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Cisco Reorganizes for Growth in the Wake of Goeckeler Departure

The News: This past week, Cisco announced significant organizational changes following the departure of David Goeckeler, has been a driving force across the company’s broad portfolio including responsibility for $34 billion in revenue and more than 25,000 engineers. Goeckeler heads to Western Digital as CEO and Cisco has announced significant changes in the organization that will include a greater management distribution. Additionally, Amy Chang, SVP and GM of Cisco’s collaboration business unit has taken a temporary leave of absence. For more background on the topic check out this primer from Fierce Telecom. Here is a quick breakdown of the changes:

  • Cisco will move to a new structure, which includes the following business groups and leadership:
    • Enterprise Networking and Cloud, led by SVP and GM Todd Nightingale
      • Intent Based Networking led by Scott Harrell
      • Meraki led by Chris Stori
      • Cloud led by Liz Centoni (interim)  
      • Compute and IoT led by Liz Centoni (interim)    
    • Security and Applications, New Executive TBD
      • Security will still led by Gee Rittenhouse, SVP and GM
      • Collaboration will be led by Sri Srinivasan, SVP and GM
      • AppD will continue to be lead by Danny Winokur, SVP and GM
    • Mass-Scale Infrastructure, led by SVP and GM Jonathan Davidson
    • Emerging Technologies & Incubation, led by SVP Liz Centoni
    • Core Hardware Platforms, led by SVP Eyal Dagan

Analyst Take: Amidst a whirlwind week for tech (and everyone else), Cisco found itself in a major transition with one of its most senior and visible leaders has decided to try his hand as CEO at Western Digital.  First of all, bravo for David Goeckeler.

This is a classic example of great leaders developing great leaders and wanting to see them shine–Even if this case means shining elsewhere than Cisco. With Cisco being considered Great Place to Work’s, #1 best place to work, I think a big part of such acclimation is in the culture and the desire to see people rise to their maximum potential.  With Goeckeler realizing what is next for him, this is also a perfect time for a new group of executives to step up.

This is also a great time for Cisco to re-evaluate how it distributes its leadership and how it can learn from losing such an important part of the ELT.

Making One Role into More

Cisco won’t be replacing Goeckeler directly, and I think that is a wise move. While Goeckeler was an almost permanent fixture at Cisco, this transition shows that even the most tenured executives are likely to move on at some point. Perhaps via retirement, a big opportunity or a plethora of other possibilities. And with this, we all know how significant these types of transitions can be and how disruptive they can be on short-term and sometimes longer-term operations. 

Cisco’s decision to take Goeckelers role and split it into several roles was a wise move. This mitigates some of the risks of one person controlling too many parts of the business leaving the company vulnerable. With a large body of highly talented senior managers, the appointment of folks like Todd Nightingale and Jonathan Davidson put new trust in experienced leaders in the business, but also give those folks greater focus on their respective business areas AND a closer line to CEO Chuck Robbins without an additional intermediary. In my experience, Chuck has shown consistently that he trusts his ELT, but having 4-5 team members operating more in the capacity of Goeckeler, should yield more innovation and perhaps less bottlenecks in the development, launch and growth of new products as well as the continuity of the BU’s. 

Sri Srinivasan Takes The Helm in Collaboration

Amy Chang’s decision to take a temporary leave will most certainly leave a gap given Amy’s wealth of experience, but I truly believe the business unit is in great hands with the experienced Sri Srinivasan taking the lead of the business unit going forward. Given the unprecedented times we are living in with COVID-19 and the sharp rise in remote work, the collaboration business unit has a big opportunity as well as significant challenges to compete with both Zoom and Microsoft, which are both formidable competitors. 

I’m looking for Cisco to be aggressive right now and show the world that today’s Webex Teams is far more capable than past versions and despite the business having been somewhat slow to react to the rise of Zoom, the product today is very competitive and the collaboration portfolio is the most complete in the space. I feel there is a much bigger opportunity for Cisco to regain market share as recent events are both making the market larger, but also, competition could bare fruit if the company can operate the business unit with greater precision and efficiency. This is where I think Srinivasan will shine. 

Overall Impression of Cisco’s Reorganization and Prospects Going Forward

I believe the board and CEO Chuck Robbins have a steady hand and have made a series of sound decisions in a time of flux. Goeckler was a person on the rise and his body of work at Cisco clearly had him primed to take a CEO role–It appears now was the time for him to make the move. The quick mobilization of the management team and the decision to break Goeckeler’s role into a handful of roles indicates a company that both learned from this transition and a company that recognizes that more executive focus on the business’s disparate technology portfolios will better serve the business, the customers and investors. 

Cisco, like every company on the planet has some strong challenges ahead of it. COVID-19, Tariffs and Innovation at scale all come to mind. However, I am confident that Cisco will use these times of transitions to organize in a way that will maximize the short and mid-term opportunities driving better than market average results. Based on the impassioned culture of the company that has led its global ranking as the world’s best place to work–It is hard to see this going any other way. 

Futurum Research provides industry research and analysis. These columns are for educational purposes only and should not be considered in any way investment advice.

Read more Analysis from Futurum Research:

Honeywell Drives Quantum Forward With New Roadmap and Partnerships

Cisco Expands Free Webex Offering as COVID-19 Scare Continues

HPE is Executing its Strategy Well Despite Mixed Q1 Earnings

Image: Cisco

Author Information

Daniel is the CEO of The Futurum Group. Living his life at the intersection of people and technology, Daniel works with the world’s largest technology brands exploring Digital Transformation and how it is influencing the enterprise.

From the leading edge of AI to global technology policy, Daniel makes the connections between business, people and tech that are required for companies to benefit most from their technology investments. Daniel is a top 5 globally ranked industry analyst and his ideas are regularly cited or shared in television appearances by CNBC, Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal and hundreds of other sites around the world.

A 7x Best-Selling Author including his most recent book “Human/Machine.” Daniel is also a Forbes and MarketWatch (Dow Jones) contributor.

An MBA and Former Graduate Adjunct Faculty, Daniel is an Austin Texas transplant after 40 years in Chicago. His speaking takes him around the world each year as he shares his vision of the role technology will play in our future.

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