Showing posts with label distribution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label distribution. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2008

Competitive Intelligence Webinar – Key to Setting Up a Win Loss Program

Yesterday, Ralph Nielsen (Director of Research Operations) and I co-presented a webinar on how to set up a Win Loss program that works. We took the opportunity to talk about best practices, obstacles, unexpected value. If you are thinking about setting up an in-house effort or you work with a 3rd-party vendor for your Win Loss, we gave you a ton to consider.

Also, I have recently spent some time with our great clients talking about how they use Win Loss, to whom they distribute it and where it makes a difference in their companies. I turned the results of this work into a section in the webinar that I refer to as Seven Secrets of Making Your Win Loss Program More Effective. That’s kind of a long title, but it leaves little room for confusion.

If you would like to download the slides alone, you can find them HERE.

If you want to watch the entire webinar with audio and video, you can download that file right HERE.



Over the next few days, I’ll spend some time sharing the ideas from the webinar in the blog.

Also, we appreciate the many people that gave their time and attended. If you watch the presentation and have any questions or comment, let me know. Leave a comment on this blog, email me (cdalley@primary-intel.com) or give me a call (801.838.9600 x5050)

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Does Business Have the Right Structure to Use Competitive Intelligence?

In the last post, I talked about the military and the reason that their intelligence organization generally is able to provide effective intelligence. In brief, professional, trained intelligence personnel support officers and field personnel with a sophisticated intelligence system.

The attention to intelligence is driven by the fact that lives are on the line. Understanding strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats, centers of gravity, etc… are not just “nice to know.”

As mentioned in the last blog, the military places so much emphasis on intelligence that it has its own department, outside of field operations. There are field agents and intelligence officers. The different intelligence ranks have access to every rank of fighting personnel.

It’s not all rosy and perfect, but one would be hard pressed to find another organization that matches the emphasis and effectiveness of intelligence in the military.

How does your business compare?

If you are like most, your company has invested in intelligence, but has not made a commitment to intelligence-based decisions. Communication is not as organized as it might be and the flow of information is not consistent.

A significant problem in business competitive intelligence is the fact that the intelligence staff usually resides somewhere in company other than near the decision makers. Now, for the sake of honesty, I’ll say that I have been very impressed with some of the corporate strategy groups with whom I have been associated and I am encouraged by the access which they are granted to the executive level. But these cases are far too rare.

If your business structure buries analysts and competitive intelligence professionals deep in the world of marketing, the likelihood of necessary intelligence making a difference in the company is very low.


What do you do about this?

Do you have it in your power to start an organizational change? Does your direct report have the ability to start the process?

Can you boil your intelligence down to a summary with recommendations that might be appreciated by a higher-level manager? What are your potential means of moving information to different people?

Who is your internal client? Who request intelligence? Who funds the intelligence? What do they want to know? How often do they want to know? What tangible benefits has your company realized through the use of your intelligence?

Start to formulate answers to these questions. Do so with the goal of convincing the next people up the org chart to give more visibility to your company’s competitive intelligence efforts. Show them what CI has to offer and how much is being lost with the current amount of emphasis.

These are the same techniques that 3rd-party vendors have to use to stay in business and they will work to some degree for you.

Thoughts? Let me know. (cdalley@primary-intel.com, 801-838-9600 x5050)

Monday, October 22, 2007

Military Intelligence – A Template for Effective Competitive Intelligence

More than 95% of U.S. based businesses indicate that they have dedicated some amount of resources to the gathering of intelligence. This may include market, sales or competitive intelligence, but the goal is usually the same: be better at business than the next guy.

But, few companies would rate themselves as being very effective with the intelligence. And, the funny thing is the discrepancy of the perception between those that gather the intelligence and those that would use it. Executives usually rate themselves as “somewhat effective” or “very effective” as using intelligence while the intelligence professionals generally rate the executives as “not very effective.” Hmmmm. Why so many axes to grind?

Every organization should examine and reexamine its practices to create a continual improvement process. During this process, I would recommend that each organization take a little time to review other organizations that make intelligence a priority.

Now, it would be difficult to peek into other businesses and discover their secrets. You wouldn’t open your doors to this kind of review. Why would anyone else?

But, you can look at an institution that, overall, leads the world in the gathering, analysis and use of intelligence – The military. In fact, you can make the case that the military has the longest running and most successful intelligence system in history. (We won’t talk about policy makers and their use or misuse of intelligence. That’s another story for another day…

Where else are the stakes higher than on the battlefield? In a situation where lives and equipment are constantly at risk, we can learn some very critical things about how the military values its “competitive intelligence”, from gathering through strategic use.

“Most militaries maintain a military intelligence corps with specialized intelligence units for collecting information in specific ways. Militaries also typically have intelligence staff personnel at each echelon down to battalion level. Intelligence officers and enlisted soldiers assigned to military intelligence may be selected for their analytical abilities or scores on intelligence tests. They usually receive formal training in these disciplines.




“Critical vulnerabilities are…indexed in a way that makes them easily available to advisors and line intelligence personnel who package this information for policy-makers and war-fighters. Vulnerabilities are usually indexed by the nation and military unit, with a list of possible attack methods.”

“Critical threats are usually maintained in a prioritized file, with important enemy capabilities analyzed on a schedule set by an estimate of the enemy's preparation time. For example, nuclear threats between the USSR and the US were analyzed in real time by continuously on-duty staffs. In contrast, analysis of tank or army deployments are usually triggered by accumulations of fuel and munitions, which are monitored on slower, every-few-days cycles. In some cases, automated analysis is performed in real time on automated data traffic.”

“Packaging threats and vulnerabilities for decision makers is a crucial part of military intelligence. A good intelligence officer will stay very close to the policy-maker or war fighter, to anticipate their information requirements, and tailor the information needed. A good intelligence officer will ask a fairly large number of questions in order to help anticipate needs, perhaps even to the point of annoying the principal. For an important policy-maker, the intelligence officer will have a staff to which research projects can be assigned.”

Developing a plan of attack is not the responsibility of intelligence, though it helps an analyst to know the capabilities of common types of military units. Generally, policy-makers are presented with a list of threats, and opportunities. They approve some basic action, and then professional military personnel plan the detailed act and carry it out. Once hostilities begin, target selection often moves into the upper end of the military chain of command. Once ready stocks of weapons and fuel are depleted, logistic concerns are often exported to civilian policy-makers.” (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_intelligence)
The points that catch my attention are:

  1. Intelligence professionals are present at each level of the military
  2. They receive formal training in intelligence practices
  3. Good intelligence officers stay very close to the policy-maker or war-fighter
  4. Good intelligence officers ask lots of questions to make sure that the intelligence program is on the right track and can anticipate the leaders’ needs
  5. Good intelligence officers package the intelligence in ways that the users can easily consume while still getting the intended “nutritional value”
  6. While competitive intelligence personnel are not responsible for policy, direction or decisions, they should try to understand how these decisions are made. This will provide a deeper context to make future intelligence efforts more valuable.

In the next post, we’ll look at the usual structure of intelligence in today’s business.

And, if you have any thoughts, leave me a comment. I dare you.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Effective Competitive Intelligence - Problem 4: Communication

In my last post, I started talking again about effective competitive intelligence. Again, my definition of effectiveness is:

– Strengthen your company’s position
• How is our value proposition perceived?
• What is the competition doing?
• Which industry-wide best practices will truly apply?
– Discover new markets
• What is possible with new technologies?
• Where should we steer the company?
– Develop new products/services/solutions
• What problems do our clients experience that we can address?

One of the biggest complaints of Competitive Intelligence generators and users alike is the fact that intelligence, information and knowledge in general is lost in the shuffle. In fact, according to an Accenture study:

  • 53% of obtained information is worthless
  • 31% say that it Competitive Intelligence is hard to get at
  • 57% have to go to numerous sources to compile necessary intelligence
  • 45% can’t find information on other departments’ activities
  • 42% accidentally use the wrong information once per week
  • 40% say other parts of the company won’t share information
  • 59% say there is poor distribution of information

  • Many of these problems are the result of poor corporate communication.


    In summary, we find that intelligence suffers from the fact that organized distribution channels don’t exist (If a tree falls in the woods…).

    If you have created a quality library of information, its value is compromised by the fact that people:

  • Don’t know it exists
  • Can’t read it
  • Don’t like the way it is distributed

  • This same topic was addressed in our recent webinar which can be downloaded HERE.

    How do you solve this problem?

    1. Start with intelligence that means something to others.
    2. Speak with a loud voice and be available to others in decision-making posts
    3. Find internal champions
    4. Determine that the intelligence will be received and reviewed
    You’ll note that I haven’t mentioned anything about content management systems or other technologies. Before you can install software to distribute intelligence, you have to create a hunger for it and establish communication channels that work. Otherwise, you’re likely to spend quite a bit of money on software that will lie dormant most of the time.

    If you have a success story with overcoming the communication barrier, drop me a note. I’m always interested in examples of success, no matter how small they may seem (cdalley@primary-intel.com, 801-838-9600 x5050)

    Monday, October 8, 2007

    Effective Competitive Intelligence – Don’t Let Indecision Derail You

    No matter how you practice competitive intelligence, you have to be concerned with the fact that your CI program must be effective in your business. Much emphasis has been put on various programs in the company and their “effectiveness.” To me “effective” is a relative term. There are so many levels of effectiveness that almost anything can be graded as effective. The real talent and wisdom are manifest in one’s ability to differentiate between lower and higher levels.

    So, what are the effectiveness qualifiers for competitive intelligence? I’ll stick with a definition put forth earlier in this same blog (which was also a topic in our recent webinar which can be downloaded HERE). The mission of effective Competitive Intelligence should be to:

    – Strengthen your company’s position
    • How is our value proposition perceived?
    • What is the competition doing?
    • Which industry-wide best practices will truly apply?
    – Discover new markets
    • What is possible with new technologies?
    • Where should we steer the company?
    – Develop new products/services/solutions
    • What problems do our clients experience that we can address?

    Indecision
    There are so many obstacles to producing effective intelligence. The first of these obstacles is indecision. This indecision devalues intelligence efforts and, in some cases, leads to the dissolution of the actual intelligence efforts.

    What is the real problem with indecision? It’s the fact that nobody can agree on what should be studied or what results should come of the efforts. Often, executives will request specific bits of information while other departments create laundry lists of potential topics.



    In way too many cases, a strategic plan for intelligence is lacking. Evidence of this environment usually rears its head with the philosophy of “Let’s grab everything we can” and “Once we have the intelligence, we’ll know what to do with it.” The most dangerous symptom is a company that is very reactive in its intelligence efforts. “What just happened?!?! Go find out what [competitor x] is doing!”

    The truth of the matter is that this lack of system usually leads to way too much information which can not be prioritized. The abundance of information leads to overload and blindness. The end result is that the intelligence is used less and less until the prevailing feeling is that the intelligence is not useful after all. From this point on, corporate decisions will not be based on the intelligence efforts, but on experience and such.

    Without a competitive intelligence strategy that makes effectiveness a strong characteristic of success, the intelligence group is likely to marginalize its own value.

    Recommendation
    So, the recommendation is that you have to make your company be decisive about its intelligence efforts. Develop a set of effectiveness criteria or use those that I included above. Measure your strategy against its ability to be effective. And, be enough of a salesperson to sell this idea to your management and on up the chain.

    Create a habit of decisiveness around your intelligence efforts, strategies and plans. Otherwise, indecision will trivialize your best efforts.

    Thoughts? Leave me a comment or we can chat. (cdalley@primary-intel.com, 801.838.9600 x5050)

    Wednesday, September 19, 2007

    PI Competitive Intelligence Newsletter

    This edition features ideas on gathering competitive intelligence from some of the most fertile ground, your client and prospects. And, don’t forget to comment on the blog. Where does competitive intelligence go in your company?

    To subscribe to the newsletter, click HERE or use the subscribe option on any of the newsletter pages (accessible by clicking on the links below)

    Cover Story
    Your Prospects Are Talking. Are You Listening?
    By Mark Larson, Primary Intelligence
    What's ironic is that a prospect is generally the easiest source of information about a company's products or direction. Consider this idea: the people most willing to help with anything are those that will generally benefit the most for providing feedback. (For more, click here)


    BlogCentral
    Where does your Competitive Intelligence Go?
    In some recent studies from Primary Intelligence, we have asked representatives from various industries and company sizes "Who has access to the competitive intelligence data?" For more, click here)

    The A-List Archive
    Straightforward Pricing Helps Siebel Win Contract with Terry Hinge & Hardware
    Originally Published in January 2005.
    With its recent growth through acquisitions and development of new divisions, Terry Hinge & Hardware needed to standardize and integrate its sources of sales information. The President/COO explained that the Company originally evaluated Salesforce.com, Siebel, and Caritor, but eliminated the latter because evaluators believed the vendor did not have enough. (For more, click here)

    Monday, September 17, 2007

    Upcoming Webinar – Making Competitive Intelligence Effective

    Just wanted to let you know that I will co-host a webinar on September 27 with one of my associates, Mike Brose. The webinar will be conducted at 2PM ET (11AM PT) and is free of charge.

    A summary of the webinar follows:

    While information provides the fuel for strategic direction, how often does yesterday's "can't miss" competitive intelligence initiative get lost in the shuffle of today's realities?

    Overall, too many sales, competitive, and market intelligence initiatives are judged ineffective due to the fact that the intelligence is never used to increase sales, gain a competitive advantage, or capitalize on a new market opportunity.

    Primary Intelligence would like to invite you to a presentation that will show:

    -Why competitive intelligence is often under-utilized
    -How to generate findings that actually makes a difference
    -How to start with the end in mind
    -Different methods to ensure that the intelligence will provide a guiding beacon.

    Those that will benefit include:
    -Marketing leaders
    -Market research managers
    -Market and Industry analysts
    -Sales leaders
    -Corporate leadership positions (CEO, CMO, CSO)

    Reserve your Webinar seat now at:https://www.gotomeeting.com/register/976829978

    Date: September 27, 2007
    Time: 2PM ET, 1PM CT, Noon MT, 11AM PT

    Friday, September 14, 2007

    Using PowerPoint to Distribute Competitive Intelligence

    Last post, I shared a video showing some of the most common sins of PowerPoint (PPT) usage. I’m guilty of most and will have my license revoked.

    Stories of PPT abuse are not hard to find. Your company may be PPT agnostic, but many companies are forming opinions one way or another. Competitive Intelligence is, by definition, a source of information and sharing information is job #1 of PPT.

    But, like anything else, you have to know how to use PPT to maximize its effectiveness. One of the weaknesses of PPT is the fact that it tends to simplify concepts much too easily.

    Gettysburg Address – PPT Style
    How has PPT changed the way we communicate? Imagine a world with almost no pronouns or punctuation. A world where any complex thought must be broken into seven-word chunks, with colorful blobs between them. Wait. You don’t have to imagine it. You are probably exposed to it regularly. You may even speak fluent PPT.

    For a funny example, check out the Gettysburg Address, done in PPT. Click on the link below and then click on “Click here to start.”

    Gettysburg Address in PPT

    IBM and Sun Talk Business
    “Lou Gerstner's remarkable turnaround of IBM from near-collapse began with a briefing he asked for on the state of the mainframe business. Mainframes accounted for more than 90% of the company's profits, which were sinking fast when he took over. Gerstner describes this critical meeting in his book Who Says Elephants Can't Dance, as follows:



    ‘At the time, the standard format of any important IBM meeting was a presentation using overhead projectors and graphics on transparencies that IBMers called—and no one remembers why—"foils." Nick was on his second foil when I stepped to the table and, as politely as I could in front of his team, switched off the projector. After a long moment of awkward silence, I simply said, "Let's just talk about your business." I mention this episode because it had an unintended, but terribly powerful ripple effect.’
    Scott McNealy, a self-styled Chairman of Sun Microsystems, famously declared in 1997:


    ‘We had 12.9 gigabytes of PowerPoint slides on our network. And I thought, "What a huge waste of corporate productivity." So we banned it. And we've had three unbelievable record-breaking fiscal quarters since we banned PowerPoint. Now, I would argue that every company in the world, if it would just ban PowerPoint, would see their earnings skyrocket. Employees would stand around going, "What do I do? Guess I've got to go to work."’
    Regardless of whether the ban was real or its contribution to record-breaking profits a hyperbole, there is something to be said for PowerPoint slide shows in the form of an infomercial getting in the way of having an honest discussion of complex issues and detracting from finding out the truth.” - MarketingProfs

    Next time you are called upon to share information, consider the benefits of standing in front of a group and talking. What would happen if there were dialogue instead of slides? Would you be seen as more of a consultant, or would your audience be uncomfortable, not knowing how to react?

    Just some thoughts. Let me know what you think as well. (cdalley@primary-intel.com)

    Wednesday, September 5, 2007

    Star Trek, Competitive Intelligence and Analytics

    Whether you are focused on market, sales or competitive intelligence, analytics are becoming more important, and useful, every day. Of course, the analytics tool you use has to be focused on your specific need. I see tools come and go that try to be everything to everyone, which ends up working for nobody.

    The concepts of analysis and analytics, however, are sound.

    I'll turn the presentation over to Matt Bailey, Founder of SiteLogic, a company that provides consulting and tools to increase website effectiveness. I enjoyed his lesson on how analytics may help save the lives of the "Red Shirts."

    Analytics According to Captain Kirk
    In my seminars, I enjoy teaching analytics because the fun is in finding effective and memorable methods to help people understand the concepts. One of my favorites is an analysis of the Red-Shirt Phenomenon in Star Trek.

    What? You don't know about the Red Shirt Phenomenon? Well, as any die-hard Trekkie knows, if you are wearing a red shirt and beam to the planet with Captain Kirk, you're gonna die. That's the common thinking, but I decided to put this to the test. After all, I hadn't seen any definitive proof; it's just what people said. (Remind you of your current web analytics strategy?) So, let's set our phasers on 'stun' and see what we find...

    The Basic Stats:
    The Enterprise has a crew of 430 (startrek.com) in its five-year mission. (Now, I know that the show was only on the air for 3 years, but bear with me. 80 episodes were produced, which gives us the data to build from.) 59 crewmembers were killed during the mission, which comes out to 13.7% of the crew. So, that will be our overall conversion rate, 13.7%.

    Data Segmentation:
    However, we need to segment the overall mortality (conversion) rate in order to gain the specific information that we need:

  • Yellow-shirt crewperson deaths: 6 (10%)
  • Blue-Shirt crewperson deaths: 5 (8 %)
  • Engineering smock crewperson deaths: 4
  • Red-Shirt crewperson deaths: 43 (73%)


  • So, the basic segmentation of factors allows us to confirm that red-shirted crewmembers died more than any other crewmembers on the original Star Trek series.

    However, that's only just simple stats reporting - ready for some analysis?

    In-depth Analysis
    Analysis involves asking questions about the data. Analysis attempts to bring reason and cause to the reported data in order to find why something is happening. With that data, one can improve the situation based on the intelligence gained from the analysis.

    Q: What causes a red-shirted crewman to die?
  • On-board incident - 42.5%
  • Beaming down to the planet - 57.5%


  • There were also many fights during the mission; on the Enterprise, on planets, and various space stations. The fights were also divided between alien races or crazed crewmen (usually wearing red shirts).

    There were 130 fights over 80 episodes.
  • 18 of the 130 fights resulted in a fatality.
  • 13 of the 18 fatal fights resulted in a red-shirt fatality.


  • Q: what was the rate of red-shirt casualties?
  • 18 red-shirt fatality episodes:
  • 8 multiple fatality occurrences; involving 34 red-shirted crewmen.
  • 9 single red-shirt fatality situations.


  • It was found that red-shirted crewmembers tended to die in groups. In 17 red-shirt fatality episodes, 8 were multiple incidents, 9 were single incidents. In a little less than 50% of the fatal red-shirt situations, multiple crewmen were vaporized.

    Q: What factors could increase/decrease the survival rate of red-shirted crewmen?
    Besides not getting involved in fights, which usually proved fatal, the crewmen could avoid beaming down to the planet's surface, which is inherent to their end. However, that could result in a court-martial for failure to obey orders.

    Besides not beaming down, another factor that showed to increase the survival rate of the red-shirts was the nature of the relationship between the alien life and captain Kirk. When Captain Kirk meets an alien woman and "makes contact" the survival rate of the red-shirted crewmen increases by 84%. In fact, out of Captain Kirks' 24 "relationships" there were only three instances of red-shirt vaporization.

    The caveat to this is when Captain Kirk not only meets the local alien women, but also starts a fight among alien locals. The combination of these events has led to the elimination of 4 crewmembers (3 red-shirts).

    Here are the statistics:
    Red Shirt Death episodes = 18
    Episodes with fights = 55
    Probability of a fight breaking out = 70%
    Kirk "conquest" episodes = 24
    Kirk "conquest" + fights = 16
    Kirk "conquest" + red shirt casualty= 4
    Red shirt death + fight + Kirk "conquest" = 3

    And the data trends
    Probability of a red-shirt casualty= 53%
    14% of fights ended in a fatality (with a 72% chance the fatality wore a red shirt)
    Probability of a red-shirt "incident" when Kirk has a "conquest" = 12%

    The red-shirt survival rate is slightly higher when Kirk meets women than when a fight breaks out. This trend necessitates the question: How often did Captain Kirk "meet" women? In 30% of the missions.

    As the data shows, Captain Kirk "making contact" with alien women has an impact on the crew's survival. The red-shirt death rate is higher when a fight breaks out than when Kirk meets a woman and a fight breaks out. Yet the analysis shows that meeting Kirk meeting women only happens in 30% of the missions.

    Conclusion:
    We can reliably improve the survivability of the red-shirted crewmen by only exploring peaceful, female-only planets (android and alien females included).

    Reporting the Data:
    Now, researching the data can be fun and informative. However, that is only half of the battle. The interesting part comes when you have to communicate not only the data, but your conclusions in an effective, persuasive manner. The best analysis won't go far if you can't communicate the conclusions in a manner that people understand.

    There are a few options at our disposal. First, the PowerPoint Method.








    There are a number of things wrong with the typical method of presenting data. For starters, this presentation could bore even the most hardened Starfleet manager (CEO). The typical corporate PowerPoint slide design is obnoxious and does not leave room for information, the charts are redundant, even unnecessary, and it does not do a good job of communicating the information or the analysis.

    In most cases, PowerPoint is NOT the recommended tool for communicating analytics data. It is not the right tool for the job. Communicating analytics data involves providing conclusions based on facts, tests, comparisons, and research. In order to display the necessary data, a better method must be used, and not one that forces redundant bullet point and "snazzy" charts.

    Visualizing the Data:There are some necessary elements required in developing a chart for this type data:

  • A list of the specific episodes
  • Events that happened in each episode

  • The number of events that happened in each episode
  • An easy way to identify data, then compare and contrast actions in all episodes


  • By seeing all of the available data in one chart, associations, patterns and conclusions can be drawn simply by comparing the relationships as they are presented. This is something that I learned from Edward Tufte - 1. More information is needed to simplify data presentation. 2. Unless all of the data is presented, there is no data integrity.

    Information is Primary to Design
    This is critical in developing a chart of information - the information is primary. List the necessary data elements first. Then, develop the design around the information, and not the other way around. Otherwise, a beautiful chart will lack the critical information necessary to support your conclusions. The graphing software that I found extremely effective for communicating the episode data for this Star Trek analysis is Microsoft's Office 2007, and in Apple's OS X graphics software.


    (click image for full-size version)

    I like this chart - eliminating the need for a legend is critical to allowing the information to flow. The data is the same color or object as the information we are trying to convey. Because there is no suitable color for Captain Kirk's affairs, we substituted a very flattering picture. Fights are represented by tiny phasers, which are not the best representation because of the size, but can easily be determined by the process of elimination. This chart allows conclusions and observations that simple charts, numbers, and explanations may never bring to the surface. It allows for easy comparison, both to other shirt colors, and in relation to other episodes. It also looks as though Kirk was a very busy man.

    In the first year of the series, red-shirt casualties were lower than other color-shirted crewmembers. The second and especially the third seasons were especially brutal. In the third season, only red-shirted crewmembers died; maybe because the other colors enacted better safety protocols, or maybe because they avoided the bridge when a new planet came into view, for fear of beaming down with Cpt. Kirk.

    Summary:
    Of the elements that helped to provide this analysis, segmentation was key.

    Segmentation of groups allows for comparisons. Comparisons allow you to spot trends that may be different from the rest. Asking questions of the data allows you to dig into specific trends and spot additional factors that affect the original analysis. Unless we dug into Kirk's personal life, we may never have spotted the contrast of Kirk's attraction to alien females as it related to saving red-shirt crewmen's lives.

    Remember, when you have to account for lost crewmembers, your report needs to account for the how, the why, and the ability to draw specific conclusions as to how to affect the trends in the future. Depending upon your approach, you could either doom the project, and future red-shirted crewmen, or you could be visiting planets full of peaceful alien women.

    Wednesday, August 15, 2007

    Upcoming Webinar - The Sad Story of Intelligence that Never Made a Difference

    Just wanted to let you know that I will co-host a webinar next week with one of my associates, Mike Brose. A summary of the webinar them follows:

    While information provides the fuel for strategic direction, how often does yesterday's "can't miss" competitive intelligence initiative get lost in the shuffle of today's realities?

    Overall, too many sales, competitive, and market intelligence initiatives are judged ineffective due to the fact that the intelligence is never used to increase sales, gain a competitive advantage, or capitalize on a new market opportunity.


    Primary Intelligence would like to invite you to a presentation that will show:

  • Why competitive intelligence is often under-utilized
  • How to generate findings that actually makes a difference
  • How to start with the end in mind
  • Different methods to ensure that the intelligence will provide a guiding beacon.

  • Those that will benefit include:
  • Marketing leaders
  • Market research managers
  • Market and Industry analysts
  • Sales leaders
  • Corporate leadership positions (CEO, CMO, CSO)

  • Reserve your Webinar seat now at:https://www.gotomeeting.com/register/162321711

    If you have any questions, let me know (cdalley@primary-intel.com)

    Wednesday, August 1, 2007

    You Couldn’t Make Competitive Intelligence So Irrelevant if You Tried

    If your idea of effective competitive intelligence is gathering a bit of information, consolidating that information into a brief doc (perhaps on an attractive company letterhead) and sending that doc off to a distribution list, please stop reading. Go back to your cube, surf some more web sites and live a happy life.

    Pardon me if I’m a little grumpy today, but I have just finished reviewing a company’s CI efforts and have added one more company to the pile of “irrelevant competitive intelligence efforts.”

    What do I mean by irrelevant? In this case, the marketing department employs a few “analysts” to gather CI on a few competitors, market conditions and industry developments. These people put a little personal spin on the data and then launch their reports and briefs into different corporate branches through email, an intranet and their SFA tool.

    (Yes, there is disdain in my description, but it wouldn’t matter if they increased the quality of their personnel or budget to gather more information.)

    The problem here is that the CI program is not making any difference at all in their ability to be more competitive. The data that is collected is better than nothing, but even if it is read, nobody acts on it, provides feedback or seems to value it at any important level of the company.

    The intelligence has to make a difference somewhere in the company or the program is simply a money sink that exists because “other companies have a CI department.”

    I suppose that there are all kinds of people out there, but I, for one, would be bored out of my skull if I didn’t think my efforts were making a positive difference in the company. If I found myself in that situation, I would do everything I could to change the situation. To be clear, this isn’t a matter of personal ego. Instead, I want to leverage our competitive intelligence efforts to create as much benefit as possible.

    Enough of the rant. On Friday, I’ll describe an environment that makes exceptional use of Competitive, Market and Sales intelligence.

    And if you want to chat about these thoughts, please leave me a post, call me (801-838-9600 x5050) or email me (cdalley@primary-intel.com)

    Friday, June 22, 2007

    Webinar Wrap-up – Putting Sales Intelligence into the Sales Force

    Yesterday, I co-hosted a Webinar with Ron Sathoff, a member of the product development group. We appreciate the time that our attendees shared with us and hope that the presentation was beneficial.

    The main takeaways were:

    • The definition of sales intelligence
    • Benefits and ROI of effective sales intelligence
    • Obstacles to the adoption of sales intelligence by sales groups
    • Examples of solutions that increase sales intelligence usage

    If you are a practitioner of competitive intelligence, this Webinar was geared specifically to making sure that your company receives the biggest market gains from your efforts.

    The Webinar can be downloaded here. The file may be a little large, but can be easily navigated once it is downloaded.

    If you would like to receive an invitation to our Webinars in the future, please drop me a line at cdalley@primary-intel.com. Also, I’m happy to explain any of the concepts presented if you would like to discuss.

    Friday, June 8, 2007

    Why Doesn't Competitive Intelligence Flow to Sales?

    It has been my observation that most companies perform some type of competitive intelligence. In fact, most have several, if not dozens, of programs. Each research initiative is built to produce information upon which decisions may be based.

    It has also been my observation that the production of intelligence is almost always handled by the marketing department, which makes sense. Of course, I am painting in broad strokes, but if you can accept that most analysts, competitive intelligence specialists and market research groups fit under the marketing umbrella, we should all agree on this point.

    In fact, in one of our Primary Intelligence internal studies, 89% of companies said that they have a formal competitive intelligence program in place. This is higher than the 78% that have a customer sat program and the 65% that conduct account retention analysis.

    But, when we ask the sales reps about the availability and use of competitive intelligence in their jobs, only 56% of sales managers claim competitive intelligence as one of their tools. A higher percentage of sales reps (68%) say that they use competitive intelligence to sell. But, I don’t know the percentage of intelligence that comes from marketing vs. self-generated intelligence. Sales reps and account managers can be very resourceful when it comes to preparing to do their job.

    All this seems to beg the question… why isn’t sales organizing competitive intelligence initiatives more often? Why don’t sales managers use competitive intelligence to position more effectively? Why doesn’t the sales department work more closely with marketing?

    It is my experience that there is more than one obstacle. But, the most important fact is that the intelligence is delivered in chunks that sales doesn’t want to eat. This fact seems to outweigh the type of intelligence available or any other obstacles that might exist between sales and marketing.

    Another important fact to consider is that the competitive intelligence is often commissioned by management and executives, which means that the intelligence is not designed from the outset to satisfy sales nor answer questions relevant to sales.

    Both of these problems can be overcome through tighter communication between sales and marketing. Odds are that current intelligence initiatives can be reworked to include a few tidbits for the sales group. Furthermore, marketing can study the current information sources used by sales and mimic those sources to deliver bits and pieces (or full meals) straight to the sales reps.

    If the intelligence can make a sales rep 10% more effective (and current evidence suggests that 10% is a conservative figure), how much revenue does your company stand to gain by improving the intelligence communication process? What opportunity is being lost today by not doing so?

    Let’s talk about the possibilities and what they mean to you. (cdalley@primary-intel.com, 801-838-9600 x5050)

    Wednesday, June 6, 2007

    Primary Intelligence Newsletter Launches!

    EXTRA! EXTRA! READ ALL ABOUT IT!

    Yesterday, we launched the Primary Intelligence Weekly Newsletter, which was a very big deal for our company. A number of events came together lately to encourage us to share our ideas and the newsletter seems to be the best tool for our purposes.

    Our newsletter will be dedicated to the promotion of sales and competitive intelligence. If you have spent any time reading this blog, you'll know that we lean heavily toward intelligence that is most likely to provide ROI. We will discuss current topics, provide case studies and bring you techniques that are likely to help your company move ahead of the competitors. In brief we will:

    • Promote competitive intelligence
    • Create a forum of likeminded people
    • Solicit viewpoints from practitioners and academics
    If you would like to be added to our subscription list, send me an email and I'll make sure you are added for the next edition (cdalley@primary-intel.com)

    Take a look at the stories from our first edition:

    Cover Story

    Million Dollar Competitive Intelligence for Pennies a Day

    By Ron Sathoff, Primary Intelligence Inc.

    My Dad always used to say, "Leveraging all that you already have in an efficient way can bring about unexpected benefits." Of course, he phrased it as "Make the most of what you have," or "No, you can't have any more money," but the sentiment is similar. Enhancing your Competitive Intelligence does not mean you have to launch a whole new set of research initiatives. (For more, click here)



    BlogCentral

    It Really Isn't About Price

    Recently, we interviewed a lost sales opportunity for one of our vision care providers. They had battled it out with two other providers and in the end, they weren't selected, but it wasn't about price. (For more, click here)




    The Big Deal

    The A-List: 7-Eleven Selects HP Technology

    7-Eleven needed to upgrade the information technology that it had in its stores to provide them with the data they needed to run their systems faster. After sending out RFPs to several companies, 7-Eleven narrowed its short list to two alternatives: a Hewlett-Packard solution, and a combined solution from NEC and NCR, with NEC providing the hardware and NCR providing the service for the solution. (For more, click here)

    If you have feedback or comments, let me know. I am interested to know what you think about our publication. (cdalley@primary-intel.com, 801-838-9600 x5050)

    Friday, May 4, 2007

    Competitive Intelligence Needs a Personal Touch

    I am a little hard of hearing today after yelling and cheering at the Utah Jazz/Houston Rockets game. What a great game! The crowd was nuts. The players played hard, and (more importantly for Jazz fans) there will be a game 7 on Saturday night.

    You may have already seen this, but check out the Google driving directions from New York to London, UK: (click here)

    The fun of it is when you consider that these are driving directions. The best part is looking all the way down the list and finding out that the Google people know that you can’t drive across the Atlantic Ocean. However, they have a practical alternative.

    This does have a point.

    The Google directions are smart enough to tell you that you’re going to have to swim to cross the ocean. Someone at Google had the notion to take a piece of information that was delivered automatically and insert a custom bit of instruction that is either useful or entertaining, depending on your point of view.

    If you provide competitive intelligence in your organization, you have to help advise the users on different points. If you leave everything to the reader of the data, it is possible that they will end up in the wrong place with the wrong tools. Use your experience to understand the context of the data and provide recommendations.

    One of the worst things that can happen to intelligence is to orphan a report or brief in a department. In most companies, they will suffer from neglect. Very sad, indeed.

    And, I think the Jazz will beat the Rockets in game 7. Goooooo JAZZ!

    Let me know what you think (cdalley@primary-intel.com, 801-838-9600 x5050)

    Friday, April 27, 2007

    Competitive Intelligence and TOO MUCH DATA!

    Ron Sathoff (an associate of mine at Primary Intelligence) brought me the results of a study from Advertising Age. The most interesting chart was called, "What Middle Managers Say About Obtaining Necessary Data" and the responses to the survey were generated from 1,009 US and UK respondents in January 2007.


    (Source: Advertising Age, Digital Marketing & Media Fast Pack, Published April 23, 2007, Copyright 2007 Crain Communications Inc.)


    If you are a competitive intelligence professional, you have to focus on improving the:

    -relevancy of your data
    -distribution methods of your data
    If you consider that 59% say they can’t find existing information, 45% say that they don’t know what the rest of the company is doing and 40% of the respondents say that other parts of the company won’t share info, you have 144% of the people that are experiencing a problem.

    Well, that’s not quite right (and you can see the my statistics training didn’t really stick), but it sure seems odd to me that this many managers are not able to find the information necessary to do their jobs better.

    So how does a company overcome these obstacles and distribute information more effectively?

    1- Someone in the organization has to understand and coordinate the primary
    intelligence-gathering campaigns. Depending on the size of the organization,
    this may be a difficult task, but a Director of CI should be able to compile and
    update a basic list

    2- This list needs to be distributed to different levels of management.
    People in the organization need to know what is available.

    3- If you have a “librarian” that catalogues the data, it is not enough
    to “store” it in convenient places. Reports need to be advertised. Data needs to
    be presented. Even an internal company newsletter to managers and execs would
    help to serve the purpose. But, nobody can hide behind the excuse, “That report
    has been posted to the intranet for months. They should have known.” You have to
    innovate to distribute intelligence effectively

    4- Road shows – Take data on the road. Summarize reports. Go to
    scheduled meetings, whether the meeting is down the hall or down the interstate.

    5- Build trust with rogue departments that don’t want to share data.
    Find out why they want to hold it so close to the vest and work your way into
    their trust

    6- Recommend consultants to help departments build in the resident
    intelligence. Some data recipients like to read reports and distill the results
    into their own recommendations. The majority prefers to get the summary, next
    steps and action plan. If this is in your comfort zone, go for it. If not, get
    outside expertise.

    This is the information age. Companies run on intelligence. They run efficiently and better than the competition when they run on the right data at the right time.

    If you are an order taker, stop. You still have to listen, but you have to do more than run projects on an as-needed basis. Take responsibility for your company’s intelligence and make it work for more people.

    If you have thoughts, questions or suggestions, contact me (cdalley@primary-intel.com, 801-838-9600 x5050)

    Friday, April 6, 2007

    Making Competitive Intelligence Louder than the Corporate Noise

    At Primary Intelligence, we just finished working with a company that had very mature competitive intelligence processes in place. The processes provided information that should have helped maintain a competitive advantage in the marketplace. Overall, the builders of the CI program put a lot of work into creating and refining processes that collected the right information.

    And, their department just lost most of its funding. New initiatives won’t be added and it will be difficult to preserve much of the status quo. Smart people will soon be working with other companies.

    Why?

    Because, the CI department never really figured out how to make the results meaningful to the executives. Decisions were rarely influenced (let alone, based on) the results of their efforts.

    And, that’s all she wrote. If a tree falls in the forest and nobody is there…

    This is not a one-time occurrence. And, it is a way of life that is not limited to the Competitive Intelligence, Marketing Research or Marketing departments of the world. In fact, important people in mission-critical roles are dismissed regularly if the perception is that they are not producing results.

    What is the take home lesson?

    Be seen. Be heard. Be effective and make your presence known. Specifically, in relation to Competitive Intelligence:

    1- Push information into the executive boardrooms as often as possible
    2- Ask, ask, ask, ask, ask about the current questions that need to be answered for the company leadership
    3- Study the way key decision-makers in the company find and read information. Do they prefer raw data, spreadsheets and crude analysis or will they only consume small, polished briefs, one chunk at a time
    4- Be a consultant. Present intelligence options and drive the topic of competitive intelligence methods as an agenda item.
    5- Be prepared to show case studies of related efforts showing ROI potential in competitive intelligence.

    After all this, be prepared to do it over and over. If you want to stay above the noise in the corporation, you have to be a little better organized, targeted and unified than everything else. Otherwise, you will just be static.

    Wednesday, April 4, 2007

    Self-service Competitive Intelligence

    Last fall, on behalf of Primary Intelligence, I co-authored an article for a local magazine on self-service intelligence. The main idea was to emphasize how to put the right intelligence in the right places at the right time to make sure that your company is capitalizing on the right markets as efficiently as possible.

    For example:

    Analytics
    The first step you need to take to leave your safe harbor is to evaluate your data collection processes and your analytic capabilities. What is the use of collecting information if you can’t interpret and act upon it with predictable outcomes? Successful analytics processes help to evaluate the quality of the initial data and determine which portions reinforce the central goals of the organization. The usefulness of the information and analytics can be determined by its ability to support the company goals.

    Customization
    Simplicity is the key here; companies should evaluate different solutions to determine the most effective collaboration tools. Special care should be taken to ensure that sensitive data is easily accessible to all required personnel while protecting it from exposure to outside parties. The fundamental requirements of sharing sensitive information must address the establishment of trust and the need to enable users to find and make sense of all available information by:
    *Enabling users to understand the reliability, accuracy, and urgency of the information.
    *Empowering owners to retain control of information and precisely determine its access and use.
    *Logging and auditing who, what, and why information is accessed and used.

    Distribution
    How do successful companies share data? It has to be part of the company culture and encouraged from the top down. The creation of “information silos” (repositories where data and analytics are stored, but not used) is most easily avoided when effective collaboration tools are used. The need for these tools increases exponentially with the size of the company. Smaller and medium-sized businesses generally benefit from more easily accessible communication channels. Larger companies become more compartmentalized and data tends to remain within divisions and managerial levels.

    Some effective methods of disseminating information through an organization include:
    *Knowledge bases and expert systems
    *Help desks
    *Corporate intranets and extranets
    *Content management
    *Wikis
    *Document management

    If you want to get results from your competitive intelligence efforts, the formula is simple: the right information delivered to the right people in a format they can understand. Try to hit at least 2 of those 3 criteria every time.

    Check out the article. Let me know what you think.