Cisco Reviews

4.1

83% would recommend to a friend

(33,559 total reviews)
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Chuck Robbins

79% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

Cisco has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 33,559 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Cisco employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

34K reviews
2.0
29 Mar 2019

Avoid TAC at any cost!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Best place to learn networking technologies at a level that you won’t get anywhere else - Depending on which team/technology you support, the skills you obtained from here can take you to the next level level position at a lucrative salary elsewhere (yes, people from TAC have moved to companies like Amazon & Google, if that’s what interests you) - Colleagues are friendly, nice and supportive - Free exams when attempting for any Cisco certs, including CCIE - Many opportunities to move to a different team/technology within the TAC theatre but not so much outside TAC

Cons

- The salary in TAC is below par. Many times I have raised this issue to my direct managers & even to the higher bosses during skip-level meetings about considering to increase the overall pay across all grades but not a single cent has ever increased! Oh, and those eNPS survey as well. Not sure if the bosses who read the surveys ever showed some sympathy to the suffering TAC engineers - The kind of work you do in TAC is very narrow. You can be highly skilled in X technology but your knowledge in other technologies can be very poor (unless you have gained experience in these “other technologies” from your previous roles) - Favouritism! TAC has a funny system to get a payrise or a grade promotion because managers value you merely based upon what you have showed off to them or what they saw from the metrics/stats and not so much with the depth of the technical knowledge & experience you have gained over the years + the challenging issues you have resolved on your own + the number of times you have helped your colleagues with difficult cases. These are stuff the managers have failed to notice! Whoever read this may disagree but they disagreed because they never understood and they always thought they were right. This place can be awesome for newbies/grads because if they showed off their little contributions here and there, worked hard, stayed in the office after hours to either study or work on cases, and be nice to the managers, they will surely get the cool stuff, travel to other Cisco’s offices for BU rotations etc, and get promoted to the higher grade very quick even surpassing the salary of the seasoned TAC engineers - Politics everywhere! I have always wanted to stay in Cisco (outside TAC, of course) and I have applied for many other internal jobs before moving on. Of all those many internal positions I have applied, 95% of the time, I got NO interview invitations at all. Did my resume failed to impress the recruiter? Was there some kind of favouritism in other departments as well? Didn’t they like TAC engineers at all? Was there some kind of politics being played out? I don’t know the true answers but whatever the reasons are, it’s funny how I got an offer upon my very first external job application from one of the Big Four tech companies. Funny but this is the reality! - Constant & very high number of employee attritions due to the above reasons - High pressure work environment because you are basically a support engineer which means that you are there to resolve problems after problems, and for every customer, their problem is always urgent to be resolved. And because TAC always lack of engineers (due to constant resignations), it creates a constant burnout mentally & physically

1.0
3 Dec 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Everyone in the industry has worked at Cisco at same stage, so you may as well get it on your resume, just dont bank on having a career at Cisco. The day you sign at Cisco, start interviewing with other companies.

Cons

I worked at Cisco for 13 years in various departments and in various job roles: The facts toaday are: 1) Zero pay increases since 2000 2) No more stock options 3) During a career, your Job description may change, but this does not mean a saray increase or promotion, rather increased responsibility for no reward. 4) All perks which made Cisco fun, (International Travel, beers in fridge, tea coffee, home internet, parking) are gone. 5) Expense claiming is a nightmare and is continually audited over the most trivial items, resulting in employees being out of pocket for months. 6) All of the talented Engineers / sales staff have left so you will be pretty much on your own, dont expect to rub shoulders in the corridors with networking guru's as they have long gone. 7) Training assuming it is approved, as there are constant expenses freezes, is conducted inhouse. Typically one person gets to go, then has to train his peers. However the guys who give the training are inexperienced and just read powerpoint slides. 8) Sales targets are strictly managed, so there are no accelerators / bonuses. 9) It is extreemely competative between staff and very political, as all try to claimb the corporate ladder in the hope of achieving a payrise...which is noexistant. 10) Moral is depressed as most staff spend their time planning an escape. 11) Innovation has been replaced by acquisition, so dont plan on being creative. If you want to have sport with the Cisco person interviewing you, ask them how long they have been in the role and what their career prospect are like within Cisco :)

2.0
29 Nov 2016

Cisco in death spiral - ala Nortel, HP

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some good people and some interesting projects

Cons

Unclear corporate direction, poor executive management, pervasive Indian culture of mediocrity and nepotism, annual mega-layoffs, poor long-term prospects,

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