Morgan Teachworth

SVP, Cisco Wireless & Meraki Hardware

Morgan Teachworth is an SVP in the Common Hardware Group (CHG) responsible for leading hardware and supply chain for Cisco’s wireless and Meraki portfolio. He assumed this role in December 2022. Prior to that, he was the VP of hardware and supply chain for Cisco Meraki.

Morgan came to Cisco in 2012 via the Meraki acquisition, where he was one of the founding engineers. Prior to Meraki, he was a design engineer at Nvidia. Morgan has more than 20 years of experience in a hyper growth environment, delivering simple and secure hardware solutions in support of cloud-first initiatives. This includes the architecture, design, manufacturing, monitoring, maintenance, and shipping of products.

Morgan has received several awards including Red Dot, Spark Product, IDSA, Good Design, European Product Design, IDA Design, iF Design and A’ Design. He also holds a bachelor’s degree in science (B.S.) with a major in electrical engineering and minor in mechanical engineering from Stanford University and completed an executive program through the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Morgan Teachworth is an SVP in the Common Hardware Group (CHG) responsible for leading hardware and supply chain for Cisco’s wireless and Meraki portfolio. He assumed this role in December 2022. Prior to that, he was the VP of hardware and supply chain for Cisco Meraki.

Morgan came to Cisco in 2012 via the Meraki acquisition, where he was one of the founding engineers. Prior to Meraki, he was a design engineer at Nvidia. Morgan has more than 20 years of experience in a hyper growth environment, delivering simple and secure hardware solutions in support of cloud-first initiatives. This includes the architecture, design, manufacturing, monitoring, maintenance, and shipping of products.

Morgan has received several awards including Red Dot, Spark Product, IDSA, Good Design, European Product Design, IDA Design, iF Design and A’ Design. He also holds a bachelor’s degree in science (B.S.) with a major in electrical engineering and minor in mechanical engineering from Stanford University and completed an executive program through the Stanford Graduate School of Business.