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Making the Cisco Connection: The Story Behind the Real Internet Superpower [Hardcover]

David Bunnell (Author), Adam Brate (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 18, 2000 0471357111 978-0471357117 1
Cisco Systems is known among the technology elite in Silicon Valley as one of the most successful companies to emerge from the Valley in many years. It has been dubbed computing's next Superpower.

Just as Intel and Microsoft soared to lofty heights with the rise of the personal computer, Cisco Systems is flying on the spectacular updraft of the Internet. The company, which makes specialized computers that route information through a network--acting as a sort of data traffic cop--has captured 85 percent of the market for routers used as the backbone of the biggest network of them all, the Internet. As a result, over the last five years, the value of Cisco's total outstanding stock has risen over 2,000 percent--twice the increase of Microsoft Corp. stock in the same period. Beginning as a tale of two college sweethearts at Stanford University who cofounded the company fifteen years ago, the often-told Cisco legend has all the makings of a great novel--love, money, a villain or two, corporate coups, and the sweet taste of victory. But mostly, the Cisco story is a very unusual tale of corporate success. Despite the struggle of passing through several regimes, Cisco managed to hit all the crucial spots of its business. Cisco consistently bested competitors like 3Com and IBM with insight, innovation, customer focus, and one of the biggest corporate buying sprees in history. Making the Cisco Connection deftly traces the networking giant's path to success, from its founding couple, Sandra Lerner and Leonard Bosack, to current CEO John Chambers. It highlights the company's astounding knack for buying other businesses and making them part of a huge conglomerate; its own highly developed use of technology; and its unusually tight-knit culture. Featuring the perspective of top Cisco executives and competitors, this book reveals how Cisco's technology, employees, and even its competition have blended to make Cisco possibly the most important company shaping the future of communications. Next to ruthless competitors Microsoft and Intel, Cisco shines with a kinder, gentler image, emphasizing happy customers and employees. You'll see how Cisco built its impressive culture by cultivating community, boosting morale, whittling down bureaucracy, and saving money to boot. This book also explains how Cisco is positioning itself to enter a new competitive playing field, moving beyond Internet routers in an attempt to build a single, giant, global communications system--based on the Internet--that would make the current telephone system obsolete. Cisco wants to be the company that delivers the infrastructure of this new network, which will combine computer networks with telephones, television, radio, and satellite communications. To do that, it is now challenging global giants such as Lucent Technologies and Fujitsu. Cisco plans to become the backbone of the entire communications industry, making it a corporation of incredible power as the Internet Age blossoms in the new millennium.

Provocative and instructive, Making the Cisco Connection traces the unique history of one of the most profitable and enduring technology companies in business today.

Acclaim for Making the CISCO Connection

"If you want to learn the whole scoop about the first Internet-Age company, and one of the most successful firms of any age, you've come to the right place. Bunnell's treatment of Cisco's rise--and continued rise--is fascinating and full of human detail. It's clear that Cisco is not just a firm with great technology, but also great leaders and managers."--Thomas H. Davenport, Director, Andersen Consulting Institute for Strategic Change; Professor, Boston University School of Management

"Cisco has emerged as a twenty-first century leader. David Bunnell captures the ongoing story of the Cisco executive team exploiting IT, structuring a unique organization, and creating a dynamic strategy for this breakaway dot com company."--Richard L. Nolan, William Barclay Harding Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Cisco Systems is one of the most valuable companies in the world, yet few know very much about it. Making the Cisco Connection, by Upside Media CEO and editor David Bunnell, is a clear and comprehensive corporate history that certainly will change that. Beginning with the firm's 1984 founding at Stanford University--when Leonard Bosack and Sandy Lerner first concocted a way for different computer systems to communicate with each other--Bunnell follows the major players and their key actions in order to place this continuing Silicon Valley success story in the proper perspective. There's its meteoric rise at the cusp of the online age, when Bosack and Lerner initially devised the electronic router that is now the backbone of the Internet. There's the power struggle with a venture capitalist that ousted this once-married duo, the marketing savvy that ultimately gave their product an 80 percent market share, the acquisition strategy that has brought both allies and competitors into the fold, the culture that celebrates cooperation and fair play, the ongoing drive to become an even broader communication gateway. These and other moves, which Bunnell fully details, have built a company worth $200 billion today. "In the end," he writes, "who knows?" --Howard Rothman

From the Inside Flap

Making the Cisco Connection Cisco Systems is known among the technology elite in Silicon Valley as one of the most successful companies to emerge from the Valley in many years. It has been dubbed computing's next Superpower. Just as Intel and Microsoft soared to lofty heights with the rise of the personal computer, Cisco Systems is flying on the spectacular updraft of the Internet. The company, which makes specialized computers that route information through a network-acting as a sort of data traffic cop-has captured 85 percent of the market for routers used as the backbone of the biggest network of them all, the Internet. As a result, over the last five years, the value of Cisco's total outstanding stock has risen over 2,000 percent-twice the increase of Microsoft Corp. stock in the same period. Beginning as a tale of two college sweethearts at Stanford University who cofounded the company fifteen years ago, the oft-told Cisco legend has all the makings of a great novel-love, money, a villain or two, corporate coups, and the sweet taste of victory. But mostly, the Cisco story is a very unusual tale of corporate success. Despite the struggle of passing through several regimes, Cisco managed to hit all the crucial spots of its business. Cisco consistently bested competitors like 3Com and IBM with insight, innovation, customer focus, add one of the biggest corporate buying sprees in history. Making the Cisco Connection deftly traces the networking giant's path to success, from its founding couple, Sandra Lerner and Leonard Bosack, to current CEO John Chambers. It highlights the company's astounding knack for buying other businesses and making them part of a huge conglomerate; its own highly developed use of technology; and its unusually tight-knit culture. Featuring the perspective of top Cisco executives and competitors, this book reveals how Cisco's technology, employees, and even its competition have blended to make Cisco possibly the most important company shaping the future of communications. Next to ruthless competitors Microsoft and Intel, Cisco shines with a kinder, gentler image, emphasizing happy customers and employees. You'll see how Cisco built its impressive culture by cultivating community, boosting morale, whittling down bureaucracy, and saving money to boot. This book also explains how Cisco is positioning itself to enter a new competitive playing field, moving beyond Internet routers in an attempt to build a single, giant, global communications system-based on the internet-that would make the current telephone system obsolete. Cisco wants to be the company that delivers the infrastructure of this new network, which will combine computer networks with telephones, television, radio, and satellite communications. To do that, it is now challenging global giants such as Lucent Technologies and Fujitsu. Cisco plans to become the backbone of the entire communications industry, making it a corporation of incredible power as the Internet Age blossoms in the new millennium. Provocative and instructive, Making the Cisco Connection traces the unique history of one of the most profitable and enduring technology companies in business today.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 218 pages
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; 1 edition (February 18, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471357111
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471357117
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,209,042 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (30 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

30 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Profile of an Irresistible Growth Enterprise, May 1, 2000
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 110,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Making the Cisco Connection: The Story Behind the Real Internet Superpower (Hardcover)
Reading this book provides a fairly compact history of Cisco Systems ascent from a start-up to the world's most valuable corporation in less than 20 years. As best I can tell from comparing the book to interviews with Cisco executives and news reports, the data included are pretty accurate.

The only significant thing missing from this book is enough context on why Cisco has been more successful than other companies. The details are there, but the highlighting of what is significant is too light.

The essential point is that a company needs a vision, strategy, values, culture, management style, and business processes that permit it to prosper from irresistible forces and trends, regardless of how these turn out. Cisco has adhered to this perspective more than almost any other company.

The aspects of what Cisco does differently come primarily in using acquisitions to add talent and provide flexibility responses to unclear, emerging technology trends. The accomplishment here is that the talented people stay, are more productive than ever before, and fit comfortably into the Cisco culture. Hardly anyone ever does these things well.

The authors also understate the significance of how Cisco has multiplied irresistible forces. The focus on the Internet allows the company to benefit from both Moore's and Metcalfe's Laws. Because of that, Cisco has a very high stock price. That makes for low costs in acquiring and keeping top people, through the use of stock-based acquisitions and stock options. Converging technologies mean that the Internet basis allows the company to impinge on other forms of communications as the convergence occurs. All this means that Cisco has the potential to be 10 times the size of Microsoft. The key difference: Cisco is much more adept at irresistible force management.

People who want to understand more about high tech competition, how to create a successful company, and find good investments will all find this book to be valuable. I especially recommend this book to people who are about to start up a new business.

Do take the material with a little grain of salt though. As good as Cisco Systems is, they're not quite as good as this book suggests.

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33 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Just an image control piece., March 16, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Making the Cisco Connection: The Story Behind the Real Internet Superpower (Hardcover)
As a ten year veteran of cisco, I am discouraged by the misinformation presented in this book. Many omissions, factual errors, incorrect attributions are present in this book. Very few of the mistakes cisco made along the way are documented and discussed. Mistakes that lead to the formation of companies that now successfully compete against cisco like Juniper Networks. Or near misses like almost giving our source code to Microsoft. Cisco has an amazing story to tell, I am sadden to see this puff piece instead. I look fondly on most of my association with cisco, but this book does not accurately document the company and its inter-workings, it only demonstrates that cisco has one of the best image control infrastructures around.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Informative, Concise, No Silicon-Valley Tabloid Nonsense, March 9, 2000
This review is from: Making the Cisco Connection: The Story Behind the Real Internet Superpower (Hardcover)
Doing justice to what today is a $452 billion dollar company, is fundamentally a challenge, to do so in such a brief book is outstanding.

In the short time since this book was written, Cisco has passed the landmark of a 300 billion dollar Market Capitilization, as mentioned in the book, and raced right through $400 billion and even $450 billion. It is now the 2nd most valuable company in the world, second only to Microsoft, and is seriously being spoken of as a rival to Microsoft for reaching the level of 1 Trillion Dollars of Market Capitalization. If the rates of value increase as they historically have, Cisco wins.

This book has technical detail, but is not overly burdened so as to discourage anyone interested in Cisco's Story.

The book gives a clear overview of the company's history, the CEO'S who have run the company to date, and the vision of the Current CEO Mr. Chambers. Cisco has an astonishing record of absorbing 61 companies, the last time I saw a number listed, and they do so with more success than any company in History. The retention of top executives and the staff of the companies acquired, exceeds any other industry benchmarks.

Even if you have no interest in the technology, the Management of this Company is extraordinary by any measure, and has been recognized as such.

This work will give you a great deal of knowledge, in a surprisingly brief book.

Truly excellent.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
customer advocacy, cisco employees, networking market, networking companies, networking industry
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Silicon Valley, John Chambers, Don Valentine, Grand Junction, San Jose, Wall Street, Bay Networks, Stanford University, John Morgridge, Peter Solvik, Sandy Lerner, Barbara Beck, Internet Junction, New York, World Wide Web, Cisco Connection Online, Bell Labs, Don Listwin, Goldman Sachs, Mario Mazzola, Pete Solvik, Research Triangle Park, Sequoia Capital, Sun Microsystems, United States
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