By
Marguerite Reardon
Wednesday, August 08 2007 09:34 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,62030554,00.htm
Cisco Systems' CEO John Chambers said the networking equipment maker is
poised to see meteoric growth over the next several years as the Internet enters
a new phase.
Like a fortune teller gazing into a crystal ball, Chambers told investors and
analysts on the company's fourth quarter earnings conference call for fiscal
2007 that he believes the Internet is about to hit its next wave, which he
expects will catapult Cisco's growth to levels it has not seen since the early
Internet boom of the 1990s.
"The second phase of the Internet will enable collaboration that will
dramatically improve productivity," he said. "And it has the opportunity to be
an instant replay of what happened for Cisco in the early 1990s, powering our
growth for at least a decade."
Cisco generated US$1.93 billion in its fourth quarter in fiscal 2007, which
ended on Jul. 28th. This was up from a year ago when Cisco generated US$1.54
billion in revenue. As for the entire year, Cisco's revenue grew 18 percent to
US$9.43 billion from US$7.98 billion last year. Analysts had been expecting revenue
around US$9.3 billion.
This growth was largely due to strong sales of Cisco's traditional routing
and switching products. But in the future, Chambers said the company sees even
more growth on the horizon through emerging businesses focused on collaboration,
such as Teleresence, a video conferencing system that actually makes people feel
like they are in the same room with people via video, and unified
communications, which allows workers to tie together several communications
tools.
Cisco's optimistic vision for the future spurred executives to finally raise
the company's long-term revenue growth expectations to between 12 percent and 17
percent. Chambers said that growth should be around 16 percent in the first
quarter of fiscal 2008. For the entire fiscal year 2008, he told investors to
expect between US$9.45 billion to US$9.55 billion in revenue or 13 percent to 17
percent growth. The previous growth range had been between 10 percent and 15
percent.
"Our momentum is even stronger than it was a year ago," Chambers said. This
coupled with the company's consistent growth for the past 16 quarters helped
prompt the management team to lift guidance.
Still, at least one analyst, Tal Liani of Merril Lynch was not satisfied. He
said on the conference call that by his calculations, Cisco could raise guidance
even more.
In some ways I have to agree with Liani. Listening to Chambers' talk you would
think he was an evangelical minister talking about the potential for
collaboration technologies to deliver Cisco and its followers to the financial
promise land. But despite the rhetoric, the company is still being cautious.
That said, I do not think I would bet against Chambers' prediction for where the
industry is headed or the potential for big growth in the long term. The company
certainly hit the jackpot during the first Internet boom, and it deftly
navigated the downturn, maintaining a strong solid business while looking for
new opportunities.
I also think Chambers' predictions for huge growth over the next several
years make sense. In the business community, where Cisco has always had a strong
foothold, more and more people are using tools like instant messaging and video
conferencing to collaborate with colleagues down the hall or across the world.
Even consumers are using Web 2.0 technology to stay connected via voice over IP
and messaging platforms like Skype or through social-networking sites like
Facebook.
Cisco not only hopes to provide some of the tools to make this collaboration
a reality, but the company also sells the underlying infrastructure that makes
all this Net activity possible. And already Cisco is seeing huge growth. For
example, it saw growth approaching 30 percent for equipment sold to phone
companies and cable operators upgrading their networks to deliver new
collaborative and interactive services.
Video will be the killer application that will drive this growth. Chambers
highlighted the company's Telepresence product as an example. This ultra
high-end video conferencing system, which comes complete with a specially built
room, has been sold to some 50 customers with about 110 Telepresence centers
around the world. Chambers said about 60 to 70 percent of the customers have
also upgraded their switching infrastructure, compounding the positive results
for Cisco.
Cisco is taking the lead in pioneering the use of new Internet technologies,
showing customers what can be possible, Chambers said.
"We expect to do with Web 2.0 technology what we did with Internet," he said.
"The Internet had been around for years, and we took it and used it to transform
our own business to improve productivity. We'll do the same thing with
collaboration technology."
This story first appeared as a blog entry at CNETnews.com