
Hot Seat
What I Learned Leading a Great American Company
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Narrado por:
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Robert Petkoff
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Jeffrey Immelt - introduction
A fascinating and candid memoir about successful leadership from the former CEO of General Electric, named one of the “World’s Best CEOs” three times by Barron’s, and the hard-won lessons he learned from his experience leading GE immediately after 9/11, through the devastating 2008-09 financial crisis, and into an increasingly globalized world.
In September 2001, Jeff Immelt replaced the most famous CEO in history, Jack Welch, at the helm of General Electric. Less than a week into his tenure, the 9/11 terrorist attacks shook the nation, and the company, to its core. GE was connected to nearly every part of the tragedy - GE-financed planes powered by GE-manufactured engines had just destroyed real estate that was insured by GE-issued policies. Facing an unprecedented situation, Immelt knew his response would set the tone for businesses everywhere that looked to GE - one of America’s biggest and most-heralded corporations - for direction. No pressure.
Over the next 16 years, Immelt would lead GE through many more dire moments, from the 2008-09 Global Financial Crisis to the 2011 meltdown of Fukushima’s nuclear reactors, which were designed by GE. But Immelt’s biggest challenge was inherited: Welch had handed over a company that had great people, but was short on innovation. Immelt set out to change GE’s focus by making it more global, more rooted in technology, and more diverse. But the stock market rarely rewarded his efforts, and GE struggled.
In Hot Seat, Immelt offers a rigorous and raw interrogation of himself and his tenure, detailing for the first time his proudest moments and his biggest mistakes. The most crucial component of leadership, he writes, is the willingness to make decisions. But knowing what to do is a thousand times easier than knowing when to do it. Perseverance, combined with clear communication, can ensure progress, if not perfection, he says. That won’t protect any CEO from second-guessing, but Immelt explains how he’s pushed through even the most withering criticism: by staying focused on his team and the goals they tried to achieve. As the business world continues to be rocked by stunning economic upheaval, Hot Seat “takes you into the office, head, and heart of the man who became CEO of GE on the eve of 9/11, and then led the iconic behemoth for 16 fascinating, and often turbulent, years. A handbook on leadership - and life” (Stanley A. McChrystal, General, US Army [Retired], CEO and Founder, McChrystal Group).
©2021 Jeffrey Immelt (P)2021 Simon & Schuster AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















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The narration in this book was very good. It was definitely a person narrating it. Good emotion, good inflection, good tempo, and good pronunciation. You won't be disappointed by the narration.
Very good narration.
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Very insightful and engaging read.
A leader has to be tested in both good and bad times to truly vet their mettle.
I'd like to see the GE tatoo though ...
Very Insightful
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Very valuable lessons. Great insights.
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Could have gone deeper
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Good leaders own failure and just stop there. He owns it (for about 5 seconds) then deflects it onto someone/anyone else. Toxic leadership and classic Harvard MBA er. He has an excuse for everything.
Should be called ‘in Defense of my time as ceo’
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Jeff is 10x the leader Jack was and 10x the leader Mr. Culp could ever be. Albeit in absentia, the monetary and societal benefits of restoring GE as an industrial company are just emerging via presidential executive order. My (know-body) prediction is Jeff will (virtually) return to the helm because nobody at GE now can do what he did then. The United States of America is on the verge of an econocentric and an ecological recovery. While GE stockholders may enjoy the money from his labor for a while, only Jeff can sustain it - probably only as an outlier.
The numbers don't lie. Jeff is the best ever.
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A different narrative
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Great insight into the goings on in a conglomerate.
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He Tried
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Good insight into running a huge company
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