Somehow Cisco forgot it is also employees and their families that are invested in the company.
+1
I agree with @1aln that annual LR's is now the new norm. But if companies continue to let older employees go because they are "expensive" and replace them with younger, less experienced and therefor less expensive employees, Cisco will no longer lead.
Morale will tank (like it already has) and employees will no longer go above and beyond to innovate and make the company succeed. It will become a clock-watching do-the-bare-minimum, learn-all-I-can-before-I'm-cut-or-quit transitional staff and nothing will get done in the months following each LR as the people who got stuff done are gone and the few remaining who know how to get stuff done are busy trying to get the new red-badges up-to-speed. And if they're disgruntled, they won't teach them all the stuff they know and precious knowledge will walk out the door over time.
I know for a fact that my team had several back-end jobs/processes that only a couple of people knew about. They're gone now. When the host that runs those jobs gets replaced, if someone doesn't make sure that the cron jobs that ran the processes gets moved to the new host then suddenly all that data collection will stop. Too many times, we've forgotten about them, stuff like cron jobs were not backed up, and we had to re-create them. But now the people who knew what needed to be gone are done. If we had a hard time, I'd hate to think how difficult it will be for someone who has no experience with what the back-end job was even doing or how it did it because "it just worked" and no one thought about it for several years.
I had no incentive to document that stuff, and if I did have it documented, who's to say that the documentation can be found given all the transition from wikicentral to Web-Ex Social to ciscowiki? Hell, half my links were dead/obsolete before I was let go back in Sep and I lost a lot of useful data because the data owner didn't migrate it from one system to the next.