Cisco CEO: Virtualisation will see next Web work boom

Cisco CEO John Chambers has predicted that the IT industry will enjoy a second era of productivity which will mirror the growth spurred by the original Internet revolution in the mid-90s.

In his keynote address to VMworld in San Francisco, Chambers said the "second phase" of Internet productivity will be driven by virtualisation, convergence and online collaboration.

"There is a fundamental shift in the industry and it's occurring much faster than any market transition I have seen so far," Chambers said.

"It is about a wave of collaboration, enabled to a great extent by the virtualisation of access to any content. This will usher in what I believe will be a generation of productivity that will change not only how we work, where we work, but the very nature of work itself."

Chambers said that the more effective sharing of compute power, combined with huge bandwidth capabilities, will "get us to re-think how we work."

"Web 2.0 has been around," he said, "but at Cisco we're doing it with a vengeance."

The networking vendor has ramped up the number of projects it undertakes, acquisitions it makes and products it launches on an annual basis by virtualising not only access to servers and applications, but also human resources.

For any given project, Cisco now assigns any stakeholder or staff member from any department -- be it sales, IT, engineering or finance -- to work together using Web 2.0 collaboration tools and online voice and video, according to the Cisco CEO.

Cisco has also set up wikis for customers and staff to contribute ideas to the company, as well as a "Ciscopedia" which enables staff to learn from experts on any given topic within the company using a Facebook-like presence technology.

"We have thousands of ideas coming through on our wikis from customers and employers," Chambers said.

Cisco's latest acquisition, WebEx, took just eight days to integrate into the wider company. An acquisition of this size once took 45 days, Chambers said -- testament to the power of using virtualisation (disaggregating applications from hardware) and collaboration tools.

Chambers also showed images from a "virtual" meeting he and his team at Cisco had with their 200 top financial analysts the day prior -- conducted via videoconference, and powered by collaboration tools and instant messaging.

The combination of virtualisation and collaboration, Chambers said, already saved the organisation US$200 million last year.

"This is where IT becomes sexy again," Chambers says. "This is where the sizzle comes back into IT."

Budgets to increase
Chambers said successful companies need to make a habit of catching these transitions -- and riding them hard.

"In the early 90s, the Internet had already been around for three decades," he said. "But already 90 percent of Cisco product orders were online. And 90 percent of our customer service was done without human intervention. We sold three times the product of our competitors -- which drove us to a position in the industry that was a huge advantage for us."

Chambers said economic growth slowed in the last two to three years as economies exhausted the productivity gains available from the first wave of the Internet.

"We are running out of gas," he said. "This is why CEOs are seeing IT as an expense item. If this scenario continued, you would expect IT budgets to remain flat for the next decade."

But Chambers expects that the industry will grow at three to five percent, not the modest two percent being forecast by financial analysts.

"I think you will see a second phase of innovation, driven by virtualisation, collaboration and convergence," he said. "I think you will see in the next five to 10 years an identical replay to what happened in the mid 90s."

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Talkback 1 comments

  1. Cisco CEO's first written blog entry Anonymous -- 11/10/07

    John Chambers, Cisco CEO, writes his first blog entry on our new collaboration blog here: http://blogs.cisco.com/collaboration/.

    He states, in part: “We are on the cusp of a new era where the Internet is transforming businesses large and small, and creating an entirely new environment for today’s workforce to communicate, collaborate and achieve. We have an opportunity to usher in a new era of economic growth and productivity and Internet-driven collaboration technologies are at the core of this transformation.â€


Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Renai LeMay Australian Govt funds IT start-ups
    This week Australia's Federal Government announced it had allocated $3.6 million in funding to 57 local research projects so that they could be commercialised, with many of them being web or IT-related start-ups.
  • Array Google should come clean on datacentres
    It's nice that Google says it has put an effort into making its datacentres more energy efficient, but the search giant's pledges won't mean much until it discloses just how many of the beasties it's actually running.
  • Array US shows what OPEL could have been
    Sprint's WiMAX roll-out in Baltimore will prove the Australian government's decision to worm its way out of the Opel WiMAX contract was a short-sighted, and ultimately damaging, political stunt that has benefited nobody.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured