John Chambers provides rich evidence of the way Cisco Systems has leveraged its core philosophy into a durable high tech success story. Chambersâ basics: catching market transitions; supply an educated workforce capable of teamwork; providing the appropriate infrastructure; and supportive government. If youâre in business, working this wisdom into a viable marketplace plan âis like a multidimensional chess game,â according to Chambers. Only the paranoid survive, and Ciscoâs top 10 network IT competitors from a decade ago are gone, he says. A decade ago, Cisco was imagining a future where there would be âaccess anywhere anytime via any device,â so, says Chambers, âwe werenât just going to build routers and switches, but went into storage, wireless, and security.â Cisco also determined to be driven by the customer, because âif you listen to customers in the right way, theyâll tell you what market transitions are going on.âChambers describes how two Cisco clients suggested 12 years ago that a ânew technology called fast Ethernet was the futureâ for networking â spurring Ciscoâs move to acquire, and then dominate that technology. âIf we canât be number one or two in an industry segment, we donât enter it,â he says. But Chambers sees major stumbling blocks ahead: âWeâre not providing the educational foundation for innovationâ in this country, he says, nor the technological infrastructure. âWeâre falling behind in research and we need to provide a welcome mat and âplease stayâ environment to students from around the world.â He warns, âIâm proud to be an American company but my jobs will go wherever the best infrastructure, innovation and supportive government is.â