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The Best Thing GE Taught Me

I was lucky enough to be in GE's "Technical Leadership Program" after graduating from college, and that experience gave me a huge respect for a company that most of us associate with kitchen appliances.

The truth is that GE is about far more than that, and in fact I'd consider them one of the most progressive and lean companies in the business world, and I'm not alone.  Anyone who's a student of business will usually have great things to say about GE.  In fact, I'd even go so far as to say that you can tell how immersed someone is in the business world by asking them what they think of GE.  Either they think "kitchen appliances" or they think "world dominator".  Their revenue is $157 Billion/year (yes with a "B") and their profit in 2005 was 16 Billion.  To put it another way, GE's profit is double Google's revenue of around 8 billion.  Kinda puts things into perspective, eh?

So here's the most valuable thing I learned while at GE:  Everyone has good ideas, but they're meaningless unless two things happen:  1) someone takes ownership of the idea.  and 2) a date is set for action on the idea.  And the GE folks are religious about this.  As ideas or suggestions come up in meetings, they're not shy about asking who in the room wants to take ownership of the idea.  And if nobody does, they ditch the idea then & there.  If someone does take ownership of it, s/he has to commit to some action by some date.  So a conversation in a GE conference room might go something like this:

[Jim:] "I have an idea - why don't we make our GE engines run on solid watste

[Sandy (running the meeting)] "Jim, that's a great idea.  Do you want to be responsible for finding out if that's feasible?"

I was lucky enough to be in GE's "Technical Leadership Program" after graduating from college, and that experience gave me a huge respect for a company that most of us associate with kitchen appliances. The truth is that GE is about far more than that, and in fact I'd consider them one of the most progressive and lean companies in the business world, and I'm not alone.  Anyone who's a student of business will usually have great things to say about GE.  In fact, I'd even go so far as to say that you can tell how immersed someone is in the business world by asking them what they think of GE.  Either they think "kitchen appliances" or they think "world dominator".  Their revenue is $157 Billion/year (yes with a "B") and their profit in 2005 was 16 Billion.  To put it another way, GE's profit is double Google's revenue of around 8 billion.  Kinda puts things into perspective, eh? So here's the most valuable thing I learned while at GE:  Everyone has good ideas, but they're meaningless unless two things happen:  1) someone takes ownership of the idea.  and 2) a date is set for action on the idea.  And the GE folks are religious about this.  As ideas or suggestions come up in meetings, they're not shy about asking who in the room wants to take ownership of the idea.  And if nobody does, they ditch the idea then & there.  If someone does take ownership of it, s/he has to commit to some action by some date.  So a conversation in a GE conference room might go something like this: [Jim:] "I have an idea - why don't we make our GE engines run on solid watste [Sandy (running the meeting)] "Jim, that's a great idea.  Do you want to be responsible for finding out if that's feasible?" [Jim] "No, I can't - my plate is full" [Sandy] "Can anyone else find out about this?" [Audrey] "I'll get some further information" [Sandy] "Great Audrey.  When can you have an answer for us?" [Audrey] "I'm not sure, Sandy - I'm really busy right now." [Sandy] "OK Audrey, by when can you tell us when you can have an answer?" [Audrey] "By the next meeting I'll have an idea of when I can find this out." So of course this was a fictional exchange, but I saw this type of thing happen over & over at GE.  And some pretty significant things just happened in that exchange.  Let me highlight them for you: 1) Jim said "no" - I was always impressed by GE's encouragement of people to say "no" when they couldn't commit to something 2) Audrey set a date to have a date!  Sandy had Audrey set an action item date, and the action item was to decide by when she'd look into the topic.  That almost never happens anywhere else!  How often do you say, "By Monday I'll decide when I'm going to finish that project".  But it works really well, because then you havea an actionable date and you can check up on the progress of the item. So go try to emulate GE a bit in your everyday life and see how it affects you.

Selling Socialize to ShareThis: A Description of the Deal process

While I can't speak to the terms of our deal with ShareThis, I'll use the experience to walk you through the general framework of a deal process, so you understand the multiple steps involved.  What I'm going to share is not a reflection of how our deal went down -- I'm pulling from various deals I'm personally familiar with or from accounts I've heard from other entrepreneurs who have also sold.

The first thing I want to highlight is the stress that a deal puts on a startup.  Uncertainty kills innovation, and for that reason, if you think you want to sell, it's critical that you get the process done super quickly.  Thirty days from start to close is an ideal (although likely impossible) goal to shoot for.  Ninety days is a reasonable and achievable goal.

It's also likely that the acquiring company won't be in as much of a hurry as you are:  Getting the deal done is likely a secondary priority for them as compared to running their main business.  For the startup, it defines the future of the company -- or at least, it's one major possible outcome with huge implications for the startup.  There are a few exceptions on the acquiring side -- for example, Facebook is known for moving blazingly fast in deals as a part of its strategy to keep startups it's interested in from being scooped by other acquirers.  As I assemble best practices for getting deals done, speed is at the very top of my list.

Next, from the startup's perspective, is evaluating alternatives.  This is where someone like Ezra is invaluable.  As I mentioned in this post, Ezra Roizen is a banker, but he's different from all the others I've met.  Ezra is a scrappy "get it done" deal magician with a small team and a huge rolodex.  He can get a temperature read from someone (usually either the CEO or a board member) at any potential acquiring company you'd like to speak to.  It'll be up to you to decide what companies you want to target, and then Ezra can take it from there.