Friday, April 13, 2007

Producing ROI from your Competitive Intelligence - "How To:

If you have every spent any time talking with me about Competitive Intelligence, you know that I am a big proponent of intelligence programs that produce revenue. So many companies launch an intelligence program with the intention of "understanding the competitive landscape" but, this is hardly a focused goal.

Over time, the intelligence program expands (bloats) to include as many intelligence categories as possible. Soon, the company hires a "librarian" and implements content management systems just to keep all of the information organized. Corporate personnel are happy because they can ask just about any question and get an answer. CI personnel are happy because they have a job that keeps them busy and security for the future.

But, my argument has always centered on, "Why do the work if you can't justify the ROI?" In other words, Competitive Intelligence has to be a driving force for strategic corporate planning. The Competitive Intelligence group should be able to tell the executives, "At a high degree of confidence, if we do 'X' in market 'Y', we would expect a 10% increase in market share and revenues."

This is so much better than knowing "how many square feet are in our competitors' new warehouse in Cedar Rapids" or "what color is our competitor's intranet login page?"

How do you determine ROI criteria for your Competitive Intelligence? I'll give you some suggestions:

1) Top-line Revenue
–Will this intelligence create new revenue opportunities?
–Will we take away sales from the competition?
–Will our existing accounts stay longer and be more profitable?
2) Bottom-line
–Can we be more efficient or learn best practices?
–Are there better ways to manage our processes?
3) Application
–How easily will we be able to act on these data?

If your CI efforts match up well with these criteria, you are probably pretty advanced. If your initiatives serve other purposes, they may still be valid, but ROI probably isn't your goal. If you need some help determining the ROI potential of your efforts, talk to Primary Intelligence. We're here to help.

And, if you don't know what the purpose of your CI initiatives are, you need to start asking. Or, looking for another job. If you can't show potential return on your efforts, you run the risk of becoming as valuable as your data; interesting, but worthless.

Please, add to the ROI criteria list. Post a comment or call me (801.838.9600 x5050, cdalley@primary-intel.com)

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