GE Digital's transformation rocky but ongoing | TechTarget (2024)

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In this Q&A, GE Digital CEO Patrick Byrne discusses how the company is back in the GE fold, GE's digital transformation lessons, and how the COVID-19 crisis affects manufacturers.

GE Digital's transformation rocky but ongoing | TechTarget (1)

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  • Jim O'Donnell,News Writer

Published: 13 Aug 2020

GE created GE Digital to provide software and services for digital transformation. However, GE's digital transformation has been rocky, as the company struggles to shift from its traditional industrial base to a more software-focused entity.

GE developed Predix as an industrial internet of things platform for the digital transformation of its businesses in 2013, and launched this for customers and partners a few years after.

In 2018, amid a backdrop of corporate turbulence, GE announced that it would spin off GE Digital. The sell-off didn't happen and GE Digital currently remains a subsidiary business of GE where it has concentrated its focus on four vertical markets: applications for discrete and process manufacturing businesses; electric grid and telecommunications utilities; oil, gas and related industries; and power generation, including gas, steam, wind, hydro and renewables.

GE Digital is now positioned to backbone digital transformation efforts and provide the systems that can manage the massive data and process requirements of those verticals, according to GE Digital CEO Patrick Byrne.

In this interview, Byrne, who became CEO in 2019 and has more than 30 years of experience in industrial technology, discusses the current state of the company, some of the lessons learned from GE Digital's transformation and how the COVID-19 pandemic has changed manufacturing businesses.

GE Digital's transformation rocky but ongoing | TechTarget (2)Patrick Byrne

What's the relationship between GE Digital and GE now?

Patrick Byrne: In late 2018, there was a press release that said our plan was to make it a wholly owned subsidiary of GE. But we decided not to do that. So, about nine months ago, we announced that this is going to be a division of GE. GE Digital is now one of the seven businesses that report to the chairman of GE.

What's going on with the Predix platform that was launched a few years ago with a lot of fanfare?

Byrne: What we've done with Predix is that it is an important part of supporting our customers. We have pivoted from trying to be a general-purpose platform to focusing on the vertical markets we concentrate on. We have hundreds of customers using Predix now. It's a principal platform in supporting our APM [asset performance management] customers. The functionality, for example, for the large industrial data sets that are required to run large gas turbines and manage balance of plant operations is critical to how Predix is built. We're committed to the platform, especially in support of our key industry applications.

GE's digital transformation has had rocky moments and it's still ongoing. What are some of the lessonsthat are continuing to be learned?

Byrne: The digital initiatives within GE go across every one of the businesses. One lesson is that it isn't just about a digital transformation, it's about a business process transformation. This means being able to look at that whole end-to-end value stream. We use Lean tools to create value stream maps that help you figure out where there's waste in business processes. The real lesson learned is to take stock of that value stream and try to see where the best business outcomes for digital transformation are. Five years ago, people did digital transformation pilots to see if they work, but almost nobody does that anymore. Most companies are looking for a hard ROI in a business outcome, and they're looking for something that could pay back in nine to 12 months.

What are some of the biggest challenges to overcome in a digital transformation?

Byrne: Oftentimes organizations are siloed. The service organization doesn't talk to the procurement organization; the procurement organization is responsible for buying parts for the repair team, but really buys those parts for the manufacturing team. So, there's change management around how you align those key business outcomes and build cross-functional teams. You have to build a business case, you have to build a guiding coalition, you have to have quick wins, you have to be able to consolidate the gains. We've seen all those challenges, but it isn't just GE, we've worked with hundreds of customers on digital transformation [projects], and they have the same challenges. You have to establish cross-functional teams with an aligned set of objectives to transform the business process. If it gets left in silos with its own metrics and its own tools, you rarely get it solved.

What are some of the ways that COVID is changing that manufacturing industry now?

Byrne: Speaking broadly not just about GE Digital in manufacturing, there are two sets of changes. One, in the COVID world, there's real turbulence in customer and supplier dynamics. For example, in April the demand for toilet paper was through the roof, but eventually it has to return to normal toilet paper usage and demand. So, the customer demand signals that manufacturers are dealing with are far more dynamic right now. But their supply base also has got a lot of dynamics, and if you're PepsiCo, Kimberly-Clark, or Procter & Gamble, how do you forecast? How long is COVID going to last? The smartest people in the world don't know that; therefore, managing suppliers and demand when you're in manufacturing is a real challenge now.

The other [effect] is inside the factories where everybody's working remotely. These companies have tens of thousands of workers, and they now have to have more touchless support of those business processes, they have to have authentication technologies and security technologies that allow people to do more remote work. We've provided all our critical software in a work-from-home remote mode, and hundreds of customers are using those now for their workforces to be able to still operate as if they were in the building, but in a highly secure mode.

COVID was a sudden dramatic change, but were manufacturers moving in that digital direction anyway?

Byrne: It varies and different companies have different levels of digital readiness. The digital readiness gap really has to do with the governance of their data, the skill sets of their workers, how their operations technology and IT technologies are integrated, and how they govern and manage cross-functional business processes at the process level and the data level. So digital readiness is all over the map. For some companies, that gap is very small; for some companies, it's a real issue. Everybody's accelerating the digital future, but the starting points are different.

Where does GE Digital stand in the enterprise industrial software market right now? Who's the competition and what differentiates GE Digital's offerings?

Byrne: There's a range of companies that we compete against, like Siemens or PTC. Our primary focus is being able to solve some of these adaptability issues, so we have a big focus on resilience and flexibility. For example, some of our products have the ability to rapidly adapt production to meet significant changes in volumes or mix of products, and we believe that's real differentiation. One of the other key things we've got is a recent product we've introduced called Proficy Operations Hub, which allows our customers to have user interfaces that fit specific user profiles. But our ability to integrate everything from automation technology, to human machine interface, to MES [manufacturing execution systems] solutions, to data in the cloud, and to the analytics that sits on top of that data in the cloud, this is a key part of what really allows us to be able to compete in manufacturing in a superior way.

What about partnerships or integrations with other enterprise software vendors?

Byrne: The enterprise software world with the ERP systems, warehouse management systems, the automation systems, are all platforms that we integrate with daily with our software. It's very rare to run into a greenfield factory; it's almost always a brownfield factory. So, we really do have to integrate with automation systems, with their financial planning and ERP systems. A lot of our systems integrators do that for us; we have a set of systems integrators that have principalresponsibility for integration with other enterprise software systems.

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Dig Deeper on Supply chain and manufacturing

GE Digital's transformation rocky but ongoing | TechTarget (2024)

FAQs

What went wrong with GE's digital transformation? ›

General Electric fancied to own the industrial internet. The American conglomerate spread its resources too thin in this endeavor, resulting in a failed digital transformation initiative.

What is happening to GE Digital? ›

2021–2024: Plan to splitting GE

2021: GE announces plan to splitting business into three new public companies: GE Vernova, GE HealthCare and GE Aerospace. GE Digital along with GE Renewable Energy, GE Power and GE Energy Financial Services will come together as GE Vernova.

What is the main reason digital transformation fails? ›

Digital transformation projects fail when there is no change management strategy. A change management strategy is a structured process that helps people understand and embrace business changes. When organizations follow a change management strategy, they are 6x more likely to meet their digital transformation goals.

What is the failure rate of digital transformation projects? ›

According to McKinsey, 70% of digital transformation projects fail to meet the stated goals.

What is the biggest enemy of digital transformation? ›

Lack of shared direction

If no one agrees on where they are going, why they are heading in that direction, and what they aim to achieve, it is close to impossible to succeed. Lack of direction starts at the top, and all too often, C-level executives avoid acknowledging that they are not on the same page.

Is GE going away? ›

And the old GE name is going away. GE will spin off GE Vernova on April 2, which will then start trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) under the ticker GEV. Holders of GE common stock will receive one share of GE Vernova common stock for every four shares of GE common stock held as of March 19.

Why is GE splitting into 3 companies? ›

The breakup culminates CEO Larry Culp's efforts to turn around a company that looked all but dead due to bad investments and the 2008 financial crisis that nearly bankrupted its most profitable business, GE Capital.

Who bought out GE? ›

It has been majority owned by Chinese multinational home appliances company Haier since 2016.

Did GE sell GE Digital? ›

Lawrence Culp. Rather than selling GE Digital, Culp has decided to spin it off as a separate, but wholly-owned subsidiary of GE. Once it is spun off early next year, it will have its own brand, board of directors, and equity structure.

Why do 70% of transformations fail? ›

Several common factors contribute to the failure of transformation programmes. These include long planning horizons, inexperienced project leaders/managers, and an excessive number of stakeholders. Long planning horizons can lead to delays in implementation, allowing unforeseen challenges to arise.

What is an example of a bad digital transformation? ›

Kodak as a Digital Transformation Failure Example Involving Late Deployment. Kodak is a rather sad example of Digital Transformation failure because the brand maintained icon status within the film photography industry for so long. But Kodak failed to embrace the movement toward digital photography in time.

What companies have failed digital transformation? ›

10 Digital Transformation Failure Examples
  • General Electric's Ambitious Digital Transformation. ...
  • Ford's Attempt to Transform into a Mobility Company. ...
  • Procter & Gamble's Digital Overhaul. ...
  • Target's Failed Canadian Expansion. ...
  • Nokia's Struggle with Digital Innovation. ...
  • Sears' Digital Transformation and Decline.

What is a common issue that could derail digital transformation? ›

1. Lack of vision. A common reason digital transformation fails is due to a lack of vision, which along with planning is the foundation for digital success. Without a clear understanding of what their digital transformation should achieve, it's easy for companies to get lost in the weeds.

What is the most difficult part of digital transformation? ›

The biggest barriers to digital transformation listed were:
  • Employee Pushback.
  • Lack of Expertise to Lead Digitization Initiatives.
  • Organizational Structure.
  • Lack of Overall Digitization Strategy.
  • Limited Budget.

Why is digital transformation so hard? ›

Complexity: Digital transformation affects multiple aspects of an organization, and the adoption of new technologies often requires changes in the way a business operates. This complexity can make it difficult to manage and coordinate efforts effectively.

What were the three alternatives GE had for developing the hardware and software capabilities to become a digital FRM? ›

 The three alternatives were building in-house capabilities, partnering with existing technology firms, or acquiring a digital firm. GE chose to build in-house capabilities by hiring thousands of new employees and investing in training existing staff.

Why did GE spin off GE Healthcare? ›

Talks of GE Healthcare spinning off began nearly five years ago. The rationale behind the spin-off plans in 2018 was to allow GE to focus more on its industrial offerings. However, those plans were scrapped in early 2019, when GE sold its pharmaceutical unit to Danaher for $21 billion.

What were the three alternatives GE had for developing the hardware and software capabilities to become a digital firm? ›

GE had three alternatives: building internally, partnering with existing companies, or acquiring external companies to develop the hardware and software capabilities required for digital transformation.

What is the failure rate of digital transformations McKinsey? ›

According to a (2021) McKinsey study - 70% of digital transformation projects ultimately 'fail'.

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