India is the 12th country, joining nations like the US, Mexico, China, Brazil and Malaysia, to house Cisco's manufacturing facility.
While the company did not disclose the investment details and number of jobs that will be created, it said the move will help further drive its strategy of having presence across development, sales and now manufacturing in India.
"India is a place where we invest across all aspects of our business and increasingly, we see a significant opportunity to look at new areas of innovation," Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins told PTI.
Cisco will use the India manufacturing operations to produce and ship orders for customers in India, as well as for testing, development, logistics, and in-house repair capabilities.
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"Typically, we start with a sub-set of products and that is what we will do here, so I think we are starting with routing and switching platforms and then we will continue to add more and more capabilities," he said.
"Over time, what we would like to see this becomes a hub for us to build products that are serving other countries in addition to India. We are starting with just providing for India," Robbins said.
India is one of the fastest growing markets for Cisco globally. With about 11,000 of its 73,000 people worldwide located in India, the country is the second largest site for the company.
With 20 per cent growth in its business here last year, the US-based firm is actively participating in various government initiatives like Digital India, Make in India and Skill India.
"We have partnered six countries (on digitisation) around the world and I would say India is one of the top two relative to our progress on a global basis... We lined up against the five big areas that the PM has -- Digital India, Make in India, Cyber security, smart cities and skilling and we created a set of efforts in all those areas," he said.
Cisco is also partnering Maharashtra government to roll
Robbins said Cisco is engaged in 14 smart city projects in India and sees huge potential in the segment.
Besides, it also plans to establish up to 25 Cisco Networking Academies in the state to train about 10,000 students by 2020. The skills-development programme helps students learn how to design, build, secure and maintain computer networks and prepare for jobs in the digital economy.
The company is also betting big on startups in India, allocating funds for entrepreneurs working on smart solutions.
Cisco is also collaborating on the state-wide rollout of broadband infrastructure to accelerate the Digital Maharashtra vision.