General Electric (GE) is made up of five major divisions that operate in a wide range of industries: Energy (Energy, Oil & Gas, Water and Process Technologies), Technology Infrastructure (Aviation, Enterprise Solutions, Healthcare, Transportation), GE Capital (Commercial Lending & Leasing, Consumer Financing, Energy Financial Services, GE Capital Aviation Services, Real Estate Financing), NBC Commercial (Cable, Film, Networks, Parks & Resorts), and Consumer & Industrial (Appliances, Consumer Electronics, Electrical Distribution, Lighting). As a result, GE sells a diverse array of products and services from home appliances to jet en- gines, security systems, wind turbines, and financial services. GE’s revenues topped $161 billion in 2009, making it so large that if each of its five business units were ranked separately, they all would appear in the Fortune 200. If GE were its own country, it would be the 50th largest in the world, ahead of Kuwait, New Zealand,
and Iraq.
Thomas Edison originally founded the company as the
Edison Electric Light Company in 1878. The company, which soon changed its name to General Electric, became an early pioneer in lightbulbs and electrical appliances and served the electrical needs of various industries, such as transportation, utilities, manufacturing, and broadcasting. GE became the acknowledged pioneer in business-to- business marketing in the 1950s and 1960s under the tagline “Progress Is Our Most Important Product.”
As the company diversified its business-to-business product lines in the 1970s and 1980s, it created new corporate campaigns, including “Progress for People” and “We Bring Good Things to Life.” In 1981, Jack Welch succeeded Reginald Jones as GE’s eighth CEO. Over Welch’s two decades of leadership, he helped grow GE from an “American manufacturer into a global services giant,” and increased the company’s market value from $12 billion in 1981 to $280 billion in 2001, making it the world’s most valuable corporation...