Cisco reviews

4.1

82% would recommend to a friend

(33,623 total reviews)
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Chuck Robbins

78% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

Cisco has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 33,623 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 Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

34K reviews
1.0
Sep 27, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

work life balance better benefits 401k match

Cons

job performance/skillset is not relevant engineers treated as house servants get attacked if you don't attack others(jungle culture) finger-pointing/self-promotion the normal way of life no risk taking in management/project decisions too many non-technical mid-level management layers cheap treatments to employees financially no career path or education/training opp.

2.0
Apr 1, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Make your own hours Some flexibility in work location (work from home, remotely, but this is a double edged sword) Financially sound with diverse portfolio of products and services, able to endure tough times better than many other companies

Cons

Engineers are viewed and treated as a commodity, not as the engine of product development. Career growth is non-existent. There is no benefit to moving within the company because you can't get a promotion or raise even if you get hired for a position that is a higher grade level. Your direct manager has no say in your evaluation rating, it is all rolled up to executive levels who arbitrarily rank order you. Cisco loves to talk about hiring the top 5% of talent, then they want to compensate them at the 70th percentile (if that), and not recognize their efforts. This causes low morale and limits the effort that people are willing to put into their work. If everyone in the company is top 5% of talent, why do the rankings have to fit an arbitrary bell-curve distribution. Isn't it possible that you have a high performing organization because they are all top talent? Cisco wants their employees to work like it is a start-up, i.e. lots of hours, however, there are no start-up type benefits. Individual contributors don't get stock (but execs get lots), there is no career advancement (see point 2). Why should I bust my ass for no reward. Cisco wants you to be "happy you still have a job" in the current environment and they manage by fear. Apple employees are asked to work like it is a start-up, but they still get broad based stock grants. Cisco talked a good game about open communication and transparency, but when an exec was asked in an all-hands how many VPs and Directors were impacted by the "limited restructuring" (i.e. lay-off) of 3-5% of the company, the response was "we're not going to talk about that" Cisco likes to think of itself as a family, however, when members of the "family" were going to be laid-off if they couldn't find another job in the company, they didn't even get interviews for open positions that matched their skill sets.

1.0
Dec 7, 2009

Cisco 2."NO"

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great company to gain experience from. Very stable if you are not interested in upper mobility. Basically you can trust that your salary will be paid, while your responsibilities will increase every year (but not your pay)

Cons

In the last 8 years the company has become a political minefield, where powerpoint presentations and endless meetings are killing creativity. With frozen salaries, no stock options and limited bonuses, it has becomed a me too company.

Viewing 184 - 186 of 33,623 Reviews

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