How do you deliver and sustain profitable growth?
That’s the key challenge shared by Procter & Gamble’s A.G. Lafley and GE’s Jeffrey Immelt.
Writes Fortune‘s Geoff Colvin:
“To meet P&G’s growth targets, Lafley has to find about $7 billion of new revenue this year, equivalent to a company the size of Barry Diller’s IAC/Interactive. At GE, Immelt has to find about $15 billion of new revenue, equal to the size of Nike. And if they succeed, of course, they’ll have to turn around and find even more next year.”
So what’s the secret formula?
Both CEOs have “reformatted their companies’ fundamental approaches to cultivating change and innovation.”
Colvin finds out more in this insightful interview:
Immelt: “The initiative we’re driving now is organic growth. If that’s your initiative, it doesn’t make sense to be training people exactly the same way you trained them in the past. So we identified about 15 companies that had grown at three times the rate of GDP, and asked what they had in common. It was five things: external focus, decisiveness, inclusiveness, risk taking and domain expertise. So we reoriented the way we evaluate and train along those lines. We just recently added leadership, innovation and growth, which is basically oriented around teams. This is the first team training we’ve done in ten or 15 years.”
Lafley: “We made innovations in two areas. First was in the leadership training we felt we would need for the 21st century. We have an inspirational leadership program that is highly individualized for handpicked managers. They’re nominated by business leaders or functional leaders, and I pick them. A big chunk of it is about personal development. We also have a general-manager program, right before or right after you become a general manager. And then we have an executive-leadership program for individuals headed to be a president or a group president. It’s pretty intense.
“The other thing we pushed at – and Jeff and I talked about this – is, How do we get a global leadership team. Some 55 percent of our business today is outside the U.S., so my top leadership team for the first time in our history is now up to half non-Americans. We pushed really hard to get there. It makes for a very different discussion when we get together for our quarterly or semester meetings. I think we’re a lot more challenging of each other.”
Other insights:
Immelt on China: “China – we just got a big order from the Ministry of Rail. I got it on a Sunday – the whole ministry is working all day on a Sunday. I believe in quality of worklife and all that stuff, but that’s the competition.”
Lafley on Globalization: “Lafley: One of the challenges for the business community broadly is to articulate in a simple way the benefits of globalization and then face head-on the fact that there will be some disruption. When a company like GE or P&G has plants to shut down, we have a pretty enlightened program for handling retraining and early retirements, so employees have the best chance to have a good income and a good life. We do need to be a little more creative in that area because there are a lot of instances that doesn’t happen. But I don’t think it’s for lack of funding or because there aren’t opportunities somewhere in the economy. Our employment rate is still the envy of the world.”
Read the interview >>