QuickStudy: Competitive Intelligence
Everybody working in the competitive intelligence (CI) arena can tell a story about being asked over cocktails if they are just corporate spies.
But there isn't really any cloak and dagger, even though the field has attracted a few former members of the CIA.
"I have a CIA background, and that's the best school for training in intelligence, so it makes it a little bit hard to tell people that CI isn't spying," says Ken Sawka, vice president of consulting at Fuld & Co., one of the most prominent CI consultancies, in Cambridge, Mass. "But I make it clear that you don't do wiretapping or paying off sources, and a CI professional mainly assesses the external impact on a business decision."
Not Spying
So if CI isn't spying, what is it, other than watching competitors and government regulators who might make a move that could cripple a company?
CI has developed in recent years in many Fortune 1,000 companies as a line of business activity, sometimes as a central unit of researchers with marketing or accounting expertise who advise top management. It can also involve heads of business units that meet regularly.
CI professionals gather data and analyze it using many software tools and systems on the market. But they also interpret the data for upper management, affecting decisions about, for example, whether to withdraw a product dominated by a competitor or to close a plant that produces products that aren't expected to be profitable.
At all stages in the CI game, the information technology department is vital, helping coordinate information gathered from voice mail or e-mail systems, storing it and organizing it, and helping business units move it around for human analysis, analysts say.
IT workers "can contribute significantly to the CI effort by gathering information on competitors when they interact with other IT people at conferences," says analyst Helen P. Burwell, president of Burwell Enterprises Inc. in Dallas. "And a company's information technology can have a great impact on how they perform."
Analysts urge IT leaders to get involved at the ground level when a company creates a CI unit to help assess software tools and decide which budget the tools will be paid from. IT managers are also vital to protecting security by helping create rights and firewalls to determine who has access to CI, analysts add.
CI Projects
Analysts say IT departments in U.S. companies are working on a wide range of CI projects. Some are operating toll-free call-in lines so frontline salespeople can quickly make a call while on the run to describe what a customer just told them about pricing on a competitor's product. Others are testing software agents that search electronically for information.
Additional Resources



Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.
White Papers & Webcasts
Sustaining SOX Compliance: Best Practices to Mitigate Risk, Automate Compliance, and Reduce Costs
Since the adoption of SOX, much has been learned about IT compliance. Discover how to make SOX efforts more effective in "Sustaining Sox...
Usability Is Everything
Learn what sets Workday's HR and Payroll solutions apart from the competition....
IDC White Paper: CCM for IT Compliance and Risk Management
Learn from industry analysts how IT organizations are using configuration management to meet compliance requirements and instill best practices. Find out how these...
The Value of Real SaaS at Workday
Cost savings, speed to value, and innovation brought to the enterprise by Workday's software-as-a-service solutions for HR and Payroll....
Keep it Clean: Maintaining the Integrity of your CMDB through Change Detection
Learn how configuration drift can challenge configuration management database (CMDB) integrity and how a configuration audit tool and an effective change management process...
SaaS at Flextronics, Inc.
Dave Smoley, CIO of Flextronics, discusses the real value of software-as-a-service and why he chose Workday for his HR solution....
The Tripwire HIPAA Solution: Meeting the Security Standards Set Forth in Section 164
HIPAA requires businesses that handle personal health information (PHI) to set up strong controls to ensure the security and integrity of that information....
Why Compliance Pays
This OnDemand webcast explores the relationship that firms with best compliance records have higher revenue, greater customer retention, lower financial losses from data...
Configuration Assessment: Choosing the Right Solution
Configuration assessment lets businesses proactively secure their IT infrastructure and achieve compliance with important industry standards and regulations. Learn why configuration assessment is...
Agile Enterprise Content Management (ECM) for Rapid ROI
Find out how combining ECM and BPM will help adress issues about content rich business processes....
Subscribe to Computerworld
