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By Jeff
Caruso
Network World,
12/24/01
It
was May 2000, and Mario Mazzola was counting the days
to his retirement. His co-workers had thrown a retirement
party for him. Cisco had issued a press release three
months earlier, stating he would be "sorely missed"
as senior vice president of the network giant's enterprise
line of business.
Mazzola had been instrumental
in building that business to the point where Cisco fully dominated the enterprise
market, with a large base of loyal customers. All it had to do was continue
milking the cash cow. At 54, Mazzola figured he could go out on top, and do
what so many dream about: Spend more time with his family.
Then he brought the youngest
of his three children, Francesca, to the office as part of a bring-your-child-to-work
day, and she observed that her father was well-liked and well-respected at
Cisco. "Everybody knows you," she said to him. "Why do you
want to leave?"
Mazzola didn't have
a good answer. He already had doubts about retiring, as he realized that engineering
was in his blood. If not working with other engineers to build something useful
and valuable - well, what exactly would he do with his time?
So he stayed, serving as
senior vice president of new business ventures until he became chief development
officer earlier this year following Cisco's reorganization into 11 major
technology groups. In this capacity, he coordinates development efforts across
all groups.
It's a new kind of
role for Mazzola, where he has to find synergies across a broad product line
and direct the massive development resources available to Cisco. In the past,
he had been comfortable leading smaller teams working in smaller markets.
"It's easier to build something from scratch, rather than work
with existing business situations," he says. But given his experience,
co-workers agree he's the right man for the job.
From Sicily to
the Silicon Valley
Born in the Calabria region
of Italy and raised in Sicily, Mazzola's first engineering job was at
Olivetti in the 1970s, helping to design CPUs and storage subsystems. Partnerships
with Intel and others brought him to Silicon Valley, where he and some peers
got the idea to combine voice and data on the same infrastructure. With backing
from Olivetti and venture capital firms, Mazzola co-founded David Systems
in 1982 to pursue that goal - one that companies are still working toward
today. "It was a little bit premature," he admits.
He left in 1990 to start
and head Crescendo Communications, a LAN switching company that developed
an encoding scheme later used as the base for Fast Ethernet and for transmitting
FDDI over copper.
Crescendo attracted the
attention of Cisco, which in 1993 was looking to expand beyond its router
heritage into the fast-growing area of LAN switching. Cisco told the company
it saw LAN switching as a potential core technology - and the two companies
could work together or compete. The $93 million purchase of Crescendo was
the first of many acquisitions Cisco would make over the next eight years.
For Mazzola, accepting
the offer was a bit of a leap of faith. He received assurances that his team
would have a good deal of latitude to build the LAN switch business within
Cisco. He insisted that Crescendo's 62 employees keep their jobs at
Cisco for at least two years. Mazzola's commitment to his employees
is a hallmark of his character, and co-workers say they regard him as a friend
as well as a manager.
But ultimately, it was
still difficult to give up his baby, recalls longtime co-worker Jayshree Ullal,
vice president of Cisco's optical network group. "There was an
emotional feeling of loss, even though logically we knew it made sense for
both Crescendo and Cisco," she says.
A Catalyst for
LAN switching
Guided by thorough market
research and a pragmatic approach to technology, Mazzola helped build the
Catalyst family of switches into a powerhouse. He did so in part by championing
the acquisitions of other companies, including Kalpana, Grand Junction and
Granite Systems. Without falling in love with a technology for its own sake,
Mazzola can spot opportunities, says Charles Giancarlo, senior vice president
and general manager of technology development at Cisco. For example, Mazzola
saw that the Catalyst 6500 could be used not only for enterprise backbones,
but also for service providers, data centers and wiring closets.
This pragmatism will serve
him well in his new role. Mazzola now has the power to change, duplicate or
cross-purpose development efforts and to fill the gaps in integration across
product lines that resulted from Cisco's acquisition-heavy strategy.
"Developing new technologies, products and solutions has always been
a passion for me," he says.
Just don't tell him
it's time to retire.
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