good people under constant pressure - S-A Staff O/S M/W SWE Eng Cisco Employee Review

3.0
Aug 7, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cisco Systems is recognized as a leader in its field. It is aggressive in maintaining, reinforcing, and developing new positions of leadership and has the financial wherewithal to do it. Cisco encourages employee development and provides plenty of opportunities for professional improvement through classes, knowledge-sharing, and on-line resources.

Cons

In my division, employees are essentially on call 24/7. We do a good amount of fire-fighting (in other words, responding to emergencies that come up and are unpredictable). There is a tendency to ignore issues that are not pressing until they become urgent. There has been improvement in this area--planning and abiding by schedules in the face of interruptions and emergencies--in the ten years I have been with the division, but when push comes to shove the old habits resurface. Some of this may be due to chronic understaffing, but with the build-up of teams in India, the understaffing is less of a problem. We try to be very responsive to customers, but as the pool of customers in our case consists of a small number of large customers, being customer-driven can lead to sudden changes in priorities and feature creep into products and development cycles. It's been suggested that rather than be so customer-focused and driven, we should lead the way in product development and innovation so that customers will want the products we develop, but we don't seem to be able to do that. It has also been the case that management will try to promote good practices by training everyone in some new method (of time management or work planning), but after the initial push, the effort is abandoned and management support for the new methods seems to vanish. We are schedule-driven no matter how unrealistic the schedule, and it's only when the true scope of the work becomes impossible to ignore that schedules (with management, with the customer) get renegotiated and start to resemble reality. The problem is always one of how to meet a very aggressive deadline.

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5.0
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CEO approval
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Pros

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Cons

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4.0
Mar 13, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I decided to wait almost a year after leaving the company before posting a review. The primary reason being is that when you decide to leave an organization it is usually because there is something there that isn't aligning with you or what you want anymore however, the grass is not always greener someplace else. This has been my experience. In fact, the appreciation I have for the company has grown so much in my time away that I would really like to return. The company truly believes on promoting within and as an employee you are encouraged to grow your career within the organization and learn new skills by taking different positions. Benefits are excellent. Cisco is the industry leader for networking and now cloud. It is sometimes easy to forget that on the daily grind but you are working for the company that everyone looks to for network and infrastructure standards. Culture within the business units managing product lines give you a lot of freedom to be innovative and creative in your approach to your role. In most cases you are given a fair amount of autonomy and control over how you do your job provided that it aligns with the strategic objectives. Benefits, 401k match, RSUs and ESPP are amazing. And while the salaries aren't the top of the industry, they are above market and pretty competitive.

Cons

Cisco can be a machine. There isn't an overt demand for all of your time (even the time outside of work) but more of a subtle, slight encouragement to always be on. If you are not careful, you will live, sleep and eat Cisco 24x7. Don't get me wrong, this is 100% a choice and if you are aware of this subtlety in the culture it is very easy to set appropriate boundaries that will be respected by the company and leadership team. If you don't like where you are in Cisco or what you are working on, give it 6 months because you will be reorg'd. While it is sometimes necessary to realign the company to meet competitive threats or market demands, reorganizing the company once a year is excessive and tends to create a distrusting environment for the rank and file which makes being a leader in the organize challenging. There is a loss of momentum and motivation that occurs a few months before and a few months after reorgs so this leaves the company being effective at delivery and execution only about 70% of the time. While Cisco attracts some bright, motivated people the truth of the matter is you are either cut out for the company and its culture or you're not. If you aren't it will be painfully obvious to you and those around you. Sadly as a leader it is hard to cut dead weight from the team and the only really accepted way is via layoffs, which is why the company reorgs once a year despite the company line about the reorgs.

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Cisco Response
10y
Thank you for such a sincere review. We appreciate your feedback and hope you are pleased to see many of our "We Are Cisco" initiatives. Indeed, it can feel like Cisco frequently changes because it is part of our innovative culture. We thank you for your time with us and wish you the best.
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