Commercial intelligence

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Commercial intelligence is a form of open-source intelligence practiced by diverse international and local businesses.

Business Intelligence is a misnomer for data mining and enterprise dashboards that present useful patterns or distillations of internal information to the executive.

What is Commercial Intelligence?[edit]

Commercial Intelligence (CI) is the process of defining, gathering, analyzing, distributing accurate, and relevant intelligence regarding the products, customers, competitors, business environment, and the organization itself.[1] This methodical program affects the organization's tactics, decisions and operations.[2]

Who uses Commercial Intelligence?[edit]

A 1998 study by the Futures Group, a Glastonbury, Connecticut-based consulting firm, indicates that 82% of companies with annual revenues exceeding $10 billion and 60% of those with annual revenues exceeding $1 billion now have an organized intelligence system.[3]

While most larger companies have specific departments devoted to Commercial Intelligence, mid-sized companies tend to hire Commercial Intelligence firms, and smaller business owners are more likely to do it themselves.[4]

What Commercial Intelligence Could We Use?[edit]

Commercial Intelligence can be obtained and analyzed in various ways that include:

  • Information on a supplier's financial performance
  • Political developments
  • Economic indicators
  • New product development
  • Currency market movements
  • Competitor performance
  • New market entrants [5]

Primary Vs Secondary Intelligence[edit]

Primary Sources of Intelligence[edit]

Primary sources of CI include:

  • Speeches by executive managers concerning future strategies, tactics of the company, and company literature shared at trade shows, conferences, and other events.
  • All forms of communication mediums such as TV, Radio, Business magazines, etc.
  • Annual reports.
  • Physical observations of activities.
  • Conversations with internal sources known to be knowledgeable about the competitor's operations and decision making
  • Conversations with ex-company employees
  • Conversations with consultants or agencies of the company

Secondary Sources of Intelligence[edit]

Secondary sources of CI include:

  • Articles and reviews created by someone outside the company concerning the company.
  • Books about the company and/or the companies in the industry.
  • Special studies, research papers, and analyst reports.[6]

Intelligence from both classifications can be found within the scope of open source intelligence (OSINT).[7]

The Commercial Intelligence Cycle[edit]

Efficient and successful CI is a constant cycle that consists of 5 steps:

  1. Planning; deliberating with decision makers to discover their intelligence needs.
  2. Gathering; collecting activities that are conducted legally and ethically.
  3. Analysis; interpreting all the information gathered and assembling the suggested actions.
  4. Dissemination; presenting the findings to the decision makers
  5. Feedback; studying the decision makers’ responses and understanding their need for continued intelligence.[8]

Ethics in Commercial Intelligence[edit]

Ethical Challenges[edit]

Misrepresentation[edit]

Misrepresentation in CI is a form of cyber engineering. It is the act of falsely identifying yourself and bluffing people into giving you personal information they wouldn't normally give. Misrepresentation is the most common issue that subdivides numerous CI practitioners into many unclear ethical issues.

The most common types of misrepresentation include:

a. Excluding specific details in one's identity: Lying about one's identity to gain access to certain information is known to be unethical amongst CI practitioners. However, there is a thin line between lying about one's identity and omitting certain details about it. Some practitioners believe that it is acceptable to deliberately skip over some details to obtain information.

For example: Person X is both a part-time student as well as a director of a large company. As part of a school assignment, X is expected to collect information about a company that just so happens to be one of X's employer's biggest competitors.

In this case, it is believed by some CI practitioners that not revealing the fact that X works for the company in addition to being a part-time student is completely ethical. In other words, X is misleading the competitor into thinking the information given to him will be used to complete a school assignment and nothing more, although, in reality, he would be gathering commercial intelligence to present to his employer.

However, these types of situations raise some ethical concerns because the competitor may not have provided certain information knowing X works for a direct competitor. The competitor was not lied to but deliberately misled in to give out specific information about the company.

b. Overhearing classified information: Some CI practitioners believe that if you overhear a competitor's conversation in a public venue, then the information discussed that was previously classified becomes ethical for you to use to your advantage.

They believe that it is not necessary to reveal their identity since the conversation occurred in an open and public place, and it is the competitors’ fault that their information has been leaked because they should have been more aware of their surroundings and been more secure with their information. On the other hand, some argue that the CI practitioners are at fault because they deliberately planned on being in those surroundings in hopes to overhearing some information, which raises concerns about the ethics of the matter.

c. Not Disclosing true intent on how information will be used: Many CI practitioners are paid by their clients to get as much information about their competitors. To do so, they would survey the competitors and suggest to them that they are simply collecting industry information, all the while not revealing who they are working for, thus, not disclosing the true intent on how the information gathered is going to be used.

All 3 misrepresentation issues share a common theme, which is: “What is the intent of the CI practitioner?” Judging by a person's intent, we can conclude whether or not the situation is ethical or non-ethical.

Client Conflict[edit]

Client conflict means any situation in which a practitioner is faced with a conflict of interest between a former and current client. The practitioner must attempt to determine how to act in the best interests of several clients in the same or substantially related matter.[9]

This type of situation usually arises with CI practitioners who are consultants. However, a clear solution is obvious; the practitioners agree that they should never service competing clients at the same time to keep classified information secure. In addition, another conflict may arise in the CI consultant and client relationship. The client usually hires the consultant to gather as much information about their competitors.

However, there is an ethical issue concerning the length in which a consultant would go to retrieve the required information; how much is too much? When the consultant ignores the cost at which they are seeking this information, they tend to stumble upon various ethical issues, and it is these ethical issues that clients don't want to be associated with that push them to hire a CI consultant.[10]

Cases of Organizations Accused of Unethical CI Practices[edit]

Oracle Corporation[edit]

In 2000, Oracle Corporation hired a detective agency to investigate two research groups that supported Microsoft during the antitrust trial. After attempting to buy garbage, the agency discovered that those two research groups were falsely identifying themselves as independent advocacy groups when they were in reality funded by Microsoft.

Oracle and the hired detective agency may have acted in questionable matters to obtain that information, but they believe that the outcome justifies their actions. Larry Ellison, Oracle's chairman, says: “I feel very good about what we did. […] Maybe our investigation organization may have done things unsavory, but it's not illegal. We got the truth out.” [11]

WestJet[edit]

In May 2004, Air Canada filed a $5 million corporate espionage lawsuit against WestJet after discovering that their rival had hacked into Air Canada's internal employee-only website over 243,000 times in a period of 10 months. WestJet used the confidential information it found to rearrange its load schedules as well as adjust routes and it significantly reduced service from the Hamilton airport and increased service in Toronto.[12]

WestJet later issued a rare apology to its rival and Robert Milton, the chief executive of parent ACE Aviation Holdings Inc, admitting that its actions of online snooping "were both unethical and unacceptable" and ended up paying AirCanada $15.5 million in legal fees as well as donating $10-million to children's charities in the names of both airlines. Moreover, Hill, one of the founders of WestJet later resigned from his position as vice-president of strategic planning in July 2004.[13]

Hewlett-Packard[edit]

In 2005, HP filed a lawsuit against its former VP, Karl Kamb, for $100 million, claiming Kamb had betrayed the company and appropriated its trade secrets as well as its money to start up his own flat-panel-TV company, as he was working on the TV project for HP. In January 2007.

Kamb filed a countersuit. Not only did he deny stealing trade secrets but also claimed that HP was aware of what he had done with its money.

He claimed that HP had asked him to gather classified information on Dell, whose entry into printers had threatened HP's most profitable line of business. In 2002, the CI unit hired Katsumi Iizuka, former president of Dell Japan until 1995, selling HP information on Dell's plans to enter the printer business. The information they gathered revolved around printer models, specifications, terms, and prices, many months before their launch. Furthermore, HP was accused of pretexting, which is the act of lying about one's identity to obtain privileged data and information, to obtain Kamb's private phone records.[14]

Society of Competitive Intelligence Professionals[edit]

Historic Development[edit]

The Society of Competitive Intelligence Professionals is one of the only global membership organizations in the rapidly growing field of competitive intelligence and business strategy. SCIP is a global not-for-profit association whose 7,000 members conduct competitor research and analysis for large and small companies, and help manage planning competitive strategy.

Established in 1986 in Washington DC, it is currently headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia. It focuses on enhancing the success of its members through education, leadership, support, and networking. Since 1986, SCIP has developed drastically and globally, and has, today, chapters all around the world as well as alliance partnerships with numerous independent affiliate organizations.[15]

On July 8, 2010, the SCIP Board of Directors voted to officially change the 25-year-old non-profit organization's name from "Society of Competitive Intelligence Professionals" to "Strategic and Competitive Intelligence Professionals".[16]

Chapters Overview[edit]

SCIP Chapters are the best way for members to build relationships within the competitive intelligence discipline in their area. Its events are open for anyone to attend, become involved, and enjoy the benefits of programming and networking. The SCIP offers many opportunities to its members including exceptional educational, and networking experiences with leading industry experts, as well as opportunities to increase knowledge by gaining access to rare and distinctive practices, tools, and publications.

In addition, the SCIP offers Collegiate Chapters for students who show interest in the world of commercial and competitive intelligence. Participant students in the Collegiate Chapter are offered training and education programs that represent unique opportunities for professional advancement. They are also benefitting exceptionally in terms of leadership skills, career development, and indispensable CI know-how. Also, the SCIP awards mentoring programs and scholarships to students who are deemed prominent, promising, and capable business students.[17]

Ethics[edit]

Economic espionage represents a failure of Commercial Intelligence, which uses open sources and other forms of ethical inquiry. Importantly, SCIP mandates that all this be done within a strictly ethical framework, which is why it has agreed upon a code of ethics;

  • To continually strive to increase the recognition and respect of the profession.
  • To comply with all applicable laws, domestic and international.
  • To accurately disclose all relevant information, including one's identity and organization, before all interviews.
  • To avoid conflicts of interest in fulfilling one's duties.
  • To provide honest and realistic recommendations and conclusions in the execution of one's duties.
  • To promote this code of ethics within one's company, with third-party contractors, and within the entire profession.
  • To faithfully adhere to and abide by one's company policies, objectives, and guidelines.[18]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Commercial Intelligence (CI)". www.kbmanage.com.
  2. ^ Kahaner, Larry (1996). Competitive Intelligence: How to Gather, Analyze, and Use Information to Move Your Business to the Top.
  3. ^ Miller, Stephan H.; Bentley, Samuel (1998). Competitive Intelligence Magazine. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. ^ Miller, Stephen H. "Competitive Intelligence -- An Overview" (PDF). www.ventes-marketing.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-13. Retrieved 2014-10-28.
  5. ^ "Commercial Intelligence" (PDF). www.cips.org. 2007.
  6. ^ "Collecting Competitive Intelligence". www.exinfm.com.
  7. ^ Levy, Joe (2011). "Primary Intelligence vs Secondary Intelligence". www.clearci.com.
  8. ^ Herring, Jan P. (1998). "What Is Intelligence Analysis?". Competitive Intelligence Magazine.
  9. ^ Stevens, Sylvia (2009). Former Client Conflicts.
  10. ^ Trevino, Linda; Weaver, Gary (1997). "Ethical Issues in Competitive Intelligence Practice: Consensus, Conflicts, and Challenges". Competitive Intelligence Review.
  11. ^ Wong, Wylie (2000). "Oracle chief defends Microsoft snooping". www.cnet.com.
  12. ^ Teel, Gina (2007). "Founding member to depart from WestJet".
  13. ^ Ratner, Jonathan (2006). "WestJet apologizes to Air Canada for snooping". www.canada.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  14. ^ Varchaver, Nicholas (2007). "A pretext for revenge". www.fortune.com.
  15. ^ "Strategy, Market & Competitive Intelligence". www.scip.org. Archived from the original on 2013-01-13. Retrieved 2014-10-30.
  16. ^ Alexandria, Va (2012). "SCIP Changes Name to Strategic and Competitive Intelligence Professionals". www.prnewswire.com.
  17. ^ "SCIP Chapter Overview". www.scip.org. Archived from the original on 2014-10-30. Retrieved 2014-10-30.
  18. ^ "SCIP Code of Ethics for CI Professionals". www.scip.org. Archived from the original on 2014-10-13. Retrieved 2014-10-30.