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Rock Your Mocs

Yá’át’ééh (Hello in Navajo).

November in the U.S. is known for many things – sweater weather, gaining an extra hour of sleep, spending time with family or football.

November is also nationally known as Native American Heritage Month – a month commemorating Native American culture by celebrating and educating others on Native food, dances and ceremonies. There are 562 federally recognized tribes and over 50 state recognized in North America. Every single tribe has their own culture, but powwows are a way for all Native people to celebrate together and gather among all nations.

I am half Native American, proudly from the Navajo nation. My culture has shaped me into the woman I am today. My mom was born and raised on the reservation and I’ve spent many summers and winters visiting.

As part of Native American Heritage month, the week of November 9 is a national campaign #RockyourMocs. It’s a fun way, as Native people, to celebrate our culture worldwide while recognizing our Tribal individuality.

Natives wear their moccasins – Native American footwear worn both in historical and modern times, to school or work. I am celebrating #RockYourMocs by wearing my favorite pair of moccasins to work during the week! I have many pairs of moccasins, some for powwows, some for my traditional wear in special events. I mainly wear moccasins during powwows, but it will be fun to wear them around Cisco!

There are so many reasons why I am proud to be Native American. My culture has defined who I am. It has given me a deep appreciation to live simply and celebrate life in its smallest moments, many of our songs, stories and poems recite this.

I learned to respect my ancestors for the opportunities they fought for and respect my elders for all their teachings. I’ve carried these cultural beliefs in all walks of my life, even at Cisco!

Native American DanceI love expressing myself through dancing. I am a woman’s fancy shawl dancer. It is the most athletic dance for Native women in the powwow circuit. Ladies wear their shawl over their shoulders as they mimic butterflies in flight. I’ve traveled across the US to participate and compete in powwows. I’ve been honored as head lady dancer, an honor where you are asked by a respected tribal member to lead all dances.

During my time here at Cisco, I have felt completely open to talking to others about my culture. I’ve expressed interest in starting a Native American network group and have received incredibly positive feedback and support. Many non-Natives have expressed interest in joining because they simply want to learn more about my culture, and that truly makes me feel welcomed.

This month, Cisco is partnering with organizations such as North Carolina State University, which has a strong Native American presence and student-led organizations, to spread the National campaign #RockYourMocs. North Carolina State University is hosting an event to learn more about traditional Native American clothing and opportunity to make your own pair of moccasins.

Later this month, Cisco is partnering with a Native American Sorority, Sigma Omicron Epsilon, to create and learn more about the historical significance of dreamcatchers in Native American culture.

#IChooseCisco because I am able to express myself here. Cisco encourages diversity and has made me feel welcome. There is a popular Navajo saying that expresses as we travel through life, we walk in beauty that is within and around us;

“With beauty before me, may I walk; with beauty behind me, may I walk; with beauty above me, may I walk; with beauty below me, may I walk; with beauty all around me, may I walk. Wandering on a trail of beauty, lively, I walk.”

Hágoónee (“okay”, or “alright then”) is used for parting. There is no word in Navajo for goodbye. So I’ll sign off this blog this way. If you are interested in learning more, feel free to comment below!

If you’re interested in joining Cisco, visit our Careers site!

Authors

Sabrina Ahmed

HR Project Specialist

Talent Acquisition

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#CiscoChampion Radio is a podcast series by Cisco Champions as technologists. Today we’re talking about ACI and OpenStack with Cisco Technical Marketing Engineer, Lauren Malhoit.

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Cisco SME
Lauren Malhoit, Technical Marketing Engineer

Cisco Champion Guest Hosts
Hal Rottenberg (@halr9000) Developer Evangelist at Splunk
Raymond Hicks (@raymhicks) Founder of 5thColumn

Moderator
Lauren Friedman (@lauren)

Continue reading “#CiscoChampion Radio S2|Ep 42: ACI and OpenStack”

Authors

Lindsay Hamilton

Social Media Blog Program Manager

Global Social Media Marketing

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I thought I’d point out some new page designs on Cisco.com that should make it easier to find and understand information about solutions from Cisco. First, there’s the new main Solutions page, which is a one-stop starting point:

Solutions-11-2015

(Note that we’re trying out different versions of this page, so the version you see may differ slightly.)

You’ll also start to see some rich pages with extensive details on specific solutions, tying together products, services and more. A great example of this is the Cisco Unified Access solution page:

Cisco-Unified-Access

(We’ve blurred some of the content at the bottom, because it’s just available to Partners and select others. But it shows how a good design can support specific personalized and entitled views. We’ve been following this entitled approach regularly in product and solution areas, because it means we can offer extra information to specific audiences, without going the old fashioned route of building and maintaining separate microsites.)

Nice work by our design, publishing, and content teams!

Authors

Martin Hardee

Director, Cisco.com

Cisco.com

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Today, industries are colliding and recombining in new ways. These collisions are yielding new competitive forms.

A new paper from the Global Center for Digital Business Transformation (DBT Center), a joint initiative between IMD and Cisco, calls this ‘Value Vampires’ and ‘Value Vacancies.’

Value vampires are companies whose competitive advantage actually shrinks overall market size. These are not garden-variety disruptors that simply take market share from incumbents. Rather, their success leads to a decline in total market revenues or profits—or both. Value vampires create enormous value for customers, combining lower costs with better experiences, but they have the potential to drain their respective markets of revenue and profitability.

Perhaps the most striking example of the value vampire phenomenon has occurred in the recorded music industry, which hit its peak in value in 1999, with $28.6 billion in global revenue. The seeds of disruption had been sown with the advent of the compact disc (CD), which put studio-quality digital files in the hands of everyday consumers. All that was missing to catalyze the reaction was a format that could take that digital file, replicate it, and make it easy to distribute. Enter the MP3 format, which took the large amount of data from the CD, compressed it, and made it transferable. Then along came Napster, a file-sharing service launched in 1999 that enabled consumers to download music for free, and to share their music collection with others. Today, recording industry executives and musicians alike are still struggling to develop new business models to help them retain what value is left in the music industry.

Music Disruption v2.1 Mike Riegel

Continue reading “Digital Agility Can Save Your Organization From Disruption”

Authors

Michael Riegel

Vice President

Industries, Platforms, and Services Marketing

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Each year more than 160,000 students enroll in the Cisco Networking Academy in North America alone. As a former academy instructor myself, and now a freelance technical trainer, I’m extremely interested in mentoring and learning opportunities that become available for up and coming network engineers, and this year something ‘new’ caught my attention. I was out in San Diego this summer at Cisco Live 2015, and while engaged in the social media aspect of the event, I noticed a new hash tag #CLDreamTeam. What was this? The Dream Team? Never heard of it. So I started to dig, and what I’ve learned is fascinating! Continue reading “Cisco Networking Academy Dream Team”

Authors

Josh Kittle

Senior System Engineer

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On August 19th twelve delegates came into Cisco for a deep dive session on multiple topics including IWAN Policy Automation and IWAN Application Visibility and Protection. This session is known as Networking Field Day where bloggers, speakers, podcasters, and influential leaders come into Cisco for a 2 hour session and ask questions to our speakers throughout presentations on exciting Cisco technologies.

Jeff Reed, VP of Network Transformation, kicked off #NFD10 by introducing Cisco’s approach to Software Define WAN (SD-WAN) for the Enterprises. Sumanth Kakaraparthi, Product Manager for Platform Routing, and Pedro Leonardo, Product Manager in Networking Transformation for Enterprise Management and Controller, then continued to dive into Zero-Touch Deployment. For more information on those sessions, click here: Networking Field Day 10 Recap – Introduction to SD-WAN and Zero Touch Deployment

Sumanth and Pedro continued with a deep dive into IWAN Policy Automation, where they explain how Cisco moves away from feature level configuration to business policy configuration.

Here are some questions that were asked Continue reading “Networking Field Day 10 Recap 2 – Deep Dive into IWAN Policy Automation along with Application Visibility and Protecti …”

Authors

Breana Jordan

Product Marketing Specialist

Products and Solutions Marketing

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In June, we announced that Cisco was recognized by Infonetics Research as a Leader in the Policy Management scorecard, based on feedback from service provider customers, vendor market share, market share momentum, financials, brand recognition, reputation for innovation, and other benchmarks.Leadership_10NOV2015

One area of strength highlighted in the scorecard was Continue reading “Expanding on Cisco’s Leadership in Policy Management”

Authors

Maywun Wong

Manager, Market Management

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We’re moving.

After twenty-five years in the same house, my wife and I will soon be living in a new place.

Moving isn’t fun. It’s not just leaving the home where we raised our two boys, but getting rid of all our unneeded items. We’re not hoarders or packrats, but it’s downright astonishing how much stuff (I won’t use the word junk) we gathered over the years.

beverly hillbillies

Businesses can be like that, too, can’t they? Continue reading “Declutter For Your Customers”

Authors

Jeff Campbell

No Longer with Cisco

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Co-authored with Dani Schrakamp

Good for Citizens, Good for Government

Fast. Reliable. Easy to use. As a consumer, this is what I have come to expect from the technology that I use.

Many companies work hard to meet – and exceed – consumers’ technological demands. But in the new digital age in which we live, technology is advancing into all areas of our lives, from transportation to retail to healthcare, and forming a transcendent bond between our physical and digital worlds. As technology crosses into new realms, governments, cities, and countries are being digitized at an increasing pace, and citizens expect the same speed, reliability, and simplicity in these governmental technological advances.

Countries and communities around the world have a responsibility to meet the expectations of their citizens – but their digitization also provides a unique opportunity to position their nations for economic success. In fact, according to research conducted by McKinsey, “digitization of the public sector could free up to $1 trillion annually in economic value worldwide, through improved cost and operational performance.” But what does it mean for a country to ‘digitize’? Cisco defines the process as building a sophisticated technology ecosystem that will allow for greater connectivity, productivity, and security. Sounds like a fantastic idea, no? But how exactly can countries get to this higher ‘digitized’ state of being?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=10O1xcvHlPE

Unlock the Door to Digital Success

In this week’s post, our digital citizen is a renowned business leader tasked with fostering public-private sector partnership initiatives for country digitization efforts. Many countries are making impressive strides in this area. But two countries in particular stand out as the perfect locations for piloting the citizen’s program: France and Israel.

Continue reading “#WednesdayWalkabout Series: Public-Private Partnership is King”

Authors

Cristina Marcolin

Marketing Director

EMEAR South Theatre