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1What’s in a Name?
2In the Beginning
Cisco was founded by Leonard Bosack and Sandra Lerner, a husband-and-wife team that, while both were working for Stanford University, created the first multiprotocol router to enable them to email each other. Two years later, Cisco shipped its first product, the AGS router for the TCP/IP. When the company went public in 1990, Lerner was fired and Bosack quit.
3Leadership
Bill Graves was Cisco’s first CEO, and held the position until 1988. He was followed by John Morgridge, who lasted until 1995, when he was replaced by current CEO John Chambers. During Chambers’ tenure, Cisco has grown from a $1.2 billion company into one with a current run rate of about $43 billion. It has more than 63,000 employees in more than 165 countries, and more than 475 offices worldwide.
4Acquisitions
Cisco has never been shy about building out its portfolio through acquisitions. In 1993, switching vendor Crescendo Systems was the first company Cisco bought, for $95 million. Since then, the networking giant has made more than 150 acquisitions, including several in 2012. Among its strategic buys this year are NDS Group (whose headquarters in Israel is shown), ClearAccess and Truviso. In 1999, Cisco bought 17 companies.
5Dot-Com Boom
6Innovation
7Cisco on the Field
Cisco executives see a lot of opportunities in sports arenas, creating StadiumVision, a sports venue technology that has been deployed in such facilities as the New Meadowlands Stadium (pictured, home of the New York Giants and Jets), Dallas Cowboys Stadium, the Los Angeles Staples Center (home of the NBA’s Lakers and Clippers and NHL’s Kings) and Real Madrid Bernabeu stadium.
8And in the Olympics
Cisco is running the routing, switching, firewall and IP telephony to about 100 venues at this summer’s 2012 Olympic Games in London. Among those are 34 competition venues, 20 mission-critical venues—including the Olympic Village and network operations center, and up to 50 spectator and athlete sites, such as transport hubs, training grounds and ticketing booths.
9Cisco and Politics
10Networking Core
Cisco was built on networking technology, and continues to dominate the market despite increased competition from the likes of HP, Juniper, Avaya, Huawei and Alcatel-Lucent. According to the company, the Catalyst 6500, pictured, is the world’s most widely deployed enterprise switch, operating in environments from mountaintops to submarine decks. Meanwhile, the CR-3 routing system is powerful enough that the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress could be downloaded in just over one second and every motion picture ever created could be streamed in less than four minutes.
11Branching Out
Cisco in recent years has expanded beyond its networking roots, becoming a larger presence in the data center with its Unified Computing System (UCS), which launched in 2009 and includes not only Cisco networking technology but also Cisco-branded x86 servers. In the past three years, the company has collected more than 11,000 UCS customers and now has an annual run rate of $1.3 billion. In first three months of 2012, data center revenue jumped 67 percent, making it among the fastest-growing businesses at Cisco.
12Server Vendor
The UCS has made Cisco a growing player in the highly competitive server market. In the first quarter of 2011, Cisco jumped onto the list of the top 10 server makers in the world, and was third in the x86 blade server space. In the first quarter of 2012, Cisco was the fifth-largest vendor in terms of server shipments, and shipments increased by 70.9 percent over the same period last year, according to Gartner.
13Using Its Own Products
Cisco in 2006 launched its TelePresence immersive video collaboration business, and has used the technology itself to cut back on expenses related to travel. Over the past six years, TelePresence has saved the company $1.13 billion in travel costs and more than 610,170 metric tons of emissions. Cisco also uses its own health care video technology to provide on-site and remote care to as many as 43,000 Cisco employees and their families at the company’s Life Connections Center.
14WebEx
15Grids
16IP Phones
17Rockin’ the Video Waves
18Partnering With Cisco
20Restructuring
Cisco executives several years ago said they wanted to expand into more than three dozen new businesses—what they called “adjacencies”—and grow revenue by 12 to 17 percent a year. However, when business began to stagnate last year, Cisco restructured, paring 6,500 jobs, shuttering much of its consumer business—including the Flip video camera—refocusing on five foundational pillars and toning down its revenue projection numbers.