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Cisco’s Chambers touts telepresence

Cisco’s Chambers touts telepresence

By:  Ryan B Patrick  On: 20 Jul 2006 For: Network World Creator

According to ­Cisco ­Systems Inc. head honcho John ­Chambers, Cisco is currently in transition, shifting from a switching and router vendor that provides the enterprise networking backbone to an IT supplier that offers communications and collaboration services.

How these technologies will be priced remains to be seen. At Networkers, ­Chambers noted that Cisco is currently reviewing the way IOS and other software images are bundled with its switches and routers. Cisco says this move — which would initially cost organizations more — actually provides more flexibility in purchasing and configuring Cisco hardware. “We need to evolve our software strategy,” Chambers said.

Wu Zhou, an analyst at IDC, offered that Chambers may be pushing Cisco to become more of a software provider than a hardware provider and taking a similar approach to Cisco competitor Avaya Inc., which recently created a new software-based pricing model. Such an approach makes sense for companies selling data and voice network convergence products because of the complexities in setting up VoIP and the reliance of such systems on software, she said.

Cisco’s services business is a “very profitable” part of its overall business, even under the current structure of allowing customers to get software upgrades packaged with maintenance services, Zhou noted. Cisco has been able to leverage what it learns from one customer’s problems to share with other customers, which has helped lower costs, she said.

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Ryan B Patrick Ryan B Patrick is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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