From Leadership & the Autonomous Enterprise: A Conversation with Former GE CEO Jeff Immelt | Imagine 2026 · · Automation Anywhere
“We're going to have an AI winter right we're going to have we're going to have the moment where people say, 'Oh, it doesn't work.' Or or we've spent too much money. That's inevitable. That happens. And who's able to persevere when when you go through those crises? Th those are the three things that I think are most material for the people in this room, right? Is we're trying something new. We're all learning it in real time. there's going to be mistakes that get made, but I I go back to having lived in this space mainly as a user for a long time.”
On , Jeffrey Immelt, Former Chairman & Chief Executive Officer at GE Aerospace, spoke about AI adoption challenges during Leadership & the Autonomous Enterprise: A Conversation with Former GE CEO Jeff Immelt | Imagine 2026 on Automation Anywhere.
Jeffrey Immelt, former Chairman and CEO of General Electric, participated in two public events in May 2026. At the Imagine 2026 conference on May 19, Immelt discussed leadership during technological disruption and the adoption of AI. He stated that an "AI winter" is inevitable, where people may say "it doesn't work" or that too much money has been spent, and emphasized the importance of perseverance through such crises. Immelt also said that AI will differentiate performance between hospitals, banks, and airlines, and that leaders must "exercise new muscles." He advised that tech professionals should not be the ones to explain technology to the public, saying "we should never let tech people talk about tech." On May 1, Immelt appeared as the inaugural Teevens Center Leadership Fellow at Dartmouth College. During the conversation, he said that leadership involves giving people truth and context, and that "there are two magic words to being a leader: blame me." He reflected on his own experience with imposter syndrome, stating he was "not comfortable enough in my own skin to say, I don't know." Immelt also commented on organizational culture, saying "your culture is only as good as the worst person you're willing to tolerate." He praised Dartmouth's current position, calling it "the best house in a bad neighborhood" and a "differentiated opportunity."