Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Corning NY specialty glass and optical fiber (NYSE: GLW); upgraded Springboard plan $4B+ incremental sales by 2026 (20% op margin), 30% CAGR optical fiber for AI data centers, Gorilla Glass, competing with Prysmian and AGC.
Corning Incorporated is a Corning, New York-based specialty glass, ceramics, and optical physics company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: GLW) as an S&P 500 Information Technology component — manufacturing optical fiber and cable (Optical Communications), display glass for LCD and OLED panels (Display Technologies), pharmaceutical glass packaging (Life Sciences), automotive emissions control substrate (Environmental Technologies), and Gorilla Glass for consumer electronics devices (Specialty Materials) through approximately 50,000 employees in 31 countries. In its upgraded "Springboard" growth plan, Corning set a target to add more than $4 billion in annualized sales (upgraded from the original $3 billion target) and achieve a 20% operating margin by end of 2026, with three primary drivers: 30% CAGR growth in the Optical Communications Enterprise segment serving AI data center connectivity, solar glass wafer revenue growth to $2.5 billion by 2028 (supplying advanced glass substrates for solar panels), and display glass pricing actions reflecting supply-demand rebalancing. The AI data center connectivity tailwind has accelerated Corning's optical communications growth — hyperscalers building out AI compute clusters (tens of thousands of GPU servers interconnected with high-bandwidth fiber networks) are driving demand for Corning's fiber optic cable products at unprecedented rates. CEO Wendell Weeks, who has led Corning since 2005, has managed the company through multiple technology transition cycles from CRT glass to LCD glass to fiber optics.
San Jose enterprise networking and security (NASDAQ: CSCO) at ~$57B annual revenue; $28B Splunk acquisition completed March 2024 integrating SIEM/SOAR with Cisco Security Cloud competing with Palo Alto Networks for enterprise cybersecurity.
Cisco Systems Inc. is a San Jose, California-based global technology conglomerate — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: CSCO) as a Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 component — generating approximately $57 billion in annual revenue and employing 86,000+ employees across 150+ countries, operating as the world's leading enterprise networking equipment manufacturer and an expanding cybersecurity and observability platform following the $28 billion acquisition of Splunk (completed March 2024, Cisco's largest-ever acquisition). Cisco's product portfolio spans networking (Catalyst switches, ASR routers, Meraki cloud-managed networking), security (Duo MFA, Cisco Firepower, Umbrella DNS security, SecureX XDR), collaboration (Webex conferencing, Webex Calling), data center (Nexus switches, UCS servers, HyperFlex HCI), and observability (Splunk SIEM/SOAR, AppDynamics APM, ThousandEyes network intelligence). CEO Chuck Robbins has led the company since 2015. Founded 1984 by Stanford computer scientists Leonard Bosack and Sandy Lerner.
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