Cisco - Collaborating On New Product Introduction
Cisco - Collaborating On New Product Introduction
Cisco - Collaborating On New Product Introduction
Systems
Cisco Systems, Inc.: Collaborating On New
Product Introduction
Overview
On November 13, 2007, more than 100 employees of Cisco Systems,
Inc. assembled in classic Cisco fashion: they dialed in from multiple
locations around the world for an important meeting.
The purpose of the gathering was to get the green light from senior
management to manufacture a new high-end router that would make
the giant networking company more competitive in an age of surging
Internet traffic.
First, even though the project had been essentially re-started in mid-
2007, Cisco was still aiming to announce the machine in November
2008.
That would give it just a year to line up manufacturing, supply chain and
marketing arrangements—an unusually accelerated schedule.
Overview
Second, Cisco, which outsourced virtually all its manufacturing, wanted
to start making the high-end router immediately in a low-cost location:
China.
Could Cisco find ways to engage closely with Foxconn and mitigate the
risks?
The company was founded in 1984 by Len Bosack and Sandy Lerner, a
husband-wife duo of Stanford University computer specialists who
experimented with networking different buildings on campus.
Their work led to the creation of the “multi-protocol” router that enabled
disparate computer networks to talk to each other, in much the same
way as different telephone networks were linked.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Company Background
The company became the leader in selling networking gear to
corporations; it quickly expanded into sales to telecommunications and
broadband service providers and, later, to consumers.
At the helm was John T. Chambers, who became chief executive officer
in 1995 and went on to become one of the world’s most visible CEOs,
considered a tech visionary and management guru.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Company Background
Cisco enjoyed meteoric growth during the 1980s and 1990s.
Just eight and a half years later, its market value topped $100 billion,
reaching that mark faster than any company in history.
In March 2000, for a brief time during the Internet boom, Cisco became
the world’s most valuable company, with a market capitalization of more
than $500 billion.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Company Background
Even after the dot-com crash, the company grew at a healthy clip.
The company earned $7.3 billion on sales of $34.9 billion in fiscal 2007,
which ended July 28, 2007.
The business was organized into more than 40 business units, defined
roughly by product spaces, such as core routing, edge routing, access
routing or wireless networking.
The Bangalore center would develop new businesses and tap into
India’s technical brainpower. Cisco dispatched a senior executive from
San Jose to head the center in Bangalore and to serve as “chief
globalization officer” for the company. It was a step toward Chambers’
goal of locating 20 percent of Cisco’s top leadership outside the United
States by 2013, shifting the company toward globally distributed,
collaborative management.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Creating a Global, Flexible Supply Chain
By the early twenty-first century, virtually all of Cisco’s production was
done by contract manufacturers in their network of factories around the
world.
Cisco itself would add value by managing the supply chain and
focusing on product design and development.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Creating a Global, Flexible Supply Chain
As the outsourced model became more sophisticated, Cisco’s contract
manufacturing partners took on increased responsibility for components
planning and procurement, order scheduling, designing manufacturing
processes, and overall supply chain management.
In early 2001, Cisco had close to 1,500 suppliers and 80 percent of its
spending went to about 200 of them.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Creating a Global, Flexible Supply Chain
By late 2006, it had about 600 suppliers and 90 percent of spending
was with just 95 of them.
The changes made it less costly and simpler to manage suppliers and
also resulted in major cost savings on components.
Its Autotest system, for instance, captured real-time data from the
facilities of contract manufacturers, providing a “one window” view of
production lines around the world.
Indeed, the company brought more than 250 new products to market in
fiscal 2008.
The supply chain organization would work closely with the NPI team to
influence which technologies and suppliers Cisco would use in the new
product.
The “concept commit” gateway came at the beginning of the first stage,
after designers had brainstormed design ideas.
At this point, primary responsibility for the new product would shift to
manufacturing from engineering.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Innovating in New Product Introduction
Near the end of the execution phase came the “orderability” checkpoint,
which ensured that Cisco could hit the targeted ship date, meet the
expected ramp-up in demand, and that suppliers were lined up and
ready.
It was ready for release, meaning it could ship in the volumes and at
the quality levels required.
Cisco’s Track Record and Competencies –
Innovating in New Product Introduction
This stage included “first customer shipment,” or FCS, when the
product was released to one or more lead customers that typically had
given input on defining product features.
After FCS, there was another gateway, known as “time to quality and
volume,” or TTQV.
The team would discuss what had gone well or not so well, and how to
incorporate the successes and avoid the mistakes in future
development projects.
Viking Product and Market
The Viking router was four years and $200 million in the making. In late
2004, Cisco had started work on a router that would let broadband
service providers consolidate their data, voice, video and mobile traffic
in a single box.
But as Cisco worked with a few lead customers to define the product, it
became apparent that it would not meet the escalating needs of service
providers.
But the company did not change the original target launch date of
November 2008.
Only a year later, on November 11, 2008, Cisco unveiled a key addition
to its product portfolio:
When fully loaded, the machine could transmit 6.4 terabits of data per
second, enough capacity to deliver high-definition video streams to all
1.2 million homes in Los Angeles simultaneously.
This would achieve a new high point among routers of its class.
Viking Product and Market – Market Needs
The ASR 9000 represented a new generation of “edge” router.
The router would consolidate voice, data, video and mobile traffic into
larger data streams to feed into the core of service providers’ networks.
This was akin to a postal system with local post offices feeding central
sorting facilities.
Viking Product and Market – Market Needs
Carriers were seeking technology to help them cope with the flood of
traffic and to move Internet content to the network edge, where it would
be closer to users and thus more easily and quickly accessed.
The ASR 9000 would be a critical asset for Cisco in the charge to
expand the company’s presence and market share in this important
market.
Viking Product and Market – Market Needs
Cisco saw a major market transition happening as network traffic
soared, fueled by greater broadband access and increased use of
video technologies such as YouTube, high-definition television, movie
downloads and mobile video.
Carriers also wanted hardware and software features in the router that
would let them better manage their networks and offer customers
revenue-generating services, such as ad insertion.
Viking Product and Market – Product
Features and Positioning
The ASR 9000 could be configured and upgraded according to a
carrier’s needs.
The box would have up to eight slots inside for “line cards” or circuit
boards.
Viking Product and Market – Product
Features and Positioning
Each card would have “ports,” or connections, for plugging in cables
and handling data traffic.
Initially, each card could handle traffic at 80 gigabits per second (or 160
gigabits per second of full duplex traffic, which counted data sent and
received at the same time).
That would give carriers lots of room to expand in order to meet the
explosion in network traffic.
Its total capacity of 6.4 terabits per second would be about six times
greater than that of competing routers.
In late 2007, Juniper Networks Inc. and Alcatel-Lucent had newer edge
routers on the market than Cisco had.
Juniper had launched its MX960 machine in early 2007 and Alcatel had
introduced its 7750 router, the result of an acquisition, in 2003.
Viking Product and Market – Product
Features and Positioning
Cisco’s previous high-end edge router, the 7600, had been released in
2001.
Cisco’s 7600 router could process 720 gigabytes per second of traffic.
Viking Product and Market – Product
Features and Positioning
The ASR 9000 would be a successor to the 7600 router; it could be
used as either a replacement for it or a complement to it. It also could
help Cisco pull further ahead of Juniper in the edge router market.
If Cisco did not meet that demand within 12 months, it could lose
market share.
Viking Product and Market – Time-to-Market
Pressure
Recalling the urgency, Westhauser said: The explosion of video
happened faster than anyone could have expected due to the explosion
in traffic from YouTube, iPods and iTunes, and the extension of video-
on-demand downloads to the living room.
The upshot was that, after the Viking project was “reset” in November
2007, Cisco would have only one year to launch the beefed-up router.
This was much faster than the typical three to five years it took to
develop a high-end router for service providers.
Viking Product and Market – Cost Pressure
The Viking team faced huge cost pressures.
The Viking router would have to be very advanced but very cost-
effective to replace service provider equipment that already was fully
depreciated.
Viking Product and Market – Cost Pressure
“It was a very cost-challenged space,” according to Westhauser.
There were two specific challenges: keeping the machine’s cost per
port low and ensuring that carriers could upgrade by using line cards
with higher port count.
Early on, Cisco set targets for both cost per port and port density.
Viking Product and Market – Cost Pressure
These targets would be achieved through sound product design and
optimal supply chain arrangements.
The contract manufacturer would have to put all the pieces together
with the highest quality, reliability and on-time performance required in
the demanding service provider market.
Its objectives were to: 1) identify the market needs and define the
product features, including the price-performance balance; 2) produce
a design that met customer requirements; 3) design and set up the
optimal supply chain for cost-effective manufacturing; 4) take steps to
ensure success, such as doing extensive prototyping, testing and
debugging during the development process; 5) set up a marketing and
pricing plan that would ensure sales success and help meet financial
objectives for the product.
Facing The Viking Challenge
Throughout the process, close collaboration was imperative, both
inside and outside Cisco.
The NPI Metrics “to-do list” for Viking contained up to 325 tasks to be
completed over 12 major phases—from “concept commit” in June 2007
through “time to quality and volume” in May 2009.
Yet, Viking was not by any means Cisco’s largest development project.
Facing The Viking Challenge
That distinction belonged to Cisco’s CRS-1, a massive 92-terabit-per-
second core router launched in 2004 that took more than four years,
$500 million and 500 engineers to develop.
In fact, it was the early feedback from several lead customers that had
prompted Cisco in mid-2007 to revamp the project by sharply
increasing the proposed router’s capacity and speed.
We agreed to modify the product definition and the road map based
upon what their needs were, the idea being that if we partnered very
early, we'd not only get very candid and good feedback to product
development, but it would also help these customers and our mutual
relationship. And we really based the whole program of development on
that.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Early
Customer Engagement
Later, Cisco continued the tight relationship by giving key customers
sneak peeks at initial prototypes, as early as nine months before first
customer shipments were scheduled.
The lead customers also tried out and gave feedback on Viking
prototypes.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Building in a
Low-Cost Location
It became clear early on that the router would have to be built in a low-
cost, overseas location.
The team had weighed the benefits and risks of launching in China.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Building in a
Low-Cost Location
Cisco would get the benefit of low-cost production right away. Avoiding
a transition to another manufacturing site later on would save money,
time and effort.
The risk was that the Chinese factory might prove unable to handle the
router’s technical complexity or would fall short on the quality, reliability
and on-time delivery needed for a carrier-class product on which there
was virtually no room for error.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Selecting
Foxconn
In mid-November 2007, Cisco made a bold decision: it awarded the
Viking manufacturing job to Foxconn, a fast-growing contract
manufacturer with extensive operations in China.
In the past, Cisco’s high-end routers had been produced by its three
other major contract manufacturers—Flextronics, Jabil and Celestica.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Selecting
Foxconn
Foxconn had produced simpler, high-volume items for Cisco, such as
Voice-over-IP phones, desktop switches and wireless network routers.
Before officially awarding the Viking job, though, Cisco did a full
technical assessment of Foxconn and asked it to build and run dozens
of test circuit boards through its soldering, assembly and other key
processes to validate full capability.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Selecting
Foxconn
The result was that the Viking router would be built at Foxconn’s
massive, walled manufacturing site in Shenzhen, China, where less
complex Cisco products were made.
Leticia Jensen said, “Over the assessment period, we noted the high
executive level commitment, excellent team, and a demonstration of
processes and technical capability.
You find when you design processes, it’s harder to turn a Mercedes into
an entry-level Toyota than to turn an entry Toyota into a Lexus.
Mercedes has never been able to put out a low-cost car, but Toyota
was able to migrate from entry-level cars up to Lexus.”
Leticia Jensen said, “If Foxconn proved that they could manufacture
high-quality, high-end products, they would be another choice in our
portfolio. In the ideal supply chain, all our partners are capable of
manufacturing all our products.”
Facing The Viking Challenge – Viking Supply
Chain
But the trump card was Foxconn’s vertical integration.
Cisco liked the idea that many different pieces of the Viking
manufacturing could be done on a single campus in China, sometimes
in adjacent buildings.
A single site being accountable for all the major pieces of the supply
chain created an agile structure.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Viking Supply
Chain
The ability to react to market demand shifts with speed was very big for
us.”
This could sharply cut transportation costs and save days of shipping
time.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Foxconn’s
Vertical Integration
It could also reduce inventory needs and save money tied up in holding
inventory.
It’s the same campus. If there’s a problem, I can ask them to come over
to talk to us.
Cisco ran the risk of being overly dependent on a single supplier and
whatever financial and operational constraints it had.
This could present a higher risk for this product than if the supply chain
were fragmented.
Leticia Jensen noted, “The key mitigation to risk in this project was the
fact that both partners had a lot at stake.
But they were reviewed quarterly, with the possibility of terms being
renegotiated. In addition, Cisco did quarterly evaluations of its contract
manufacturers and their individual production sites, informing them of
how they scored relative to other contract manufacturers.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Ensuring
Success
Cisco’s NPI process required that steps be taken to reduce the risks
inherent in new product development.
Because Viking was a major and complex program, the team knew that
“risk mitigation” measures would be more crucial than ever.
Cisco engaged its Viking supply chain partners early on to help simplify
product design and manufacturing processes.
Compared with the 7600 router, the Viking machine had 16 percent
fewer mechanical parts, a greater amount of reusable hardware, and
shorter assembly times.
More than 100 prototype chassis were built and about 1,000 prototype
line cards were produced. The unusually large number of prototypes
was needed for distribution among the far-flung software and hardware
engineering teams that were working on Viking.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Collaborating
with Technology
The Viking project represented a major exercise in global, cross-
functional teamwork, supported by a host of technology tools.
Just within the engineering organization, five sites were involved: San
Jose; Research Triangle Park, North Carolina; Petaluma, California;
Boxborough, Massachusetts; and Bangalore, India.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Collaborating
with Technology
To keep development going on a compressed schedule, prototype
hardware had to be shipped continually by Federal Express among the
sites for engineers to work on.
In addition, there were four different sites working on software for the
router, presenting a challenge of getting “culture aligned,” he said.
How do you get people in San Jose helping someone in North Carolina
that might be falling behind?
Viking team members used Cisco’s NPI Metrics, a web-based tool that
provided a single view of timelines and tasks for the far-flung team.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Collaborating
with Technology
Once a week, project managers in San Jose ran meetings with multiple
Cisco sites participating by dialing in or videoconferencing.
In the last three months before product launch, the Viking team used
the difference in time zones across the globe to keep the work going
24/7 among seven locations—California, Massachusetts, North
Carolina, Bangalore, Shanghai, Malaysia and Shenzhen.
They held dial-in meetings three times a day, at 8 a.m., 2 p.m., and 8
p.m. California time, so that multiple sites could join in.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Collaborating
with Technology
They used a “wiki” web site to share and update information and to
hand off work daily between California and China. Westhauser
commented, “This was probably the most globally developed product
that Cisco has ever had.”
Early on, Cisco set targets for both. In addition, Cisco benchmarked
against prices competitors were charging and looked at historical
pricing data on its previous routers.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Marketing
Decisions
Cisco also wanted to ensure that the ASR 9000’s pricing would not
disrupt the company’s preexisting business selling the 7600 router.
Gibbs explained, “We have a very large, established business with the
(7600) platform.
There was a downloadable video showing off the router’s speed and
power.
Developed jointly with ad agency Ogilvy & Mather, the video evoked a
television ad for a luxury sports car.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Marketing
Decisions
Both the reporter’s blog and marketing video were posted on YouTube.
In addition, the company briefed 155 industry analysts and reached out
to business and trade journalists, resulting in more than 100 articles
following the ASR 9000 launch on November 11, 2008.
Facing The Viking Challenge – Marketing
Decisions
Commenting on the new-style marketing launch, Gibbs said, “We
realized there are a lot of different ways people get their information
now.
The Viking program would test Cisco’s NPI expertise as never before.