Organize to Disrupt – and Grow – Cisco
Cisco is an admirable company. In the high tech world, few survive half as long as Cisco. Even fewer maintain growth and profitability. Cisco's willingness to obsolete its own products has been a stated objective which has helped the company keep on top of new technologies and products, growing to $36B. It's Disruptive when you are compelled to obsolete your own products. Most companies make the mistake of trying to sell products too long, trying to extend profitability by selling the product while winding down development. They fear launching new products which might "cannibalize" an existing product. As a result, competitors leapfrog their products and by the company admits things are obsolete it's too late – and the business is in deep trouble.
Now Cisco is working to keep growing by utilizing a Disruptive organization model. Headlined "Cisco's Extreme Ambition" has BusinessWeek overviewing the distribution of decision-making power to 48 different councils. Instead of a traditional hierarchy, the councils can make decisions about products themselves, thus shortening the decision process and the time to get new products to market or make acquisitions.
Cisco competes in at least 30 markets. Staying on the leading edge in that many businesses requires rethinking how to organize. Especially when you know it is critical to keep Disrupting your organization to bring forward new products which can keep you competitive. By distributing decision-making this organizational model overcomes traditional Lock-ins that could slow down Cisco
- Now strategy can be developed for the markets, built on multiple scenarios (perhaps even competing scenarios), overcoming monolithic strategy processes that are too confining and do too much option narrowing
- Hiring, including executives, won't require everybody look alike. Different kinds of people allows for alternative thinking and different sorts of decision processes – as well as different decisions
- The structure can form to the market needs – rather than being dictated from an insider perspective. By organizing to the market need each council is more likely to keep close to emerging needs
- Investments are made at a lower level, reducing the "big bang" investments that Lock-in organizations to monolithic technologies or products
- Internal experts don't gain too much power, which often limits the technologies and markets pursued.
Maintaining its willingness to remain Disruptive is critical to the ongoing success of Cisco. This new organization model is allowing Cisco to enter the lower margin server business, for example, which would be (and has been) escewed by a more centralized decision making. By focusing the organization on markets, Cisco can keep finding new ways to compete — and set new metrics for measuring itself market-by-market. And Cisco can more quickly and easily set up White Space projects to continue pursuing new market opportunities. All it has to do is add another council!