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Welch on Welch
By Michael Alan Hamlin
February 18, 2002

There's little worse than having to start a column with a mea culpa. But here goes. Last week I said the father of stockbroker and technology entrepreneur Ramon C. Garcia Jr. is the former Philippine Stock Exchange president Ramon T. Garcia. Ramon was pretty surprised - as I'm sure his real and pseudo fathers were - that I had assigned him a new dad. Ramon the entrepreneur's father is actually Ramon M. Garcia, known widely as Monchoy. He's into chemicals, plastics, and economic zones. Anyway, sorry.

Now that that's done, let's move on to Jack Welch. Welch, former chairman and CEO of General Electric, is even more high profile now than when he was employed full time. His book, Jack: Straight from the Gut (he was paid US$16.6 million for the book, and he donated it all to charity), has been an international bestseller since it appeared on bookshelves last year. Executives everywhere are lapping up Welch, trying to figure out what it is about the guy that took him to the top of GE, a US$25 billion company that he grew into a US$130 billion company (annual revenue) with assets of US$400 billion.

Aside from the book, Welch has begun appearing publicly (US$250,000 for a 1.5-hour Q&A session plus expenses and private jet) and granting a cornucopia of interviews. He doesn't seem to be doing these things to sustain his legacy, and he certainly doesn't need the money. Instead, Welch seems to be doing what he does best, that thing that accounts principally for his success: having fun.

In an interview that appears in the February 2002 issue of the Harvard Business Review Welch says about his leadership of GE, "I had the luxury of doing what I love, which is hanging around with people. I wasn't managing businesses; I was managing people." Welch's frenetic public calendar is more of the same: the guy just can't stop managing people, and getting into their heads even if they don't work for him.

But Welch calls it getting into people's skin. "What I wanted to do inside GE was to touch every person. I tried hard to make that connection, so that they cared the way I cared. Everyone, from the factories to headquarters in Fairfield, Connecticut. That's why I always made it a point to have a relationship with our unions. I wanted them to be on the same page, too."

But instead of contenting himself with connecting to everyone at GE, Welch now seems to want to connect with everyone, everywhere. Yet he professes surprise at the attention he receives, and claims that, "I don't take myself that seriously." Welch suggests that the preoccupation people have with him is probably because, "I'm always willing to say what I think.

"I'm not afraid to put ideas out there. But you have to understand that these ideas are starting points, not endings. I love to throw ideas out like Six Sigma or the boundaryless corporation and have people test them, modify them, expand them, mold them, learn from them. I think about business a lot, and I tend to verbalize my thoughts early to get those conversations started. Those discussions led to a lot of success at GE, and perhaps I get the reflected glory from that."

Thinking about business for Welch frequently means immersing himself in a specific business, or a product line, to make it better. He provides the example of cathode-ray tubes in CT scanners to the HBS editors. Although the scanners were the best in the world, Welch notes that "doctors were going nuts because the tubes were going out while they were doing procedures. My gut told me to take a deep dive on this tube problem."

Welch says that designing the scanners is a sexy job, but that ordinary cathode-ray tubes are the heart of the machine. No one was paying attention to the heart of the CT scanners because in the corporate culture then, the same people who designed everyday stuff like X-ray hangers and dollies did the tubes. There was no glamour. As a result, even though customers were screaming, no one cared about improving the cathode-ray tubes.

"That's when I suddenly became the tube business manager," Welch says about the job that no one really wanted. To make cathode-ray tube design glamorous, Welch said he "used the power of my position. I changed the salary level, changed the position, changed the people. Instead of paying the guy US$110,000 a year with six people reporting to him, I swooped in over the top of the bureaucracy and said, "Let's pay the manager US$350,000 a year and make him an officer of the company." Suddenly, cathode-ray tubes were glamorous, and customers stopped screaming.

Welch started out with GE as a US$10,000 engineer. His first successes evolved from an intimate understanding of the plastics division in which he worked. He never lost that intensity for detail. Imagine, the chairman of a US$130 billion company worrying about cathode-ray tubes. He also insisted that his managers know their businesses just as intimately, and he threw good people into critical businesses, even if they seemed mundane. "You should always overstaff an opportunity. If it's a US$5 million business, put a US$300 million person to work on it and they'll make it US$300 million. Put a US$5 million person on it, and it'll stay US$5 million."

(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian Places, of which he is co-author. His e-mail address is mahamlin@teamasia.com.ph.)


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