Monday, December 3, 2007

Competitive Intelligence Tip #1 - Make Your CI Produce Revenue

In a post by Jan P. Herring titled “How Much is Your Competitive Intelligence Worth,” the distinction between information and intelligence is made in a way that speaks to me:

“In the final analysis you can evaluate your company’s CI effort if you properly define what and how you intend to measure. In my experience, senior level users of BI/CI are not as interested in financial or quantitative measures of your CI products & services as they are in having intelligence that visibly affects their decision-making or business actions in a positive fashion. They do, however, expect to see some form of related action. Those actions that result in grater sales, profits, or other measures of business success are the most valued.

An old friend and associate, Robert Steele, probably put it best, “Information costs money. Intelligence makes money!” Essentially, any competitive information that a business manager acts on becomes intelligence. And, intelligence used by a company that makes money is good intelligence!”
He also discusses various ways that Competitive Intelligence can produce ROI, but more importantly, can be measured to validate the ROI:

  • Time saving: Savings for both professional and support personnel
  • Cost savings: Elimination or reduction in expenses
  • Cost avoidance: Elimination of planned expenses
  • Revenue increases: Increases in the number of sales or size of sales
  • Value added: Benefits not easily related to specific dollar values, e.g., more effective strategies or better new products and services.
  • In so many places, we have tried to espouse the same message. Competitive intelligence professionals need to be looking for the ROI in their initiatives. Or, too often, you will be known as the producer of information, not intelligence. And, really? What value is there in that?

    Links to other Primary Intelligence thoughts on CI/ROI
    Webinar: CI with ROI
    Another Endorsement for Win Loss Analysis
    Competitive Intelligence – The Difference Between “Interesting” and “Effective”
    What are the top challenges with regards to Competitive Intelligence?
    Making Competitive Intelligence Effective with Cross-functional Teams (Part 2 of 4)
    Increasing ROI from Competitive Intelligence Efforts
    Analytics in Competitive Intelligence: Stated Importance vs. Derived Importance

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