|
Cisco's Controversial Organizational Model: Another Reorganization! |
Case Details:
For delivery in electronic format: Rs. 500; For delivery through courier (within India): Rs. 500 + Rs. 25 for Shipping & Handling Charges
»
Human Resource, Organization Behavior Case Studies
Custom Search
Please note: This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source. Chat with us Please leave your feedback |
|||||||
Excerpts Contd...The Other ViewCisco's ResponseChambers argued that the company had arrived at its management structure after giving a lot of thought to it, continuously refining it since it was introduced in 2001. For instance, in May 2009, he told executives that he did not want them to work on more than four or five committees after some executives complained that they were overstretched. Chambers said that the new organization had served the company well. Moreover, Cisco had reached a position where instead of being led by 10 people heavily leaning on the CEO, it was being run by the top 500 people in the company.... Cisco in TroubleBy early 2011, criticism of Ciscos strategy and its board and council structure had reached a crescendo. Some critics contended that Cisco had overstretched itself through its long history of acquisitions, transferring Cisco cash to other firms’ shareholders, hurting Cisco's valuation, and leaving the company struggling. According to Thomson Reuters data, between 2000 and early 2011, the company had invested US$34 billion in acquisitions. It bought home routers, Web-based anti-virus software, web conferencing software, set-top boxes, and video cameras, but many of these businesses failed to deliver adequate returns.... A Change in Strategy and StructureIn April 2011, Chambers admitted in an internal memo that Cisco had lost its way with too many consumer acquisitions and that it would now make sure it “refocuses on the core.” He admitted that the company had disappointed investors, confused its employees, and lost credibility in the marketplace. In the memo, he wrote: “[O]ur strategy is sound… It is aspects of our operational execution that are not. 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... Too Little, Too Late?Chambers was credited with championing much of Cisco’s rapid growth in the 1990s. Some analysts felt that he had been great at operating Cisco as long as he had been in a growth market, but had failed as customers turned to cloud computing and greater use of mobile telephony networks. His reorganizing efforts had also been of little benefit, they said. Critics felt that after the setbacks, Cisco needed a radically new strategy... Exhibits
Exhibit I: Cisco's Organizational Structure (1997)
|
Case Studies Links:-
Case Studies,
Short Case Studies,
Simplified Case Studies.
Other Case Studies:-
Multimedia Case Study,
Cases in Other Languages.
Business Reports Link:-
Business Reports.
Books:-
Textbooks,
Workbooks,
Case Study Volumes.