. Earth Science News .
Cisco plans to turn India into global hub, triple workforce

A nation rewired for a new century.
by Staff Writers
Bangalore, India (AFP) Oct 31, 2007
US computer networking giant Cisco Systems plans to more than triple its workforce in India and turn the South Asian nation into a platform to tap and service markets worldwide.

Chief executive officer, John Chambers, who pledged 1.16 billion dollars in investment for India two years ago, outlined the company's plans late Tuesday after opening a 50-million-dollar facility in the southern city of Bangalore.

Chambers, who has expanded the company to 35 billion dollars in revenue from 1.2 billion dollars when he took over as CEO in 1995, tacked on 100 million dollars in additional venture capital funding.

From 3,000 current employees, the California-based Cisco will increase its workforce in India to 10,000 by 2010, and expects to generate 20 percent of its "future leadership" from the country, said Chambers, who is also chairman.

"This is a country that knows how to partner," he told reporters, adding Cisco saw India as intrinsic to its growth and not merely as a low-cost location. "It's a part of our long-term strategy."

Cisco will use the one-million-square-feet Bangalore facility to devise networking technology solutions for customers in emerging markets in Asia, including China, and the Middle East, Africa and Latin America, Chambers said.

The Banglore location, which will eventually also serve Cisco customers in developed markets like North America and Europe, will accommodate staff from its research and development, information-technology and customer support teams.

It will also house Cisco's largest campus data centre outside the US and serve as a focal point to demonstrate the company's technologies to customers.

"India is at the heart of our globalisation vision and provides a platform for Cisco to capitalise on the growth potential in the emerging world," said Wim Elfrink, chief globalisation officer at Cisco.

"The commitment we are making to truly globalise our business is reflective of the changing business models of our customers and partners," he added. "We will develop products and services here that will support customers in this part of the world."

The inauguration ceremony of the Bangalore facility, named the Cisco Globalisation Centre East, featured potential applications of the company's "Telepresence" technology, which allows groups of people in different locations to meet around a virtual "table."

The technology was used to project the life-size image of a Cisco executive in California, meeting and talking with Chambers on a stage in Bangalore as if the conversation was taking place in person.

Cisco will use part of the 100 million dollars in fresh venture capital it will pump into India to fund a healthcare project that it will undertake with Satyam Computer Services, India's fourth-largest outsourcing company.

The project will provide "virtual delivery of professional healthcare advice and support to citizens of the world in a way not seen before," said Satyam founder and chairman B. Ramalinga Raju.

"Our ultimate aim is to ensure easy access and healthcare services to the needy across the world sooner and faster," Raju said.

Cisco, founded in 1984, is the global leader in networking for the Internet. Its Internet Protocol-based (IP) networking solutions are the foundation of most corporate, education, and government communication networks around the world.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


India's Biotech Baby Elephant
Washington (UPI) April 9, 2007
Low costs and growing expertise have led to a biotechnology explosion in India, but that very success could hurt the developing world as companies look toward the lucrative global drug market, experts said Monday.







  • Acoustic Sensor Being Developed In New Anechoic Chamber
  • California fire victims get lush treatment in shelter
  • Rebuilding of Indonesia's Aceh nearly complete: officials
  • Study Shows Housing Development On The Rise Near National Forests

  • Climate controversy heats up Australian election
  • Drought in southeast US fuels battle over water resources
  • White House defends 'health benefits' of climate change
  • Like It Or Not, Uncertainty And Climate Change Go Hand-In-Hand

  • DMCii Satellite Imaging Helps Dramatically Reduce Deforestation Of Amazon Basin
  • NASA Views Southern California Fires And Winds
  • A Roadmap For Calibration And Validation
  • GeoEye Contract With ITT Begins Phased Procurement Of The GeoEye-2 Satellite

  • Analysis: U.S. OK's Saddam law oil deals
  • China to raise price of fuel: report
  • Let There Be Light: New Magnet Design Continues Magnet Lab's Tradition Of Innovation
  • China launches counter-protest against Japan in island dispute

  • Staph-Killing Properties Of Clay Investigated
  • AIDS stunting southern Africa's prospects: Malawi president
  • After extinction fears, Botswana learns to live with AIDS
  • West Nile Virus Spread Through Nerve Cells Linked To Serious Complication

  • Dead Clams Tell Many Tales
  • Could Hairy Roots Become Biofactories
  • Dinosaur Deaths Outsourced To India
  • Ancient Amphibians Left Full-Body Imprints

  • Time Spent In Car Drives Up Air Pollution Exposure
  • Birth defects soar in polluted China
  • Sakhalin II Operator Vows To Fix Environmental Damage In Year
  • Space Sensors Shed New Light On Air Quality

  • Europeans face mob anger over child 'abductions' in Chad
  • India's toilet champion sees human liberation in loos for all
  • Video Game Shown To Cut Cortisol
  • Researchers Find Earliest Evidence For Modern Human Behavior In South Africa

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement