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Cisco Plan Will Create 360,000 Network Engineers In India
The five-year strategy builds on Cisco's $1.1 billion investments in Indian ventures in recent years.
By Mary Hayes Weier
InformationWeek, NY
February 4, 2008 11:31 AM
Cisco (NSDQ: CSCO) released on Monday its plan to help India increase its number of networking engineers from about 60,000 today to 360,000 in five years. The plan entails, of course, training and certifying those engineers on Cisco technologies.
Cisco says it has established partnerships and is opening testing facilities to meet that workforce goal. Two of India's largest tech training organizations, IIHT (Indian Institute of Hardware Technology) and NIIT (National Institute of Information Technology), have become certified for training on Cisco technologies. Those organizations and another, Global Knowledge and Training Partner Ltd., have begun Cisco training and certification from 200 locations in India.
Another Cisco partner in India, Pearson VUE, says it will add 150 testing facilities for Cisco certification by the end of the year, including several mobile testing centers to reach engineers in rural areas. Pearson VUE is requiring centers to adopt "increased security measures in order to safeguard the value of IT certifications."
"With these initiatives in place, we are able to ensure that our customers and partners have the resources available to train and equip the thousands of motivated students in India with the knowledge and skills necessary to shape the country's burgeoning information economy," said Leo Scrivner, VP of human resources for Cisco Services & Globalisation Centre East, in a prepared statement.
Cisco inaugurated a new development center in Bangalore last October, and has spent more than $1.1 billion in Indian ventures in recent years, said a Cisco spokesman. A year ago, Cisco announced plans to triple its India-based workforce from 2,000 to 6,000 employees within several years. To support that growth, the company's chief globalization officer, Wim Elfrink, who reports to CEO John Chambers, relocated from the United States to Bangalore last year.
The five-year strategy builds on Cisco's $1.1 billion investments in Indian ventures in recent years.
By Mary Hayes Weier
InformationWeek, NY
February 4, 2008 11:31 AM
Cisco (NSDQ: CSCO) released on Monday its plan to help India increase its number of networking engineers from about 60,000 today to 360,000 in five years. The plan entails, of course, training and certifying those engineers on Cisco technologies.
Cisco says it has established partnerships and is opening testing facilities to meet that workforce goal. Two of India's largest tech training organizations, IIHT (Indian Institute of Hardware Technology) and NIIT (National Institute of Information Technology), have become certified for training on Cisco technologies. Those organizations and another, Global Knowledge and Training Partner Ltd., have begun Cisco training and certification from 200 locations in India.
Another Cisco partner in India, Pearson VUE, says it will add 150 testing facilities for Cisco certification by the end of the year, including several mobile testing centers to reach engineers in rural areas. Pearson VUE is requiring centers to adopt "increased security measures in order to safeguard the value of IT certifications."
"With these initiatives in place, we are able to ensure that our customers and partners have the resources available to train and equip the thousands of motivated students in India with the knowledge and skills necessary to shape the country's burgeoning information economy," said Leo Scrivner, VP of human resources for Cisco Services & Globalisation Centre East, in a prepared statement.
Cisco inaugurated a new development center in Bangalore last October, and has spent more than $1.1 billion in Indian ventures in recent years, said a Cisco spokesman. A year ago, Cisco announced plans to triple its India-based workforce from 2,000 to 6,000 employees within several years. To support that growth, the company's chief globalization officer, Wim Elfrink, who reports to CEO John Chambers, relocated from the United States to Bangalore last year.