Lecture 8 - Competitive Intelligence Flashcards
What is Competitive Intelligence?
Finding your place in the world (how do you fit in, what is around you, are there any threats, opportunities or changing circumstances).
The identification, collection, understanding and interpretation of information about your business, your competitors and the environment in which you are (or will be) operating.
How does CI help?
- Work out where you are
- Work out where the rest of the world is
- Work out your relevance to the rest of the world
What are examples of secondary research?
- Published Data - previously collected for other purposes or studies
- Internal (eg. sales reports, invoices, audits)
- External (eg. Internet searching, ABS, journals, information databases)
What are examples of primary research?
- Unpublished data - need to find the information yourself
- Use specialized CI techniques (eg. focus groups, surveys, interviews)
- Feedback from sales representatives
Secondary Research (Time, Cost, Labour, Limitations)
Efficient, Free to expensive, minimal labour and have limitations such as subjectivity, reputability of course, errors, out-of-date, usually available to competitors
Primary Research (Time, Cost, Labour, Limitations)
Moderate to tedious duration, moderate to expensive, Mostly labour intensive and limitations such as low response rate, incentive for participation, subjectivity, trust and sampling difficulties
What does the Competitor Intelligence Pyramid comprise of?
Sources of Data, Analysis of Data, Recommendations
What are examples of sources of data?
Industry experts/ analysts Industry publications Trade shows/ conferences Advertisments/ PR University research centres Financial Court documents/ patents Suppliers/ customers Newspapers/ business wire Help wanted ads Reverse engineering labs
What is the analysis of data?
To develop a deep understanding of the data
What are some recommendations?
Track existing Rivals, anticipate new rivals, inform strategy by identifying own/ competitor’s strengths or weaknesses, have an early warning system and plan of attack or retaliation
What is a competitor analysis?
- What drives the competitor
- What is the competitor doing
- What can the competitor do
- What does the competitor believe about itself and the industry
- What are the competitor’s capabilities
- How will our competitors do in the future
- Where do we have a competitive advantage
- How will this change our relationship with our competitor
What is the difference between short term and long term CI?
Short term CI: strong focus on markets and competitor’s products and the immediate revenue of the company’s products, prices, and marketing and advertising.
Long-term CI: Detects weak signals and trends very early so future risks and opportunities can be managed and controlled
How to perform CI well?
- Define the problem/ issue (why do you need the CI research?)
- Set research objectives (what do you intend to do?)
- Develop strategic research plan (identify available resources - time, money and people. Identify potential information sources. Develop methodology and process)
- Do the research
- Process and analyse information (what does it mean? is it useful)
- Act on research (Use information for strategic development decision making)
Why is good CI essential?
- stay ahead of competitors
- maximise opportunities and customer base
- inform the IP strategy
- avoid shocks and reduce risk
- inform the product development
- defining the market
- identify new technologies both useful and disruptive
- inform short and long term business strategies
- bench mark pricing and quality
- identify partnerships
- reducing reaction time