All Discussions Tagged 'economic' - Competitive Intelligence2024-03-29T07:46:48Zhttp://competitiveintelligence.ning.com/forum/topic/listForTag?tag=economic&feed=yes&xn_auth=noNew Article on CI, Law, and the Economic Espionage Acttag:competitiveintelligence.ning.com,2012-03-06:2036441:Topic:726532012-03-06T22:36:32.191ZRichard Horowitzhttp://competitiveintelligence.ning.com/profile/RichardHorowitz
<p>I recently published this article which I think members of the CI industry will find useful:</p>
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<p>Competitive Intelligence, Law, and Ethics:The Economic Espioange Act Revisited, Again (and Hopefully for the Last Time) <a href="http://rhesq.com/CI/Hopefully%20For%20The%20Last%20Time.pdf">http://rhesq.com/CI/Hopefully%20For%20The%20Last%20Time.pdf</a>.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>I recently published this article which I think members of the CI industry will find useful:</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Competitive Intelligence, Law, and Ethics:The Economic Espioange Act Revisited, Again (and Hopefully for the Last Time) <a href="http://rhesq.com/CI/Hopefully%20For%20The%20Last%20Time.pdf">http://rhesq.com/CI/Hopefully%20For%20The%20Last%20Time.pdf</a>.</p>
<p> </p> The Application of CI for International Economic Developmenttag:competitiveintelligence.ning.com,2009-06-18:2036441:Topic:239242009-06-18T12:53:38.435ZArik Johnsonhttp://competitiveintelligence.ning.com/profile/ArikJohnson
Many of you may have <a href="http://tr.im/oUME" target="_blank">missed the news</a> this week that our good friend and colleague Prof. Paul Dishman has been named a Fulbright Scholar by the State Department to lecture and do research at a university in Montenegro on using competitive intelligence in international economic development at our world's newest nation.<br />
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I'm wondering if this means there is some recognition then of CI's benefits in this sense? Paul, are you out there? Would you care…
Many of you may have <a target="_blank" href="http://tr.im/oUME">missed the news</a> this week that our good friend and colleague Prof. Paul Dishman has been named a Fulbright Scholar by the State Department to lecture and do research at a university in Montenegro on using competitive intelligence in international economic development at our world's newest nation.<br />
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I'm wondering if this means there is some recognition then of CI's benefits in this sense? Paul, are you out there? Would you care to comment? Anybody else?<br />
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It strikes me that, if the U.S. State Department is recognizing CI as a legitimate and significant enough managerial competence to have funded a Fulbright Scholarship then that's pretty big news, eh? Or, has this happened before? What did you think of Michael Porter's article on "Why America Needs an Economic Strategy?"tag:competitiveintelligence.ning.com,2008-11-10:2036441:Topic:117012008-11-10T13:06:59.801ZEric Garlandhttp://competitiveintelligence.ning.com/profile/EricGarland
New thoughts about competition and strategy may be bubbling up into the managerial mindset. I just read Michael Porter's new article "<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_45/b4107038217112.htm">Why America Needs an Economic Strategy</a>" in the latest Business Week and thought that it could mean a positive development for the competitive intelligence/strategy/scenario thinking/futures crowd here.<br />
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Porter says that America has a lot of valuable assets, and <i>no plan…</i>
New thoughts about competition and strategy may be bubbling up into the managerial mindset. I just read Michael Porter's new article "<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_45/b4107038217112.htm">Why America Needs an Economic Strategy</a>" in the latest Business Week and thought that it could mean a positive development for the competitive intelligence/strategy/scenario thinking/futures crowd here.<br />
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Porter says that America has a lot of valuable assets, and <i>no plan whatsoever</i> for long-term prosperity. The United States has a great science and technology engine, the best technology transfer in the world, and a still-vibrant culture of entrepreneurialism. However, the U.S. will be hobbled by its lacking social net, a mess of a public health system, decaying infrastructure, and creeping neo-mercantilism in the form of giant corporations that distort markets. He says that the only way out is to think long-term, from small businesses up to national policy makers.<br />
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<b><i>Question: Do you think that this presents an opportunity for you as a global intelligence professional? If so what might you do about it?</i></b><br />
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It seems to me that if people around the world are going to start thinking broadly, it can only mean good things for our community. Perhaps our moment has arrived, if only we can seize it. It seems better than small, short-term, parochial, next-quarter thinking at the very least!