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To: Zoltan! who wrote (34161)4/19/2000 1:55:00 AM
From: JRH  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 77400
 

Cisco boosts telecommunications strategy with SBC pact

yahoo.cnet.com

By Ben Heskett
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
April 18, 2000, 9:00 p.m. PT

Cisco Systems will gain a strong endorsement from a local phone company tomorrow, striking a multibillion-dollar alliance with
SBC Communications for a variety of Internet equipment.

The alliance is significant for both companies. Cisco is focusing its sales efforts on telecommunications carriers, hoping to gain a larger
share of a market with annual sales of more than $50 billion. SBC, on the other hand, has found its business driven by Internet-based data,
not voice communications.

Terms of the non-exclusive, two-year marketing and sales deal were not disclosed, but SBC executives said it
represented a "multibillion-dollar opportunity for both companies." SBC launched a $6 billion effort called Project
Pronto intended to improve its high-speed Net strategy last fall.

"It's good news for Cisco," said Hilary Mine, analyst with industry consultants Probe Research. "It doesn't mean
Lucent and Nortel won't get multibillion-dollar deals, but it's a significant foot in the door."

Cisco built its business by providing equipment for corporations and early entrants in the Internet service provider
market. The company has extended that focus in recent years to include traditional telecommunications
companies, such as Sprint, and a new breed of start-up carriers, such as Qwest Communications International.

Cisco has had a tougher time making inroads into the networks of the local phone companies, or "Baby Bells." The
company includes US West and GTE among its customers, but it has yet to displace the significant investments
the Baby Bells have made in equipment from telecommunications equipment veterans such as Lucent
Technologies and Nortel Networks.

Thus, the SBC deal could represent an opportunity for Cisco to extend its current commitment to help SBC build its
voice and Internet-based data networks.

"We view this as an important milestone," said Larry Lang, vice president of service provider marketing for Cisco.

Terms of the deal cover several of Cisco's data and Internet equipment technologies, including high-speed digital
subscriber line (DSL) Net access and gateway gear, switching devices based on asynchronous transfer mode
(ATM), dial-up access equipment, and virtual private network (VPN) technology.

One Wall Street analyst said the deal will probably be a blow to Newbridge Networks, which already has a
relationship with SBC and was recently acquired by Alcatel.

Niche player Redback Networks also counts SBC as a customer for its high-speed access subscriber
management technology, much of which is based on DSL.

Executives at the company said their sales to SBC are not affected by its deal with Cisco. "It's an expanding relationship going forward,"
said Randall Kruep, senior vice president of worldwide sales for Redback.

SBC executives said the Cisco deal does not shut out its other technology providers. "We have relationships with every other major player
(in the industry)," said Tom McGrath, president of SBC's DataComm business.

SBC is the largest reseller of Cisco equipment to third parties and a significant user of Cisco technology internally, according to the
company. SBC's DataComm business had about $3 billion in sales for its most recent fiscal year, according to executives, and is expected
to double in three years.