Cisco began its acquisition spree in 1993 with the purchase of Crescendo Communications Inc. (Cisco, 1993). The purpose of this acquisition was to acquire a product that Cisco's customers wanted, but that Cisco did not at the time provide. Over the rest of the 1990s, Cisco focused on that type of expansion, totaling 71 acquisitions and a massive growth in the size of the company both in terms of revenue and employees (Ibid).
The company was driven to make these acquisitions because it wanted to serve its major customers better. Cisco was selling to firms like Ford and Boeing, and it was under pressure to add new products to its lineup in order to meet their needs. Acquiring companies that already had those products was seen by Cisco management as the quickest way to meet this market need to hold competitors at bay. The initial acquisitions were made in this ad hoc fashion, as needed, without any coherent plan.
As acquisitions were clearly becoming a major part of the company's strategy, Cisco sought to develop a set of acquisition criteria to guide the acquisition process in a more strategic manner. The company built the strategy around the need for speed -- once a target was identified, Cisco wanted to buy it and begin the integration process quickly in order to minimize the risk to the company that was associated with a long integration process and slower response time to customer needs.
Q2. There were five key elements to the acquisition strategy, according to Singh and Chaudhuri (2008). The first element was that "the target and Cisco share a compatible vision of the future from both an industry and product perspective." This is important because Cisco values a rapid integration process for new acquisitions. If there are major issues with respect to vision, then this integration process will not be possible.
The second element is "The acquisition will produce a quick win for Cisco shareholders, preferably within 12 months of purchase." This falls under the 'obvious' category because no company wants to make acquisitions that are detrimental to its own interests. The key here is that Cisco sees this element as orienting it towards acquiring companies for which it has an immediate use or need. The Crescendo acquisition is...
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