I was at Cisco for around 10 years and left of my own accord several years ago (not part of a LR/ER.). I was an IC at Cisco, but I’m now a manager and spend a lot of time evaluating candidates (and talking to other managers about their candidates.)
I just have a few observations for my former colleagues:
1) There is life after Cisco, and it can be really good. While there are certainly people out there that don’t want ex-Cisco employees to join their company, in my experience they are in the minority.
2) Nobody likes a naysayer. There is always a lot of bitterness in these forums, which is understandable, but check it at the door. I always tell people I enjoyed my time at Cisco, worked with some great people, and don’t have anything bad to say about the place and just leave it at that. 9.5 times out of 10 they don’t ask for any detail beyond that.
3) Focus on the good aspects of Cisco’s culture (even if it was in the distant past) when you reflect on what value you can add to a new employer... Customer focus, hard work/entrepreneurial mindset, teamwork and winning together. That’s the stuff people care about.
4) Once you get your next job, forget about Cisco. Don’t think about and don’t talk about it. A lot of ex-Cisco people seem to focus a lot on Cisco, place an outsize sense of important on its activities and politics/what they heard from their buddies on LinkedIn. A) Nobody cares and it’s boring and b) it is a total waste of your mental effort. This one may sound a little strange, but I’ve seen it over and over again, like people are brainwashed or something.
If this stuff sounds obvious, well, I guess it is, but I see it over and over again...
Anyway, keep your chin up — I know you can do great things with the right attitude. Lot’s of ex-Cisco people are out there living the dream, making the same or better money, with 1/10th of the politics and stress.