GE’s Ecomagination: From Business Commitment to Business Philosophy and Social Contract

Written by Tom Kucharvy on April 17th, 2011
Summary:

General Electric appears to be well on its way to evolving Ecomagination from a business opportunity into a corporate philosophy—in the way the company views its relationships and ecosystems, its mission and its commitment to society.

Five years ago, when General Electric first launched its ecomagination program, many, including some within the company, saw it primarily as a marketing and PR effort. As discussed in my April 3rd post, the company has long since proven that it was much more than a marketing program. It has now become a fundamental part of its business. And, judging from its commitments to extending the program, ecomagination is on the path to being core to GE’s business.

In fact, ecomagination appears to be more than a central part of GE’s business. Ecomagination is expanding the company’s view of and approach to partnering and is  beginning to become integral to the way GE views its business and even to its contract with society.

The Growing Ecomagination Partner Ecosystem

This, however, is not to suggest that GE believes that it can field all the technology required for its ecomagination solutions. As I discuss in greater depth in a recent report I wrote on GE’s work in building an ecosystem around its Smart Grid program, GE’s divisions are working more closely with each other to facilitate the development of and to support standards that facilitate interoperability across multiple industries (energy, aircraft, healthcare, etc.) as well as to leverage technologies and processes developed in one, to support others.

This being said, each division is also building partner ecosystems around their own ecomagination offerings—ecosystems that consist of combinations of customers, governments, academia and all types of large and small businesses. The company is also forging relationships with other global innovation leaders, exemplified by partnerships with:

  • Honda, to bring the smart grid to aerospace;
  • Better Place, with which it shares a vision to accelerate the global deployment of electric vehicles;
  • Masco, to help builders design and build more energy-efficient homes that use ecomagination home technologies,
  • Cities, including Portland, Oregon and Orlando, Florida to help them meet sustainability goals while simultaneously creating jobs; and with
  • Leading research universities, like Columbia, to realize the next generation of clean energy innovation.

And, where the partners do not yet exist, GE is helping to create them. The company’s ecomagination Challenge is an open call for breakthrough ideas to create a cleaner, more efficient and economically viable grid and to accelerate the adoption of smart grid technologies that leverage GE infrastructure. Like IBM’s Global Entrepreneur Initiative, it provides entrepreneurs with access to GE technical and commercial experts, introductions to VCs and other partners, and opportunities for ongoing technical and go-to-market relationships. The Challenge came with a pledge of $200 million (of which GE funded about half, with the other half coming from its VC partners), to be invested in promising start-ups. The winners, who were announced in December 2010, include:

  • ElectricRoute, which created a communications gateway point for electric transmission and distribution systems;
  • WinFlex, which produces rotors for wind turbines from light, flexible and inexpensive composite materials; and
  • Capstone Metering, which applies remote communications technology to water meters.

GE recently extended the ecomagination Challenge with call for solutions for home energy creation, management and use.

Ecomagination as Integrating Umbrella

Ecomagination serves as both an inspiration to and obligation of GE’s businesses. Led by Jeff Immelt’s conviction that investment in ecomagination will be good for all of GE’s stakeholders, the ecomagination goals for R&D spend, revenue growth and environmental responsibility (energy efficiency and greenhouse gas reduction) ensure that all the company’s businesses contribute. Ecomagination provides corporate leadership, not only by providing the structure for the product approval process, but also by providing continuous feedback on best practices, environmental trends, and the continual monitoring of claims to ensure GE leadership.

Ecomagination also serves as a central coordinating group for key stakeholder outreach, with executive-level, strategic customer engagements; employee engagement; and collaboration with NGOs, governments and other corporations. Furthermore, ecomagination.com raises topical and sometimes controversial issues, and invites the public to participate in the conversation.

This year, ecomagination is expanding its role in driving cross-business initiatives. GE’s heritage with electric vehicles dates back nearly 100 years to Charles Steinmetz and is entrenched in many GE businesses. GE Capital’s Fleet Services is a world leading leasing company. GE’s Licensing & Trading works with automotive manufacturers to improve fuel efficiency. And of course, GE Energy designs and manufacturers electrical equipment from the WattStation EV charger, through all of its local distribution equipment, to the generating technology itself. The company is aggressively endorsing electric vehicles (EVs) through its normal channels, and especially through its commitment to put 25,000 EVs on the road by 2015, both in its own fleet and in those of key customers. The ecomagination team is leading the company’s coordination of these activities.

Given all this, there can be little doubt that ecomagination is far more than an advertising program. It has become a fundamental precept of General Electric’s business philosophy and its social contract. Nowhere is this more evident than in the company’s Digital Energy group’s Smart Grid program (which I discuss in more depth in my aforementioned report).

 

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