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By Julie Bort
Network World, 12/24/01

What one hand giveth, the other taketh away.

Cisco's perch atop our annual Powerometer ranking of most powerful network companies was short-lived. After handing the title to the router king for the first time last year, the 250 Network World readers polled for this sixth annual survey restored the honor to its near-perennial holder, Microsoft.

But the match was so close that if our survey were a football game, Microsoft's finish would have been the Hail Mary play of the week. The software maker scored 77.2 compared to Cisco's 77 - practically a tie. Yet even a virtual tie represents a significant loss of face for Cisco among users, while Microsoft's power remains steady. Last year, Cisco earned a Powerometer score of 81.5, compared with Microsoft's 77.5.




The change illustrates how Cisco, one of the emblems of the New Economy (in its peak and crash) is no longer viewed as invincible. While respondents acknowledged Cisco's weakened state in 2001, they said it will rebound: 52% predict the company's power will rise in 2002.

Up-and-comers such as Alcatel are quickly slipping into the space created by Cisco's power reduction. True, Alcatel and Cisco aren't in the same league - Alcatel only ranked 22 out of 25. But its almost 9% year-to-year increase was the biggest percentage jump on the survey.

Among telecom providers, AT&T landed first, at No. 8, down two notches from last year. Clearly, the carrier faces many challenges, including its inability to stop incumbent local exchange carriers from gaining long-distance nods.  Verizon, understandably, is gobbling up influence faster than a shark in a feeding frenzy. Its long-distance wins, charismatic leaders and enormous wireless reach helped it earn the survey's biggest leap in rank, a six-spot gain to No.12. (CEO Ivan Seidenberg made a huge leap up the CEO Powerometer ranks, too.) BellSouth also jumped the ranks - up four spots to No. 18 - in part because of its relative stability during these rocky telecom times (still in the black), and also from the noise it's making about long-distance, although it has yet to win any regulatory approvals.


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But long-distance isn't enough. SBC Communications, which offers long-distance in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, still slid five spots. Huge layoffs and the foundering, once-hyped DSL buildout, Project Pronto, contributed to its shrunken stature.

Also understandably, telecom equipment manufacturers tanked. Lucent, constantly troubled this year, lost the most influence. A 20% drop in its score sunk it 14 spots to No. 23. Nortel lost 11%, dropping four spots to No. 14.

But do-it-all hardware/software giants IBM and Hewlett-Packard fared well. IBM in particular rushed for big yardage. On the strength of its technology, IBM scampered up four spots to No. 4. Recently, readers named its WebSphere servers, collocation facilities and network-attached storage products best in class. And HP climbed to No. 9 from No. 11. Besting both in gain is Network Associates, leaping six spots to No. 10 on its strength in the white-hot security market.

Overall, despite the troubled economy, seven of the 25 Powerometer vendors gained power in 2001.

Related links

Vendor breaking news
Stay on top of the latest product and financial news on your vendors.

10 Most Powerful Companies in Networking for 2000
See who made the list last year and compare with this year's picks. Power Issue, 12/25/00

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The 10 most powerful companies in networking
2001 Company Powerometer: Cisco loses face
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How we did it
Powerometer chart: The most powerful companies
Power gainers and losers
Power in flux
2001 CEO Powerometer
Powerometer demographics

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