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Cisco slashes thousands of staff, 7% of entire workforce, pivots into AI
(www.theregister.com)
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How does cloud computing negatively impact router sales?
There’s a bunch of reasons:
tl;dr, the stuff Cisco does well (core network, edge network) is now a low-margin, low-growth mature market, and the higher-growth markets (voice, collab) they frankly aren’t very good on, and their presence in depended on your using their low-growth stuff (if you don’t need Cisco for phone or WebEx, why spend on Cisco switches?)
I can’t stress how much Teams and Zoom have disrupted traditional voice and collaboration, which was a cash cow for Cisco. I can see Cisco wanting to do the AI thing to try to keep people in their call centre solution, but why would I spend Cisco levels of money on WebEx plus AI when I already pay Microsoft for Teams and Dynamics and the Azure AI stack (if I’m a big company). Smaller companies won’t even give Cisco a second look; they’ll use an SMB solution instead.
In case you’re wondering why Microsoft chases every niche, this is why. Microsoft almost had this happen to them in the 1990s when they got complacent and watched as the open internet almost made their operating system monopoly—and the network effects that drove sales of Office and their server products—irrelevant. They got a second smack upside the head when they lost on mobile.
Cisco got similarly lazy, assuming that their dominant positions in network and voice would be a license to print money, but if I don’t need a Cisco phone to make calls, and I can use Teams or Zoom to meet with people, why the hell would I pay thousands for Cisco hardware and hundreds per month per person for Webex and UCS?
Yep. The company I work for stripped out all the Cisco desk phones last week. All the phone numbers just map to Teams now.
Cheaper, less hardware to troubleshoot, and better suited to hybrid work.
Yup. And that should've been a lock-in for Cisco, all they needed to do was make/buy something like Teams/Skype and integrate it with their phone systems. Oh, and make their conference solutions not suck. Remote work was already a thing before 2020, so there's really no excuse for them to not already have a solid solution.
But no, Cisco is largely incompetent. I used to love their hardware, now I avoid it because of the sheer number of exploits, high price relative to value, and competition from alternatives.
They do have Webex Teams.
My experience with it was less than stellar.
Then again, we're being migrated to MS Teams now, and my first impression is... hot garbage.
Yeah, Webex was somehow worse than Teams. They should've just purchased Zoom and then improve the security, that was actually somewhat decent.