John T. Chambers
  CEO (since 1995) Chairman (since 2006),
Cisco Systems
"I learned an awful lot about what not to do. You could see management getting further and further from the customer, telling the customer that they knew what he needed better than the customer did"
John Chambers is an influential leader of the past one and half decade, a great strategist and visionary who took up reins as Senior Vice President of global operations of Cisco Systems in 1990 and later raised through ranks as CEO in 1995 till now and Chairman of Board since 2006. The company was operating with $70mn when Chambers started in 1990 and in 1995 when Chambers took helm as CEO, the company grew to $1bn and the growth continued persistently under the great leadership of Chambers to the rate of nearly $40bn. Today the company is the world leader in networking systems. 
 
 The company, which was a routers company, expanded itself into packets, switches, ATM's, Internets, and Intranets tapping new technologies and markets with quick moves of acquisitions and porting the new technologies to synchronize into Cisco's infrastructure.
| The key strategies that were fundamental in success of Cisco   Systems was its simple to use technology, the top priority given to the   customers' preferences and needs, delivering more value to the customers as   compared to its competitors. In the previous past, Cisco Systems delivered a value of 26   cents per dollar. This was all made possible by the great and pioneering   knowledge of Chambers about the growing markets and his unwaivered focus on   the future growth of Cisco and his customer centric approach. He worked on   his laurels relentlessly, raised the company through the odds, and made it to   the top far beyond the expectations of his contemporaries and analysts. Thus,   Chambers succeeded in building an innovative next generation company and   stood a role model for the upcoming CEOs. The Essence of Real Leadership As all of us know that the times of turbulence are real   measure of leader's success. As Cisco reported a marginal loss in the recent   past, the CEO holds himself responsible for the weak performance of the   company and addresses the customers and employees saying that he is confident   that "Cisco's vision and fundamental strategy is right". He would   act on what is to be fixed in the Cisco's portfolio and the fundamental   changes are ahead. The success of Cisco was mostly dependent on its acquisitions   (as many as ten acquisitions in the first ten years of his tenure), where as   the world has shifted to consumer dominant products. He says that he plans to   boost Cisco's focus and discipline. Chambers added, "We have disappointed our investors and   we have confused our employees. Bottom line, we have lost some of the   credibility that is foundational to Cisco's success – and we must earn   it back." A Cisco's spokes person revealed "At Cisco we've been   driving a value-based channel strategy since 2001 and are committed to   earning our partners' loyalty each and every day. While many of our   competitors' partner strategies remain unclear, Cisco is doubling down on the   channel by investing $75 million in our new partner-led sales model." Chambers named several of Cisco's strengths, including its   ability to anticipate and take advantage of changes in the marketplace, its   continued growth in the data center, its focus on collaboration, and its big   leap into the world of technology. "We have been slow to make decisions,   we have had surprises where we should not, and we have lost the   accountability that has been a hallmark of our ability to execute   consistently for our customers and our shareholders". The way he was connected to the customers, shareholders,   employees and partners shows his empathy and emotional intelligence, the real   qualities of a leader. This bonds the Cisco's customers for lifetime, with   encapsulating trust at the time of turbulence. Hats off for the great leadership   of Chambers. Educational and Career Outlook John Chambers with his winning attitude has overcome his   problem of Dyslexia, and got himself well educated as any other leader did.   He finished his high school at  After finishing his Masters and deciding his future would be   in business, Chambers accepted a job offer from IBM in 1976 as a salesperson,   with least desire to be in sales. At the time when Chambers joined in IBM,   the company was a giant in the computer industry, the most massive and   powerful company known as "The Big Blue". Soon after he kick started   his career as a salesperson, he found himself good at the task with   determination and touch of southern gentility he could gain a positive   response from the customers. John soon realized the shortcomings of IBM that   it was working on business computers and typewriters, where as adventurous   startups of that era worked on personal computers. As John was lacking an   engineering and research background, he doubted his stepping up the corporate   ladder in IBM, though he excelled in sales. Therefore, after a six-year long   tenure of sales experience in IBM, he managed to convince Wang, Chinese   American founder of Wang Laboratories in the year 1982, that he was the right   person to head the Asian sales team of Wang Labs and walked the path of his   ambitions with pride. Asian customers liked the easygoing Southern manners of   Chambers as compared to loud and hard-driving American salesmen. Chambers had utmost respect for his boss Wang and he stated   that Wang was the most impressive person of his life after his father, who   had belief and trust in him. Later things drastically changed and Wang passed   away with cancer in 1990's and Wang's son Fred took up Wang's Laboratories as   successor to Mr. Wang and the company's prospects turned worse and the stock   fell steeply as the investors quit. Chambers happened to resign from Wang   labs and looked for a new job. John Chambers was seriously looking out for executive   positions and Cisco was the only company that responded to Chambers letters   sent out for job search. In fall of 1990, Morgridge, the energetic, veteran   of both Honeywell and Stratus, appointed John Chambers as Senior Vice   President of Cisco for Worldwide sales and operations. This was the beginning   of the Cisco's way by John Chambers striving through the volatility of the   technologies and marketplaces. Cisco was found in 1983 by a married couple of Stanford, Len   Bosack, head of computer-science department and  Later the founders were out of the company selling their   stakes at $170mn. In 1990's being selected by Morgridge, traditional John   Chambers was not an easy fit for the fastest trends of Silicon Valley, which   were out of control. At the time when Morgridge and Chambers worked together   with "technological agnosticism" the major Cisco's policy, the   company has a roaring business in routers. Both of them thought that routers   were not the only game of the company. Therefore, they wisely took a   decision, keeping in view the company's future generally and technologically   to acquire Cresendo Communications, a switching company for $95mn. This was   the first acquisition made by Cisco in 1993. These switches gave power users   and devices easy and better accessibility to the servers making networking   child's play. This acquisition proved to be a great success though the   revenues of Cresendo Communications were as low as $10mn, because the giant   companies like Ford and Boeing were interested in switching products. The   saga of acquisitions continued (2001) and Cisco went ahead to acquire other   small switching companies such as Kalpana, Lightstream, and  In January 1995, Morgridge left the company, with John   Chambers as successor CEO. Under the leadership of Morgridge Cisco not only   went public but also had tremendous growth with takeovers and was at $1bn.   The company which has a meager workforce of 34 employees rose to 2,260 by   1995. Chambers was strongly determined to take the company way too high   beyond the expectations of industrial analysts and leave his mark in the   corporate history. The most valuable learning that Chambers got from IBM was   that, customers liked simple one-step concept of technology rather than   trying numerous components rigorously. Therefore, he implemented this   learning in Cisco and made it a point to provide Cisco's customers with a   full array of data solutions in order to stop them from reaching out   competitors. Chambers wanted consistent and continuous growth of Cisco and   navigated through routers, packets, switches and with explosion of telecom   market; Chambers found that ATM is the key for Cisco's growth because of   which he acquired StrataCom in 2001 for $4.5 billion far more than the   company's market value. This pushed Cisco to the first place as vendor in   2002, to provide advanced network infrastructure for the intranet and   Internet environments and the only vendor to offer end-to-end connectivity   across public, private or hybrid networks. Under the strong leadership of Chambers, Cisco started hiring   best talent in technology and business as a part of its aggressive   recruitment program. Chambers strongly believed that to stay on the top in   the marketplace is to listen to the customers carefully and take into   consideration their preferences for now and for five to ten years ahead of   time and respond to the customers needs accordingly. Chambers always nurtured   R&D and told them to integrate the technology of the acquired companies,   making it compatible with Cisco's existing infrastructure. Chambers   strengthened the position of Cisco forever by acquiring Linskys for $500mn in   2003 and Latitude Communications, a company specialized in conferencing for   $80mn cash in 2004. In 2006, John Chambers took up as Chairman of Board in   addition to the responsibility as CEO. In his journey in Cisco from 1990 until date, Chambers   experienced numerous peaks and falls, but steered the company towards   excellence with his quick response to the ever-changing market strategies.   One such instance; in early 2000 the network and telecom companies have been   overvalued and in early 2001 Cisco experienced a fallout hit after 14   consecutive strong quarters till August 2000. As a response to this fall out   hit, the company fired 15% of its workforce and the company's CEO received a   salary of $1 per annum. He became the inevitable part of Cisco and stood   exemplary to the future entrepreneurs. More about John Chambers 
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The born leader John Chambers took birth in  Young John at the age of nine had a problem of Dyslexia, a   learning disorder, which often made his education and study more torturous.   Nevertheless, John's parents were confident about John and arranged him a   reading specialist, Lorene Anderson-Walters, to cope up with his problem.   John was highly optimistic and had a competitive attitude and enterprising   type of personality, by which he achieved his education and stood an   exemplary leader for past two decades. John's favorite game was basketball, which he enjoyed playing   in teams and he always played tennis doubles. Later he married, Elaine, his   high-school sweetheart and frequent doubles partner. With Elaine, he had two   children a girl Lindsay and a boy John. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 Added to his entrepreneurship are his social responsibility   and his philanthropy. Chambers played an active role in forming   public-private partnerships to reorganize healthcare and education in 2008,   for earthquake effected areas of  He not only donated $180,000 for the Republican Party (Mr.   McCain) and $100,000 to the Democrats Party (Mr. Bush) for the Presidential   elections; but also served two American presidents; most recently as Vice   Chairman of the President George W. Bush National Infrastructure Advisory   Council (NIAC), where he provided industry experience and leadership to help   protect the United States' critical infrastructure. He also served on   President George W. Bush's Transition Team and Education Committee and on   President Bill Clinton's Trade Policy Committee. 
 
 
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||





 
No comments:
Post a Comment