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David Goeckeler, who handled $34 billion of Cisco's $52 billion in annual sales, is taking the CEO job at Western Digital.
David Goeckeler, the executive in charge of the majority of Cisco's business, is leaving the company to take the CEO job at Western Digital, which makes infrastructure for data centers.
Figure 1: Goeckeler will become the CEO of Western Digital March 9.
(Source: Western Digital)
Goeckeler worked at Cisco for more than two decades, eventually taking over the company's Networking and Security Business, which comprises $34 billion of Cisco's $52 billion in annual sales. He's also credited with transitioning the company's business to a software- and recurring revenue-based model.
"We believe current Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins is well entrenched, thus Mr. Goeckeler needed to make an external move for a CEO seat. Western Digital, of course, plays in a market adjacent to Cisco's own," speculated the Wall Street analysts at Nomura's Instinet.
In order to plug the hole left by Goeckeler's departure, Cisco is reshuffling its leadership team. Todd Nightingale, who ran Cisco's Meraki unit, will take over the bulk of Goeckeler's duties at the company's Enterprise Networking and Cloud Business.
Jonathan Davidson will continue to oversee Cisco's service provider operation, though the unit is getting renamed from "Service Provider Business" to "Mass-Scale Infrastructure Group."
The analysts at Nomura's Instinet added that Eyal Dagan, who ran Cisco's ASIC group, will add the company's routing silicon operation to its Core Hardware Platform unit. And the firm said Sri Srinivasan (leading Cisco's Webex business) and Maria Martinez (overseeing the company's software, subscriptions and services operation) will also assume expanded roles.
As reported by CRN, Goeckeler's departure comes just months after Cisco combined its enterprise networking and data center networking units under Goeckeler.
In its most recent quarter, Cisco posted earnings and revenues that exceeded Wall Street's expectations. But the company's CEO said some of its customers are pausing to see what growth drivers they need to react to, and when they need to react.
— Mike Dano, Editorial Director, 5G & Mobile Strategies, Light Reading | @mikeddano
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