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Airbnb, a key player in the new sharing economy, has recently established the role of Chief Employee Experience Officer who oversees the company’s “workplace as an experience™”—and they’ve even trademarked it—who carefully orchestrates the physical, emotional, intellectual, virtual, and aspirational elements of the work experience to inspire employees. It’s been a big hit with employees, 90% of whom recommend Airbnb as a great place to work, according to an article in Forbes.

According to a 2015 healthcare industry analyst report, that field has established the role of Chief Experience Officer to elevate the patient and family care experience, restore joy to the practice of medicine for practitioners while still being able to reduce overall costs. A huge balancing act to be sure.

What if cities had a similar role? Let’s call it the “Chief City Experience Officer” or CCXO.

Imagine having a single individual responsible for creating memorable experiences for residents, visitors, businesses and even city employees…for identifying the important characteristics that make a city unique and seeing to it that the cultural elements necessary to support those characteristics are preserved. Where a Chief Innovation Officer (I’ve seen them called CINOs)—a role that has begun to surface in a number of cities—looks for the new, a CCXO is actually responsible for preserving what’s good about the old. She or he would identify and articulate the culture and soul of her city—its brand, if you will—and see to it that the city builds brand equity by establishing and protecting the very elements that resonate with residents, tourists and local businesses, as well as inspire the employees who run the city agencies and vertical industries to embrace a sense of city pride and reflect it in the way they fulfill their duties and provide services.

Experience-pic

A CCXO would need to be able to see across the various city vertical industries – transportation, lighting, water management, parking services, traffic control, etc., to build alliances and create positive experiences on a daily basis.

So how does that jive with the idea of the smart city? A city made more efficient by the use of technology. Well, as surprising as it might sound coming from a technology company executive, creating a smart city is more than just installing a bunch of hardware and software and calling it a day. When it comes to creating sustainable smart cities, we have to understand what makes a city unique, what makes it tick and makes people want to be there, so that becoming smart includes reinforcing and reflecting the city’s uniqueness rather than permitting it to become impersonal, homogenized.

It seems that a number of cities have begun thinking about how to balance the new with the old and I propose that more cities are going to come to this realization soon. It’s really the blend of art and science. And this may not, in fact, be an entirely new role. The same processes and outcomes—overseeing and assuring the urban experience—may already be the province of the mayor. In your city, who is responsible for the urban experience…is there someone?

At the New Cities Summit this week, the theme of Urban Tech prompted many conversations about technology, of course. But we also talked a lot about what else was necessary, in addition to the technology, to create a vibrant smart city. So for instance, there was a lot of discussion about mobility—self-driving cars, bike sharing, public transit, trains and how it all works together. But have we asked why we need to mobilize in the first place. Maybe we can rethink where we need to go and for what purpose—for work, for entertainment, for necessities, for carrying something or someone from one place to another. That perspective might really significantly change the entire mobility equation all together. Is there someone asking these questions and getting the answers they need?

We have to recognize that each city has its own rhythm, and we can’t forget that. If we don’t get that right, then it’s not really a smart city. How do you sense the rhythm and the soul of a city…understand what tourists and residents want…figure out the real starting point from which begin to add technology to support those elements…and in the least invasive way. You have to understand the communities within a city to understand the city.

Helsinki, the capital of Finland, could be on the right track. A city well on its way to creating an open and interactive city, it posted a call to fill a new position: Chief Design Officer. Though not exactly a City Experience Officer, this role would seem to reflect the city’s sensitivity to what it will take to keep a smart city going. They are seeking a professional with strategic expertise in service design, leadership in a broad operational environment and user-oriented development processes, an understanding of the public sector, excellent interaction and negotiation skills, ability to establish cooperation between internal and external stakeholder groups, diverse design knowledge, strong knowledge of international operations and networking and practical experience in change management, who can work in both Finnish and English. (If you think you’re what Helsinki needs, contact them here)

Suppose the role of Chief City Experience Officer existed in your city…what might that look like? Do you think it would make your city an even better place to live and work? I look forward to hearing your views…

Authors

Anil Menon

President

Smart+Connected Communities and Cisco Deputy Chief Globalisation Officer

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Today the International Trade Commission issued a Final Determination that Arista’s products infringe three Cisco patents. Two of the patents cover Cisco’s private VLAN network security technology which Arista included in its switches. The third covers Cisco’s proprietary core SysDB technology misappropriated by Arista, which Arista’s CEO has ironically referred to as Arista’s “secret sauce.” The case, known as “the ‘944 investigation,” is the first of two ITC investigations into Arista’s unlawful and unauthorized copying and use of Cisco’s proprietary, non-standardized switching technology. The Commission’s ruling affirms Administrative Law Judge Shaw’s 294-page Initial Determination, issued in early February. The Commission’s own full decision will be issued shortly. Arista insisted that large portions of Judge Shaw’s opinion be kept secret. Cisco is prepared to allow all but six lines of that opinion, which incorporate customer information, to be made public. We call on Arista to be honest with its shareholders and customers about the scope and intentionality of its misappropriation by allowing Judge Shaw’s opinion, and the ITC’s pending decision, to be made public.

This marks the end of Arista’s ability to mislead its shareholders and customers about the infringing nature of their products. The ITC remedies include an exclusion order, which would ban all Arista switches and their components from importation into the U.S., and a cease and desist blocking them from building infringing products in the US that are comprised of any imported components.

Arista has as much as acknowledged the infringement of the Private VLAN patents, announcing that they will discontinue the private VLAN feature “for now,” belying their claim that they had developed workarounds.  The remedies also include a cease and desist order prohibiting the marketing, sale, and distribution of infringing Arista switches in the U.S. These orders are scheduled to go into effect at the end of the Presidential Review Period on August 23, 2016. Arista made much of the fact that it had challenged the validity of Cisco’s patents. Arista did not challenge the validity of the Private VLAN patents, however, and the Patent and Trademark Office declined to institute review proceedings on six claims in the SysDB patent which the ITC found infringed.

We previously outlined Arista’s options after Judge Shaw issued his Initial Determination. Now that the Commission’s final ruling found Arista’s behavior unlawful, there are fewer options available. All of those options are ethically questionable and carry significantly more risk for customers, partners and vendors. Further, they will only serve as a brief, temporary delay, given that Arista’s copying has not been limited to just the patents in the ‘944 case. An additional ITC action is due for Initial Determination in late August and a District Court copyright infringement case set for trial in November.

Arista’s options are:

  • Attempt to evade the ITC orders by hiring a contract manufacturer to build in the U.S.:The ITC’s exclusion order extends to components used to make infringing Arista switches and the cease and desist order prohibits the promotion, sale and distribution of infringing switches. Encouraging contract manufacturers to circumvent these federal rulings by assembling infringing Arista switches using imported components will expose these manufacturers to claims of willful patent infringement in federal court. Such actions not only would violate the ITC orders, but the federal court has the authority to enjoin local manufacturing of infringing products.

Arista has acknowledged that this delay tactic will not remedy Arista’s infringing conduct: Arista’s CFO recently said that “Putting it in the U.S., in terms of litigation, does give us a little bit more flexibility on timing,” acknowledging “the strategy is still very much [that] we need to have design-around, so we need to get the design-arounds approved.”

The right thing for Arista to do is to stop using Cisco’s patented technology, not to find ways to ship products to U.S. customers that they know infringe Cisco patents. Just last August, the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in the Suprema case that programming or configuring an imported product to perform in an infringing manner is a violation of an ITC order, and subject to injunction and significant penalties.

  • Appeal to the Federal Circuit for a stay of the exclusion order: Stays of ITC exclusion orders during an appeal process are extremely rare. In the unlikely event a stay could be obtained, this delay tactic would continue to cause uncertainty for customers who were sold infringing products. It also increases the risk for those customers who are planning their future networking needs.
  • Attempt to evade transparent review of the claimed design around: Arista has had ample opportunity to present its promised redesign to the ITC, but has declined to do so. Arista later refused Cisco’s attempts to discuss the promised redesigned product. Now, faced with a final determination of infringement, Arista apparently intends to ask Customs and Border Protection to review its redesign in secret and without Cisco’s participation. We believe that any such review should be transparent and should continue to be conducted in a fair and open process in the ITC, where Arista has the burden of proof.

We welcome fair competition from Arista. Fair competition requires technical redesigns that the ITC determines no longer infringe. That, however, has not happened.

Arista’s copying has not been limited to the patents in the ‘944 case. In August, we expect an initial ruling regarding a different group of patents in the second ITC investigation (the ‘945 Investigation). In that case, the ITC Staff Attorney has recommended findings of infringement of two additional Cisco patents.  And in November, Arista faces trial on charges of patent and copyright infringement involving its use of Cisco’s proprietary interface and related materials.

We thank the Commission, Judge Shaw and the ITC staff for their diligence in this lengthy investigation. Cisco’s goal has always been to protect our innovation, and stop Arista from using our patented technology. If Arista wants to continue competing in this market, the ITC has ruled that they will need to do so without the use of stolen Cisco IP.

 

Authors

Mark Chandler

Retired | Executive Vice President

Chief Legal and Compliance Officer

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In order to be more responsive in a highly competitive marketplace, organizations are transforming to support the 21st century needs by being more agile and efficient in delivering centralized applications and services to a geographically distributed customer base. To accomplish these goals, organizations are consolidating data centers, adding virtualization technologies, and leveraging cloud architectures. These initiatives however, along with others, are imposing significant strain on storage networks. The following discusses how Krones uses Cisco technologies to improve storage infrastructure uptime, performance, and scalability.

Krones built scalable SAN using Cisco MDS  

KRONES AG, headquartered in Neutraubling, Germany, plans, develops, and builds manufacturing plants and machinery for companies that require advanced process, bottling, and packaging technology. The company produces the machines that make millions of bottles, cans, and specialty containers daily for producers of beer, soft drinks, wine, sparkling wine, spirits, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and cosmetics while accelerating mass production. It also provides logistics and IT solutions for its customers.

Krones

Krones’ manufacturing and services rely on three data centers to support business-critical production systems including SAP, databases, Microsoft Exchange, EMC storage, and VMware virtualization. Two data centers are deployed in an active-active configuration, and the third is used for control, backup, and recovery.

All three data centers connect over a Fibre Channel fabric. Krones has 1200 virtual machines and 200 physical servers, including Cisco UCS® servers in conjunction with EMC VPLEX virtualized, EMC VMAX, and EMC VNX hybrid flash storage.

During a typical day, the three facilities handle 3.5 petabytes of data and serve up to 13,000 users.

Business Challenge:

  • Improve virtual machine load balancing and performance
  • Reduce downtime due to high error rates and broken links
  • Gain SAN management self-sufficiency

Continue reading “Krones Optimizes Virtual Machine Load Balancing and SAN Performance”

Authors

Tony Antony

Marketing

Solutions

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Each week, the Cisco Government team is posting a #TransformationThursday blog where they will discuss digital transformation in cities, detailing storylines and examples with various social, environmental and economic outcomes. Join in the conversation as they take a candid look at digitization, capturing best practices and solutions to common challenges while preserving an approach that addresses each community’s specific wants and needs. Today’s topic features community learning and education, told by a truly passionate advocate for enabling students to learn without limits.

The times are changing and education needs to change as well. We need innovation. Today’s traditional classrooms are in the process of being drastically redefined. Innovative educational technologies reflect a better way to reach students and learners regardless of time or space, and the creative design of new technologies that promote engaged learning are arguably some of the most important advancements of the digital era.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qI_UEaPpDKw

Education and continued learning have an unmistakably essential role to play in shaping our future generations.The development of technology looks to address our changing social demands for how things like teaching and learning mechanisms are contemplated and perpetually evolved. 

However, it’s easy to forget that technology is just the vector, not the mission. We must first focus on the users, and what educational challenges they’re grappling with each day. To read more inspirational stories of those who are using technology in new and imaginative ways to help fix large-scale, global issues, go here.

Authors

Alexia Crossman

Senior Cross-Portfolio Messaging Manager

Cisco Marketing

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It’s an exciting time in the world of Geographic Information Systems (GIS). Whether you’re a utility looking to view your customer landscape to fix issues or analyze power consumption, or a manufacturer like Cisco looking to gain visibility into the supply chain, Esri can provide the visualization tools.

esri

At the last Esri User Conference Cisco and Esri announced the testing of ArcGIS Pro in virtualized environments. As Esri said last year, ArcGIS Pro virtualizes well. ArcGIS Pro also delivers a great interactive experience when working with 2D and 3D data.

Virtualization is a trend that is continuing to grow as more companies move from physical desktops to on-premise VDI environments and cloud-based Desktop as a Service (DaaS). Cisco is helping Esri preview the challenges that come up in this new environment so ArcGIS Pro can be deployed for a great user experience.

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ArcGIS Pro reinvents desktop GIS with Cisco And Esri

What does this all mean? Well, the Cisco virtualization of graphics (working with NVIDIA GPUs) means that engineers don’t have to wait around for seven hours in order to do 10 minutes of work to download design data on a new vehicle design (a quote from a major automotive manufacturer at a recent conference). Power utilities can be more responsive with greater visibility. It also means a great user experience for other Esri users viewing GIS data.

At the Esri User Conference there will be ample time to discuss with Cisco Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) these topics:

  • How Esri and Cisco are working together to improve the user experience. Esri and Cisco are exploring ways that will provide this new virtualized environment easily to users.
  • How Industries such as power utilities and manufacturing are benefiting from a secure scaleable environment that can be provisioned in minutes, not hours or days. Cisco UCS allows for consumption of location intelligence and spatial analytics from Esri anytime, anywhere and from any device.
  • How we enable Smart City solutions that empower both government and the private sector to work together to provide improved services and greater responsiveness to citizens.

Have we intrigued you?  Then “come on down” to the Cisco sponsored ‘Startup Zone’. Cisco is sponsoring the ‘Zone’ to help bring you 25 presentations in a dedicated demo theater, and 10 Startup session presentations in industry focused tracks. Of course, we’re there too, talking about Industrial applications, Smart Cities and the new virtualization paradigm.

By the way, did I tell you we’ll be giving away ‘selfie-sticks’. Yes, we will be, it’s true! Come on by to see how you could get one!

I’m looking forward to our conversations in San Diego at the Esri User Conference. Find us in the lounge area of the Startup Zone – that’s Booth UNB2.

Here’s the last Esri Conference News about Cisco and Esri if you missed it: A World of New Possibilities with ArcGIS Pro and Cisco Systems

Finally, to find out how Cisco and our partners can help you, go to Cisco Energy, Cisco Manufacturing, and Cisco Smart Cities.

From the Cisco-Esri team to you – safe travels and a great conference!

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Authors

Peter Granger

Senior Sales Transformation Manager

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Time to Cut the Cord:

Sometimes it’s hard to let go. Whether it is a favorite toy as a child or that beloved outfit that will never go out of style (although it definitely has), it’s a challenge to push beyond the familiar comfort of the status quo.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qI_UEaPpDKw

The times are changing and education needs to change as well. We need innovation. Today’s traditional classroom is in the process of being drastically redefined. Innovative educational technologies might represent a completely new way of teaching, or it can reflect a better way to reach students and learners regardless of time or space. The creative design of new technologies and media that deliver powerful teaching and promote engaged learning are arguably some of the most important advancements of the digital era. Education and continued learning have the unmistakably essential role to play in shaping our future generations.

Success Stories:

The development of technology looks to address our changing social demands for how things like teaching and learning mechanisms are contemplated and perpetually evolved. However, it’s easy to forget that technology is just the vector, not the mission. We must first focus on the users, and what educational challenges they’re grappling with each day.

As rapid connectivity takes hold, communities must first and foremost address and solve the issues of bridging the digital inequality gap. For education, that means providing and/or enabling learning tools for those of any age, any socioeconomic background, in any location and at any time.

Let’s then consider both physical and network connectivity. Connected transportation solutions for education are providing the option for a mobile platform to bring critical connectivity to underserved or remote areas, ensuring equitable learning opportunities. Schools are already beginning to experiment with strategically parking buses in particular locations to allow groups of students and parents to access web resources. Howe Public Schools took a different route (pun intended) with live video monitoring on buses to keep students safer, Wi-Fi accessibility in-transit for access to the school network and online courses for ongoing study, and GPS monitoring on the fleet of buses for telematics and location management. In the process, saving time, cutting costs, extending the learning environment, and keeping students and faculty safer.

Next, let’s look at a traditionally structured learning environment. In the middle of Norway’s second largest city, Bergen University College sought to optimize the physical space available to them while improving the productivity and campus experience for both students and faculty. By providing fast reliable Wi-Fi and tools to guide students and visitors around campus, students and teachers have more time together, campus mobility is much less stressful, and the university finds it easier to attract the best educators and students.

Next Up in #TransformationThursday Series:

Stay tuned for next week’s post to discover more information about community safety and security. And be sure to check back each week as we discuss digital transformation in cities, detailing storylines and examples with various social, environmental and economic outcomes.

We’d also love for you to be a part of the conversation by using the hashtag #TransformationThursday and by following @CiscoGovt on Twitter.

And for more information and additional examples, visit our smart cities on Cisco.com.

Authors

Lyanne Paustenbach

No Longer with Cisco

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10078_Consistency_256

If you’re like me, you don’t like to mix things. The components for my home theater are the same. My tablet, cell phone and laptop all run the same OS. I don’t even like Neapolitan ice cream. Some might think I’m boring, but I prefer orderly.

Your network is made up of Cisco products, so why are you thinking about buying network security from a company other than Cisco? Cisco offers Identity Services Engine (ISE), which was recently awarded with SC Magazine’s 2016 Best Network Access Control (NAC) Solution Award.

Cisco ISE is now offering an Express License Bundle specifically tailored for small- and medium-sized businesses that want enterprise-class security. Cisco’s security solution encompasses: hotspot, sponsored and self-registration portals as well as RADIUS authentication, authorization and accounting for 150 endpoints, which can easily be upgraded to support up to 5k endpoints. ISE Express also comes with a virtual machine license and unlimited access to the ISE portal builder

ISE Express is easy to use because it allows you to control all access through the network from one place, stops threats from getting on your network and provides rich user and device data. Besides its unmatched scalability, ISE Express beats the competition in things such as:

  • Guest services. It’s easy to deploy and comes with a detailed dynamic guest workflow. Other solutions charge extra for guest customization services – not Cisco!
  • Enabled Smart Default. This feature encompasses IP-Phone policies, multiple guest access methods, blacklisting, wired and wireless and more.
  • TrustSec: This provides software-defined segmentation to dynamically enforce role-based access policy throughout the network.
  • Better third party support.
  • Extensive troubleshooting capabilities.

To read more about Cisco ISE Express, click here.

Authors

Dan Stotts

Former Product Marketing Manager, Cisco

Security Product Marketing Organization

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In a world of roboadvisors, mobile payment apps, and automated processes, do people still matter in banking?

I believe the answer is a resounding “Yes!”

In fact, as agile, online “fintechs” continue to challenge retail banks, I see people as more of an advantage than ever. After all, those online-only disruptors can’t match banks for the level of personalized expertise and advice they can offer on a wide range of products and services.

But in order to make their people a true differentiator — in the branch and beyond — banks need to use them correctly. That means being more digitized, not less. Moreover, banks need to transform fast, given the pace of industry disruption.

The key is finding that sweet spot where digital and humans meet, and everyone — customers and employees — benefits.

This is supported by a new Cisco study, “A Roadmap to Digital Value in Retail Banking.” It shows how digital technologies in retail banking are driving $405 billion in Digital Value at Stake between 2015 and 2017.

In 2015, however, financial services organizations captured only 29 percent of that value. How can banks realize their share of that value, before their competitors — new and old — grab it first?

Our study focused on a number of key digital use cases that drive more than 90 percent of the total value opportunity. By assessing and implementing the use cases that best align with their desired business outcomes — after first ensuring a solid foundation of cybersecurity — each bank can begin to follow its own path to new value.

What are the most important use cases? For retail banks, they are sales and services transformation, next-generation workers, and video advice — all of which depend on, you guessed it, people.

For people to drive innovation and better customer interactions, however, they need to be empowered. That requires workforce transformation, supported by real-time data insights, collaboration tools, video, and other technologies. In addition, automated processes must free bank employees from the kinds of manual, time-consuming tasks that sap their energy and creativity.

Let’s look at a few banks that excel in empowering their people:

  • Raiffeisen Bank is a leader in the Eastern European market. In recent years, it transformed its customer-facing activities and call center with new collaboration tools, unified communications, and automation. As a result, customer-facing teams are more efficient: self-service options have eliminated 15,000 incoming calls a month, while 80 percent of calls are now answered within 20 seconds.
  • Australia’s Westpac needed a solution to connect its far-flung branches with its expert advisors. In particular, the bank wanted to offer financial advice tailored to the needs of small businesses. In 2015, the bank rolled out video-conferencing solutions in 25 branches, and plans to expand the technologies elsewhere. By connecting small-business owners with experts in other branches, the bank can now serve more customers with more timely advice than ever before.
  • State Bank of India was concerned with reaching its increasingly young and digitally savvy customer base. The bank created SBIInTouch, a new type of digital-banking branch, mostly located in urban areas. The small branches include digital kiosks that feature interactive screens and video. Remote experts can connect “face-to-face” with more customers than ever to share advice on managing their portfolios and selecting the products that best meet their needs.

Automation? I’m all in favor of it. Digitization? It’s transforming the world in amazing ways.

But at the end of the day, the real question is “how are they benefiting people?” Smart banks will ensure that their customers and employees are getting the most out of new technologies.

That will enable them to thrive in complex, challenging environments and drive their own disruption — as their people innovate and interact in exciting new ways.

By integrating the digital and physical worlds, I see banks creating a value prop that the fintechs can’t match. The key is placing people at the center.

 

Authors

Chris White

Senior Vice President

IoT Global Sales

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When you start an internship, or really anything new, it’s a little weird.  Add to the mix that Cisco is full of incredible minds who are moving at a lightening pace, and it may be slightly earth-shattering to come to the realization that you’re not performing the way you want to. Interns come in, bright eyes, shoes shined and ready to take on the world, and then…suddenly you feel about as useful as a parka in Florida…in July.

Let’s face it, it’s hard to accept that you’re not perfect, especially when it feels like everyone around you is. (Reality check: they’re not. Whew!)

From there, it’s easy for your insecurities to grow because of an overwhelming feeling of an underwhelming performance. We feel this way despite the truth that most everyone in the office has probably felt the same exact way you do right now.

Real talk, in my first few weeks at Cisco, I struggled with feeling imperfect and I let that mindset psyche me out.  It was hard to come from a familiar place of rainbows and unicorns, of confidence and comfort, to suddenly not be able to set up a meeting correctly or use WebEx.

Self-doubt and insecurities grew as the first weeks wore on, and my world came to a screeching halt as my over-achieving ways and reality were at constant war with the parts of myself that I would have liked to keep hidden. The reality that I was not perfect nor ever going to be perfect set in and reality took a baseball bat to my fragile dreams and bright eyes.

My shoes might have been scuffed, but it gave me time to gain some perspective on how imperfection helps reveal things to you that you may not have realized before.

This obviously isn’t an ideal scenario, but psyching myself out needed to stop.

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Here are 4 things that I’ve realized so far on my journey:

  1. You’re not going to be perfect the first time you try something.  That’s okay, just don’t try sky diving. Everyone that I’ve admitted imperfection to has told me that it’s okay and completely normal. Really. No one has fired me or made me sit facing the corner alone. Feeling uncomfortable about not being “at your best” can be a sign that you’re out of your comfort zone, and that’s great – especially here at Cisco.  Being out of your comfort zone is where growth happens and if an internship isn’t about experience and growing, I’m not sure what it’s supposed to be about. Cisco wants you to grow and to thrive and most times, they’re the ones gently pushing you out of your comfort zone. This means that you might mess up, but at Cisco? That’s fine. Making mistakes enables us to work on how we can prevent ourselves and others from doing the same thing, and work on ways to make the process better.
  1. Your imperfection can and will enable your team to function the way it’s meant to and will lower the risk of embarrassment later. Asking a question doesn’t mean that people will automatically assume you’re an ignoramus. I repeat, asking a question does not mean that people will assume that you are an ignoramus. Rather, it gives your team the chance to be the team they’re meant to be. A team, your team, THE team makes up for where someone is weak or still learning so that you can be stronger together. My team at Cisco has been there for every question, for every trip up and for all my imperfections and at the same time they’ve inspired me to pick myself up and do better next time. Inflecting your voice to insinuate a question mark doesn’t make you weak, it makes you strong, and it means you’re smart enough to find an answer before it’s too late.
  1. Get out of your own head. Imperfection and nerves are part of the process. Just don’t forget to expect great things afterwards. As I mentioned before, it’s easy to psyche yourself out. Stop. Get back in the game. You’re great and capable and important and smart. Whether getting back in the game means asking a question that you think is dumb, or accidentally spilling coffee, don’t sweat it. Thomas Edison is known for the invention of the lightbulb, and although some report that he “failed” 1,000 times, he claims that the lightbulb was just an invention that had 1,000 steps. So that question you’re afraid to ask? Ask it. It could lead to an innovative change in the status quo. That coffee you spilled? Maybe the shape of the stain forms the next multi-million dollar idea that Cisco has. You never know. Realize that it’s okay to be imperfect, and sometimes, your imperfection might just lead to something great. It’s just another step. Be okay with it. We are all going to mess up. What you do afterwards is what counts.
  1. It gets better. Relax – you’ve got this. The response and support I’ve gotten from my team, the people that I have worked with as well as my fellow interns have been more than I could have asked for. They’ve not only encouraged me and followed up with me, but have reminded me that my journey isn’t over in the best ways possible. My identity is not “weak”, my name is not “mess-up” and I will be stronger for having survived my mistakes, burn marks on my hand and all.  According to Winston Churchill, “Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts.”

In the days ahead, I will probably feel less than perfect but this time — it’ll be okay. I realize that I’m being stretched, I’m being challenged, and because of that I’m also growing; and it’s never been a better time for that.

 

Want to join a team that helps you to grow? We’re hiring!

Authors

Ruth Huang

Intern

Communications and Marketing