At a time when most tech companies are hiring workers, Cisco Systems is about to pare its workforce. And according to some analysts, those layoffs could be significant.
During a May 11 conference call to discuss quarterly financial numbers, both Cisco Chairman and CEO John Chambers and COO Gary Moore said job cuts were on the way as the networking giant tries to get back on solid footing after several disappointing quarters.
Neither would say how many of Cisco’s 73,400-plus employees would lose their jobs, but both made clear that such cuts were going to play a key role in the company’s efforts to pare $1 billion from its operating expenses this year.
However, four analysts contacted by Reuters said the figure could be as high as 4,000, with the average being around 3,000. Some of that will include an early retirement plan the company has instituted, as well as attrition, but many will be straight layoffs. That would be more than the 2,000 jobs Cisco cut in 2002, after the Internet bubble burst.
However, not all analysts believe the job cuts will be as steep. Shaw Wu, an analyst with Sterne, Agee and Leach, told Bloomberg that he expects layoffs to be in the “low thousands.”
“Nothing that would be … huge,” Wu told Bloomberg. “It seems like more streamlining.”
Chambers during the May 11 call said Cisco will dial down or exit underperforming businesses over the next few months, which will account for many of the layoffs. Soon after Chambers sent out a memo to employees in April saying that Cisco had lost its way and that changes would be made, Cisco revamped its consumer products business, which included shuttering its popular Flip video camera line. That move led to about 550 layoffs.
Earlier this month, Cisco announced a reorganization of its sales, services and management units, including reducing the number of management councils from nine to three.
For more, read the eWEEK article: Cisco Job Cuts Could Be Huge, Analysts Warn: Report.