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Cisco slashing up to 6000 jobs

Cisco slashing up to 6000 jobs

The reorganisation will shift more resources into Cloud, software and security

Cisco Systems will cut as many as 6000 jobs over the next 12 months, saying it needs to shift resources to growing businesses such as cloud, software and security.

The move will be a reorganization rather than a net reduction, the company said. It needs to cut jobs because the product categories where it sees the strongest growth, such as security, require special skills, so it needs to make room for workers in those areas, it said.

"If we don't have the courage to change, if we don't lead the change, we will be left behind," chairman and CEO John Chambers said on a conference call.

Cisco has about 74,000 employees, so the cuts will affect about 8 per cent of its staff. It will take charges of about $US700 million for the cost of the reorganization, up to half of that in the current quarter, Chief Financial Officer, Frank Calderoni, said.

Cisco announced the move on a conference call to discuss its financial results for the quarter, the fourth of its fiscal year. Its revenue and profit were roughly flat compared with a year earlier, though Chambers said he's grown more optimistic over the past few months.

During the quarter, Cisco posted sharply higher sales of software products, up 29 per cent, and UCS (Unified Computing System) data-center gear, up 30 per cent. In addition, its customer base for the new Nexus 9000 switch line grew from 180 to 580 customers. The Nexus 9000 is at the heart of Cisco's SDN (software-defined networking) strategy.

However, the company's core businesses declined overall, with routing down 7 per cent and switching down 4 per cent.

Sales fell in most emerging markets, including China, Russia, Ukraine and many countries in the Middle East, a trend that Chambers blamed partly on economic and political upheavals. Cisco doesn't expect the picture to improve in emerging markets for several quarters and thinks things could get worse, he said.

The company's sales to service providers are also ailing, partly because of mergers and acquisitions that are reducing the number of potential customers, Chambers said.

Stephen Lawson covers mobile, storage and networking technologies for The IDG News Service. Follow Stephen on Twitter at @sdlawsonmedia. Stephen's e-mail address is stephen_lawson@idg.com

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