Cisco Systems rolls out AI agents to 90,000 employees starting July
The networking giant is betting big on agentic AI across its entire workforce, with AI infrastructure orders already past $2 billion
Cisco is putting AI agents in the hands of every single one of its roughly 90,000 employees starting in July. The rollout represents one of the largest enterprise-wide agentic AI deployments to date, and it’s coming from a company that spent decades building the pipes of the internet before pivoting hard into the pipes of the AI economy.
CFO Mark Patterson, who stepped into the role in July 2025, framed the moment in characteristically dramatic fashion.
“AI is the most significant technology transition that we’ve seen in probably our lifetime, and I think Cisco was right at the heart of it.”
Patterson has spent 26 years at Cisco.
What Cisco is actually building
The internal AI agent deployment is part of a broader “agentic” platform strategy that Cisco unveiled at its Cisco Live 2026 event in June. The centerpiece is something called Cisco Cloud Control, a unified platform designed to let human operators and AI agents collaborate on managing critical IT infrastructure.
The platform also includes what Cisco calls Agentic SOC capabilities: AI agents that can assist security operations centers by triaging alerts, investigating threats, and recommending responses.
Cisco is also weaving in its Splunk acquisition to boost visibility across the stack. Splunk’s observability tools, combined with agentic AI, give Cisco a play that few competitors can match: the ability to monitor, diagnose, and act on infrastructure problems at scale, with minimal human intervention.
The numbers behind the bet
Cisco’s AI infrastructure orders have already surpassed $2 billion as of late 2025, driven by demand from both hyperscalers and enterprises building out their AI capabilities.
The company’s fiscal year 2026 outlook for AI infrastructure revenue sits at approximately $9 billion. For context, Cisco’s total revenue for fiscal 2024 was around $53 billion.
Why crypto and blockchain watchers should pay attention
Cisco has a documented history with blockchain technology, including published whitepapers on blockchain applications in supply chain management and a portfolio of blockchain-related patents.
No specific cryptocurrencies or tokens are tied to the current AI agent rollout. But the intersection of agentic AI and blockchain is a space that Cisco has been quietly exploring, particularly around confidential computing and establishing trust in digital assets.