Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins framed the networking giant’s future around what he termed the “agentic AI revolution” during his Cisco Live 2025 keynote, declaring this transition more consequential than the 1990s internet boom while revealing sweeping infrastructure partnerships and security upgrades.
“This is perhaps the most important Cisco Live I have ever been to,” Robbins said, acknowledging his team’s tendency to make similar claims annually before adding, “but this year, we mean it.” The CEO pointed to the flurry of product announcements as evidence, describing them as “the most [innovation] we have delivered here at Cisco Live in my career.”
The address revealed startling data about corporate AI readiness. According to Cisco’s internal surveys, 98 per cent of attendees feel “extreme urgency” to implement AI solutions, with 85 per cent believing they must act within 18 months.
Yet Robbins conceded that “very few of you feel truly prepared” for this transition, which has rapidly evolved from basic chatbots to systems where “we are talking about how we manage the workforce, humans and agents.”
At the heart of Cisco’s strategy lies what Cisco chief called “the fusion of security into the network” to support AI infrastructure. He repeatedly emphasised networking’s renewed centrality, noting that 97 per cent of customers consider modern networks “critical” for AI adoption.
In a reversal of cloud-first dogma, the top executive said, “Private data centres are back.” Enterprises now seek a “balanced hybrid approach,” blending public clouds with edge-based AI models.
“Smaller models running at the edge” will demand reinvented infrastructure, he said, nodding to lingering scepticism: “Years ago, someone asked, ‘What if no one buys another Ethernet port?’ They were crazy.”
The Cisco chief detailed three primary focus areas for the company’s AI push. First, the company unveiled expanded collaborations with Nvidia including a “Secure AI Factory” solution for AI workload deployment. Second, workplace modernisation efforts featured Wi-Fi 7 integrations and new Nexus 9300 switches with data processing units. Third, security upgrades showcased deeper integration of Splunk’s analytics platform following its $28 billion acquisition last year.
“We have to scale machines to fight threats, not people,” Robbins said when discussing AI-powered cybersecurity tools demonstrated at the recent RSA Conference. He noted that less than half of organisations understand AI-related risks, calling this awareness gap particularly dangerous when dealing with autonomous AI systems.
Geopolitical tensions emerged as a recurring theme. “Your CEOs… they are worried about safety and security, but they are also just as worried about having one of their competitors move faster,” Robbins observed.
He positioned the San Jose-headquartered firm as uniquely capable of bridging networking and security needs, claiming “none of our networking friends have security [and] none of our security friends have networking.”
Reflecting on responsible AI development, he said that it should be built with integrity. “You have to build it with integrity and you have to build it with a consideration for humanity,” Robbins said, framing trust as the ultimate competitive differentiator. “The future with AI won’t be a straight path. It’ll twist, it’ll turn, it will zig then zag.”
Cisco’s ambitious repositioning from traditional networking hardware provider to AI infrastructure architect comes as competitors like Juniper Networks and Hewlett Packard Enterprise intensify their own AI-focused offerings in the enterprise technology market.

