Taro Logo

Used to be a great place to work... now it feels like any other large organization

Engineer
Current Employee
Has worked at Cisco for less than 1 year
December 8, 2009
Raleigh, North Carolina
3.0
No CEO Opinion
Pros

Cisco is great for your resume and provides good experience in how global organizations work.

It gives you exposure to a broad customer base and how each of those operate.

There is a lot to be learned that is both technical and experiential.

The benefits were great, but now they are dwindling with every cycle.

There are still a few managers who DO care, but you may have to dig to find one during your career.

Salary was great, but buying power is dwindling with the lack of merit/COLA increases.

If you're customer-facing, there is still a good deal of job security.

If you're in IT or development, not-so-much; offshoring is the name of the game.

For a really big company, it is one of the better ones out there.

Some of the serious technology plays have a good chance at being highly successful and keeping Cisco on top of the industry pack.

Cons

Leadership team members have lost touch with reality and are primarily drinking the Kool-Aid. They communicate the direction to Sr. Management and line management, and those managers are then forced to try and take an untenable vision/strategy and execute upon it. How well they can balance reality with fantasy determines how well you, as an individual contributor, will do.

In the ancient past, if you chose to bring up a serious weakness of a product/service, you were considered to be contributing to the success of the team. Now, if you are outspoken, you are not a team player. Empowerment is now non-existent. Mediocrity is becoming the norm, and those that want to excel are starting to look outside the doors of Cisco, now that the Golden Handcuffs (stocks/bonus/benefits) are evaporating.

The EPM (employee review) cycle is a joke, and your reviews are strictly based on your manager and his/her ability to 'fight' for you at leadership ratings/ranking meetings.

Have a passive manager who doesn't like a good fight or has someone else they're solely rooting for? You'll not get that strong E+ or X rating to get that promotion or salary increase. Period.

If you have a passionate manager that cares for his/her people, then they can eventually "spread some love around" to you, but chances are it will take a few cycles.

A note to prospective employees: Once you're inside, if you plan on sticking around, shop for those managers. If you can find one that's good with people, technically sharp, and somewhat politically savvy at the same time, you might be able to also get some promotions along the way as he/she rides the wave upward. You need to use your skills/merit to leverage yourself into an org that will allow you to play this game, then you can be promoted. This skill took me a long time to learn, but it's a good one to learn, since it doesn't just apply here, as Cisco is just like any other big company now.

And yes, negotiate a high starting salary – you may not see an increase for some time.

Advice to Management

Stop listening to the 'yes' men only, and start listening more closely to feedback from your customers as well as individual contributors and line management.

Stop treating us like children. Historically, we would hear about 'bad news' in a direct, adult discussion. Now, we get to listen to VoDs that tell us 'just a tease,' then tell us how next month there will be another VoD that will tell us just a little bit more on how badly we're going to get screwed on whatever perk or benefit is being reduced or removed.

Was this helpful?

Cisco Interview Experiences