| Training and Development - The GE Way |  | 
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 Case Details:
 
 Case Code : HROB072
 Case Length : 18 Pages
 Period : 1981-05
 Pub Date : 2005
 Teaching Note : Available
 Organization : General Electric Company
 Industry : Diversified
 Countries : USA
 
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 << Previous "Great people build great companies. Talent development is 
not a slogan at GE, it is a way of life."1 - Jack Welch, Chief Executive Officer (1981-2001), General 
Electric Co. in 2005. "Developing leaders, developing people takes three things. 
It takes leadership commitment, it takes disciplined processes and it takes 
commitment to people. It works for us." 2 - Bob Corcoran, Chief Learning Officer, General Electric Co. 
in 2004. "There is reason to believe that they are a better 
training ground than we are."3 - Nitin Nohria, Professor, Harvard Business School in 2003, 
commenting on GE's ability to develop managerial talent. Introduction
	
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In 2005, General Electric Company4 (GE) 
was one of the world's biggest conglomerates with a presence across 160 
countries, 11 varied businesses and employee strength of around 307,000. Some of 
its businesses were large enough to make it to the Fortune 500 list on their 
own. GE had not only survived successfully for 133 years5 
but had also consistently generated great value for its shareholders, despite 
its size. GE was the only company with a continuous listing in the Dow Jones 
Industrial Average6 since the original 
index was constructed in 1896. GE had won many accolades as the world's most 
respected company7 in appreciation of its 
people management and sustained profitability. |   
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	One of the factors that contributed to the company's success was its ability 
	to train and develop its multinational, diverse workforce in a successful 
	manner. 
	
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			GE was one of the first companies to establish a management 
			development center to train and develop its employees. During the 
			1980s, this center put the company on a growth trajectory that very 
			few corporations could match. It inspired many other renowned 
			companies like Boeing Co., Home Depot and Toyota Motors to model 
			their training centers on the one at GE. 
 In the media, GE has been referred to as a "captain-of-industry 
			university" or "the leadership factory" in recognition of its 
			ability to produce exceptional leaders who went on to became CEOs at 
			other Fortune 500 companies (Refer Exhibit I).
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Training and Development - The GE Way
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