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October 2003 GE Finds Its Inner EdisonContinued from page 1 By Robert Buderi
TR: This willingness to look farther out, invest over long time periods, and maybe take a few more chances, seems different from what GE has done in the past 10 or 15 years. If anything, the central lab had a reputation for shorter-term, less fundamental research. Immelt: Because it's so much the heritage of the company, I can't really categorize it as different. If you look at our medical business, for instance, we always have done things that have been 10 or 15 years ahead of where we needed to be. But let's say it is different: we are investing more R&D dollars on longer-range programs. I'd say one of the things that I personally believe is that I can't sit around a company like GE and see us want to go out and pay a startup $100 million for technology that if we had just spent $2 million a year for 10 years, we could have done a better job at.I hate that, I just hate that. I really hold our leaders accountable to figure out our markets, figure out our customers, and invest in where we see the market going. You know, I look in the mirror every day and see my banker. So I have great engineers and a good banker, and we know as much about the market as anybody else. I don't see why we can't do just as good a job of innovation as anybody else. So I do have a real hot button on that one. And I've been driving that one really hard. TR: What areas get you most excited? TR: How do you pay for all this research? One thing I've done is, two or three years ago our lab might be running as many as 400 projects. Now we run about 50 or 60, so we do fewer, higher-impact projects that the businesses have a clear line of sight on and interest in. For something like nanotechnology that has the potential to impact four or five businesses but takes long-term, high-risk research to realize that potential, it's impossible for me to expect any one of our CEOs [each of GE's 13 business units has its own chief executive] to invest in it on their own. So I fund those types of programs-in nanotechnology, photovoltaics, molecular imaging, hydrogen energy, advanced propulsion. Those would be minimally $10 million a year each; some would be more than that. Typically, they would have NIH [National Institutes of Health] or Department of Energy or some kind of government funding associated with them. Inherent in it is a commitment of multiple years: these aren't things you start and stop. But by the same token, nothing is set in stone. There comes a point in time where stuff might not make as much sense, and we have to cut it, or I might have to double the bet in others.
TR: To help do all this, you announced a $100 million expansion in the global research center, near Schenectady. Can you explain the plans to also use the center to help exchange ideas between GE's businesses and customers? Our business leaders are spending time at the center learning where technology is going, while at the same time educating scientists about where the market is going and what is most important to our customers. I really want that to be part of the global research center. That way, it's not an island. One of the big fears is that you develop this blue-sky place that's totally isolated from reality. I want a whole series of leaders to be able to come through there and share that reality, while at the same time they become better technology managers. Another reason we're building the conference center and lodge is that I expect customers to be 30, 40, 50 percent of who comes up there. Customers will come there to hear about potential technologies and how they might impact their markets. And the customers will be able to tell us firsthand how they see technologies impacting their businesses. It will help shape some of our R&D efforts and keep the voice of the customer in our technology development. TR: Let's go back to the first question. At a time when the prevailing trend is to shorten product development cycles and hunker down, won't focusing more on longer-term technologies risk missing market opportunities today? But if you look at the heart of the industrial side of GE, we are the world's preeminent infrastructure company. And much of our stuff takes place over relatively long cycles. We've been in the energy business for 100 years. So if we want to stay in it another 100 years, we'd better have a pretty good understanding of what kind of technologies people could be using to generate electricity 30 to 40 years from now. If we're going to fly people, we'd better have a pretty good understanding of that. If we're going to image people, we'd better have a pretty good understanding of that. And all that requires long-term understanding of technology leadership. It comes from the old salesman in me: it's always easier to sell the things you're selling today if you can also captivate customers with what the future brings. That's just a truism. |
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