Cisco Systems: The Supply Chain Story
	
 
		
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Case Details:
  
Case Code : ITSY001  
Case Length : 08 Pages  
Period : 1984-2002  
Pub Date : 2002  
Teaching Note : Available  
Organization : Cisco Systems  
Industry : Computer Networking  
Countries : USA 
 
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			Cisco - The Networked Supply Chain
	
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 Cisco was founded in 1984 by a group of computer scientists 
at Stanford. They designed an operating software called IOS (Internet Operating 
System) that could route streams of data from one computer to another. The 
software was loaded into a box containing microprocessors specially designed for 
routing. This was the router, a machine that made Cisco a hugely successful 
venture over the next two decades (Refer Table I for details of Cisco's growth). 
In 1985, the company started a customer support site through which customers 
could download software over FTP1 and also upgrade the downloaded software. It 
also provided technical support through e-mail to its customers.  | 
		
		   
		
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 In 1990, Cisco installed a bug report database on its site. The database 
	contained information about potential software problems to help customers 
	and developers. The system allowed customers to find out whether a specific 
	problem was unique, and if not, how other customers had solved that problem. 
	By 1991, Cisco's support center was receiving around 3,000 calls a month.  
	
	
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		 This figure increased to 12,000 by 1992. In order to 
		deal with the large volume of transactions, the company built a customer 
		support system on its website. In 1993, Cisco installed an Internet 
		based system for its large customers, usually multinational enterprises. 
		The system allowed customers to post queries, about their software 
		problems. Cisco also installed a trigger function called 'Bug Alert,' 
		which sent emails containing information on software problems within 24 
		hours of their discovery. Encouraged by the success of its customer 
		support site, Cisco launched Cisco Information Online in 1994. This 
		online service offered not only company and product information but also 
		technical and customer support to Cisco's customers.  | 		
	 
 
			By 1995, the company introduced applications for 
			selling products or services on its website. The main idea behind 
			this initiative was to transfer paper, fax, e-mail and CD-ROM 
			distribution of technical documentation and training materials to 
			the web, thus saving time for employees, customers and trading 
			partners and besides broadening Cisco's market reach. 
			
			
 
			
Excerpts >>  
 
1]  
Acronym for File Transfer Protocol – The most common way to download and upload 
files on the Internet. When a person downloads something from a shareware site, 
he/she is typically connected to an FTP site, and the computer and the server 
use FTP to send the file(s).  
 
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