males)
- Obvious Field
- Contenders
- Broader Consensus Field
21Starting the Process of CEO selection
- Formally in June 24, 1994
- Agenda of the MDCCs meeting - succession
- Welch discussed 24 candidates (all white males)
- Obvious Field
- Contenders
- Broader Consensus Field
22Starting the Process of CEO selection
- Obvious Field
- 7 men running GEs largest businesses
- Had to be considered due to their positions
- Could be eliminated due to age
- None made to the final
23Starting the Process of CEO selection
- Contenders
- 4 executives below the top-tier
- None became finalists
24Starting the Process of CEO selection
- Broader Consensus Field
- 13 other executives from various positions
- Spotted by Welch for their talents
- Included all 3 finalists
25CEO Candidates
- Robert Nardelli
- Age 52.
- Chief of the GE business that makes turbines and
generators for electric utilities.
26CEO Candidates
- W. James McNerney
- Age 51.
- CEO, GE Aircraft Engines (ran several other
divisions during his 15 years in GE). - In 1997 media guessed he would be a top
vote-getter.
27CEO Candidates
- Jeffrey Immelt
- Age 47.
- Began his GE career in 1982.
- Held a series of leadership roles in GE Plastics,
Medical Systems, GE Appliances.
28CEO Selection
- Testing the ability to grow.
- Rotating CEO candidates through different
divisions of the company. - GEs advantage over many other companies
-reputation of skillfully training internal
talents for the top job. - mainly due to GEs large portfolio of businesses
which provide broad developmental experiences for
its executives. - not every company ranking equally high the GE is
able to cultivate internal CEOs (eg. IBM, ATT).
29CEO Selection
- Directors getting a feel to the human side of the
contenders. - Annual festive occasions with serious purpose
- playing golf
- Welch personally worked out the golf foursomes
- informal dinners
- seating directors and CEO candidates carefully
- Candidates encouraged to contact board directors
directly when needed
30CEO Selection
- Follow-up Discussions
- Usual review of the companys top 20-30
executives, including all CEO candidates - Welch gave an assessment of each executive from
his HANDWRITTEN notes - Directors received a book that detail executives
- We might spend an hour on the first page. Its
not what most people are used to W. Conaty, GE
Human Resources Chief
31CEO Selection
- MDCC Visits to GE Businesses.
- In 1996-1997 MDCC decided to know more about the
candidates and visited several GE businesses with
and without Welch. - with a cover story of wanting to understand
their businesses. - very rarely practiced in the corporate world.
32CEO Selection
- Cutting the Field.
- At the intensive talent review in 1997, after 3
years of getting to know the contenders, Welch
and directors cut the list of candidates to
eight - finalists
- David Calhoun, GE Lighting.
- David Cote, GE Appliances.
- Dennis Dammerman, CFO.
- John Rice, Transportation Systems.
- Gary Rogers, GE Plastics.
33CEO Selection
- Endgame begins
- Starting from June 1998, all contenders left in
their jobs until the winner is chosen - Time to watch...
34CEO Selection
- Field Narrowing
- Dammerman
- replaces the CEO of the GE Capital who resigned
in Dec. 1998 - Calhoun
- leaves Lighting to run Employers Reinsurance
business in GE Capital in July 1999 - David Cote
- resigned in Nov. 1999 to become a President and
CEO of TRW
35CEO Selection
- Without drama and horce race!
- Welchs experience while running for CEO
- Airplane Interviews
- Welchs predecessor Reginal H. Jones called
abruptly each contender to his office and asked
Who should be the next chairman if both were on
a plane and it crashed? - top contenders were brought together to the
headquarter jobs, where the atmosphere became
political and poisonous
36CEO Selection
- Finalists announced
- In mid 2000 Welch was ready to announce the names
of the finalists - Immelt
- Nardelli
- backed up by John Rice
- McNerney
- backed up by Calhoun
37CEO Selection
- Last meeting of MDCC.
- Welch and MDCC talked about succession for about
4 hours. - Seemed like Immelt is the one, but no firm
decision could be made. - Other guys were doing fabulous things Conaty.
38CEO Selection
- Final Choice
- Welch is still determined not to make the process
public until then end. - The right time - Thanksgiving weekend.
- After two hours of discussion between Welch and
MDCC Immelt was chosen, Board agreed with the
recommendation. - Welch calls Immelt
39Advantages of the new CEO
- Age was his advantage.
- Well-liked and popular.
- can keep managers who might be tempted to leave,
when Welch leaves. - Demonstrated capacity to grow.
40Other Finalists
- Both McNerney and Nardelli instantly became the
two most intensively recruited executives - McNerney, CEO at 3M
- Nardelli, CEO at Home Depot
41Was the choice correct?
- GE keeps ranking as the worlds most respected
company according to Financial Times annual
surveys - Welch era - longest bull market in the US history
- Immelts early tenure - bear market, terrorist
attacks, war in Iraque.
42What was different?
- Never looked at an outsider.
- Formed no long-term strategic vision.
- No common template for measuring candidates.
- A lot of time devoted by the board to getting to
know the contenders. - Choosing the new CEO took almost 6.5 years.
- A lot of human interaction.
43Conclusions
- The more time spent on succession planning, the
better. - The Board is deeply involved in succession.
- CEO and Board communicate frequently reviewing
their choices. - Human interaction between board and the
candidates is essential for good assessments.
44Conclusions (cont.)
- Less drama of succession and horse races among
top contenders - ethical issues. - CEO assigns candidates jobs to broaden their
skills.