Buying any kind of software requires a great deal of thought into why and what it is going to be used for. Intelligence software is no different in that respect. Please share best practices in this area and what the key points are to think abut before deciding what to implement. What must be included and what is not so important? Should everything come from one vendor or should you build it on your own?
The report referenced here is one of the most thorough CI software case studies ever written. Most of the 20+ pages are direct quotes from a CIO at a European Pharmaceutical firm. He talks about the research and selection process, as well as the planning, deployment and training process.
Indeed, procuring software requires a good understanding of the following concepts:
- Why do I, my team, my company need a software for intelligence activities?
- What does it cost me, my team, and my company not having a software today?
- Which value should this software bring now and in the future to me, my team, and how will it positively impact information flows and processes in my company?
There are some good answers from other posters here. The last question you raise about building your own solution instead of going for something provided by a vendor has it's own interesting aspects. We did a white paper on this a couple of years ago: http://www.comintell.com/website/downloads/White%20Papers/S0130-F%2...
While some people are aware that it might be costly to do their own development, fewer realise that home cooked solutions tend to underperfom as well. We have some references to that in the white paper. So, in answer to your last question, I would prefer a vendor solution or a combination of vendor solutions to building my own.
I think that there an interesting White-Paper from Digimind attaching which are the main features for a CI software. This is a good starting point for a check list for doing a benchmark and comparative cost-features.
I find websites like www.wikiinvest.com as good starting points for CI projects. But again these are more websites than tools. I have not come across any comprehensive tools than can do the analysis for you and most CI tools I have seen here and els…
4 hours ago
Xavier Le Nué is now a member of Competitive Intelligence
I am reading Seena Sharp's Competitive Intelligence Advantage and it is quickly becoming a favorite. I have read other books and found them too academic to be practical. I am compiling a list of recommended reading (books, websites, blogs, magazines…
I am reading Seena Sharp's Competitive Intelligence Advantageand it is quickly becoming one of my favorites. I have read other books, but got little practical use out of them--they were much to academic. I am trying to compile a recommended bibliogr…
I am enjoying the book, still working through it with all my other reading, but I like the practicality of it. Practitioners of the art need more than academic treaties on the subject. And thanks for making it a Kindle selection--when you travel aro…
Well getting a clean feed takes a combination of good web-sources and appropriate taxonomy-based semantic filters. It seems your friend's RSS is clean and thus it may be worth to look at his/her taxonomy. Any insight?
Indeed Richard you seem pretty well covered as far as information retrieval is concerned.
What about analysis, sharing, collaboration with others? What about aggregating those feeds together?
Any insights would be helpful.
I use e-sobi. It is a rss and podcast feed reader. I can add the feeds I want, I can store pages for later use, I can set alerts. Seems to be more powerful than the free readers. SInce you can organize it the way you want, it provides a way to quick…
A collective of professionals and passionate amateurs around the globe who analyze a world in transition and help guide leaders in their most critical decisions.