Cisco’s Top Execs On Plans To Aggressively Grow Subscriptions By 2025
Cisco has been on a mission to become a software company in recent years and the tech giant is now aiming for sales from subscriptions to make up half of its revenue by fiscal 2025. Here‘s what Cisco’s CEO, CFO, and executive leadership team said about its plans to further subscriptions.
All Eyes On Subscriptions
Cisco Systems announced its plans to become a software-first company in 2017 and during its most recent Investor Day this week, the tech giant made good on its promises.
Cisco finished its 2021 fiscal year (July 31) with 31 percent of revenues coming from software and subscriptions accounting for 79 percent of software revenues, exceeding Cisco‘s target of generating two-thirds of its revenue from subscriptions. Software and service revenue also exceeded Cisco’s target of 50 percent of total revenue, hitting 53 percent at the end of its most recent fiscal year. Those numbers prove that Cisco is now one of the biggest software providers in the world, the company‘s executive leadership team announced during Investor Day 2021.
But subscriptions are just as important as software – the two go hand-in-hand, according to Cisco. In fact, Cisco is now aiming for sales from subscriptions to make up half of its revenue by fiscal 2025, and partners are a huge part of the equation to reach that goal.
Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins and CFO Scott Herren took to the virtual stage this week, flanked by their peers on the executive leadership team, to talk about the importance of subscriptions and what Cisco is doing to further its strategy. Here‘s what the leaders had to say.
Chuck Robbins, Cisco CEO
On Cisco's software and subscription pivot
“This journey that we‘ve been on to continue to increase our subscription software inside our business – when I took over, we had $3.4 billion in subscription software. We exited last year at almost $12 billion. So, the team did an amazing job. Eighty-one percent of our software is now sold as a subscription, as opposed to, I think it was 40 percent back in 2015.”
“I think it‘s [about] sticking with this multi-year technology strategy and continuing to push the business transformation that we’ve been pushing.”
Scott Herren, Cisco CFO
On disciplined financial management through subscriptions
“I think what‘s impressive is … the amount of [Cisco’s] software revenue that is subscription-based. It more than tripled [since FY 2015]. It went from about 40 percent of our software revenues that were subscription based to 79 percent in the [fiscal] year we just closed. A significant amount of progress, not just in driving more software revenue, but driving more of it from subscription.”
“[I plan to] continue that disciplined financial management and operating efficiency that Cisco has become known for. We‘ve built that skill set. It’s not going to change. I want to maximize the value we create through the course of this transformation by building the amount of subscription and recurring revenue we have, that you can then renew next year, and [stack] new sales on top of that, which not only creates greater revenue growth and greater cash flow growth, it [also] gives us greater visibility and there’s less volatility in our results.”
Liz Centoni, Chief Strategy Officer and GM, Applications
On the availability of subscriptions
“Customers want to deliver a cloud experience across a hybrid, multi-cloud world. [They want to] simplify and automate operations, reduce complexity, and have it delivered as a service and managed as a subscription … As users’ devices, applications, and data continues to be more distributed, customers are looking to address a variety of tradeoffs around cost latency, performance, data, sovereignty, globalization, and availability. And they‘re looking to do all of this with a flexible consumption model, and have solutions delivered as a service and through subscription.”
“We‘re a sizable software company. Our subscription business continues to grow, and hence, so does our predictable revenue, and every part from portfolio – not just software – is available and will be available as a service as long as our customers want to consume it that way.”
Gerri Elliott, EVP, Chief Customer and Partner Officer
On growing through Flexibility
“While growth is the primary goal, how we grow is just as important. We have to continue the transformation journey we‘re on, we need to accelerate our recurring software business, we need to provide flexibility and choice into our offerings and meet the buyers where they are.”
“Every customer, regardless of where they sit in the organization, has three things when they‘re considering new technology: quality, of course, that’s job number one. But they also want a simple, flexible way to buy and consume. And they want to realize the most value in the least amount of time.”
Todd Nightingale, EVP, GM, Enterprise Networking and Cloud
On subscription momentum in Cisco's core networking business
“All of these [technology and buying] transitions are driving momentum for Cisco and we‘re feeling that in our networking business. We’ve seen double-digit growth [in fiscal Q4 2021] in our core enterprise networking space, and that’s a really remarkable result for Cisco. The core enterprise networking business is being transformed more and more to a software business. We saw 29 percent of the [networking] business has been transformed to software and two-thirds of that software are now in subscriptions. We’re seeing it not just in our collaboration or security business, we’re seeing in our core networking business. We have huge momentum that is propelling us and will continue to propel us in the future with a million customers as well as 330 million networking devices. That’s an enormous installed base and it represents an enormous opportunity for us.”