SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Information Architecture >> Messaging and Collaboration

Video the new frontier for Cisco

Video the new frontier for Cisco

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 10 Dec 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

The network equipment maker has the expertise to be the leader in collaborative technologies, CEO Chambers tells C-Scape audience. How to move on from a "box mentality"

CARLSBAD, Calif. -- Video is the next frontier Cisco Systems aims to conquer, company CEO John Chambers told an audience here of industry analysts from around the world.

The next phase of business and Internet growth will be driven by collaborative technologies, he said, which will help organizations drive innovation and productivity. Cisco, through its TelePresence and unified communications technologies, has the expertise to be the leader, he said. And the company will lead through example.

Although TelePresence, a video meeting product that allows participants talk to each other via large LCD monitors, is only a year old, Chambers said he will increasingly use it to do business.

“I spend over 75 per cent of my time touching customers, travelling around the world,” he said. “I think over the next three years I will double the number of customers I touch (using video meetings) and cut my travelling in half.”

“If we are successful it will be hard for our peers to keep up,” he said.

That is a bold prediction, given that companies from Microsoft to Nortel are also pushing collaboration, including video.

In the short term, organizations don’t see it as vital as Chambers painted it, said Forrester Research analyst Chris Silva, interviewed after the CEO’s address, which even the company acknowledges. He noted that a slide Chambers showed on video use over the next five years predicts the biggest leap will take place in 2010, when networks will be better able to handle the bandwidth.

“Cisco, HP, Polycom, all these companies are taking their converged voice solutions and focusing on video,” said Silva. “But he (Chambers) made the point that video chews up massive amounts of bandwidth. Cisco has a more vested interest in building out a more healthy, robust network across organizations than other players, so I think their use of video right now is their best bet to continue their drive to proliferate wireless networks and more capable core networks in all the orgs they work with.”

The conference, dubbed C-Scape, is aimed at giving industry and financial analysts an idea of where Cisco is going in the coming years and how it is executing on its strategy.

Perhaps to no one’s surprise, Chambers painted the company as a leader in the technologies that will drive business forward from carrier products to the enterprise. While he emphasized the importance of video, which he said will give businesses the ability to dramatically transform their business processes, Chambers also said social networking tools will be the backbone to collaboration.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 816   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more
blog comments powered by Disqus