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  2. Competitive intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competitive_intelligence

    Competitive intelligence is a legal business practice, as opposed to industrial espionage, which is illegal. [4]The focus is on the external business environment. [5]There is a process involved in gathering information, converting it into intelligence, and then using it in decision-making.

  3. Technology scouting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technology_scouting

    Technology scouting is also known to be part of competitive intelligence, which firms apply as a tool of competitive strategy. [5] It can also be regarded as a method of technology forecasting [6] or in the broader context also an element of corporate foresight. [7] Technology scouting may also be applied as an element of an open innovation ...

  4. Mercyhurst University Institute for Intelligence Studies

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercyhurst_University...

    The Masters of Science in Applied Intelligence is a thirty-four or thirty-six-credit two-year program designed to prepare graduates to pursue analyst careers in law enforcement, national security and competitive intelligence. As of 2009, there are approximately 53 graduate students in the Applied Intelligence program. [8]

  5. Intelligence source and information reliability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence_source_and...

    According to Ewen Montagu, John Godfrey devised this system when he was director of the Naval Intelligence Division (N.I.D.) around the time of World War II. [5] The system employed by the United States Armed Forces rates the reliability of the source as well as the information. The source reliability is rated between A (history of complete ...

  6. Market intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_intelligence

    As research into MI comes from scholars and non-scholars of different backgrounds it has resulted in a fragmented state of research. This has led to MI being used interchangeably with other market terms such as competitive intelligence, business intelligence and strategic intelligence. [9]

  7. Knowledge economy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_economy

    The knowledge economy operates differently from the past as it has been identified by the upheavals (sometimes referred to as the knowledge revolution) in technological innovations and the globally competitive need for differentiation with new goods and services, and processes that develop from the research community (i.e., R&D factors ...

  8. Intelligence (journal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence_(journal)

    Intelligence is a bimonthly peer-reviewed academic journal of psychology that covers research on intelligence and psychometrics. It is published by Elsevier and is the official journal of the International Society for Intelligence Research. The journal was established in 1977 by Douglas K. Detterman (Case Western Reserve University).

  9. Open-source intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-source_intelligence

    Collecting open-source intelligence is achieved in a variety of different ways, [4] such as: Social Media Intelligence, which is acquired from viewing or observing a subjects online social profile activity. Search engine data mining or scraping. Public records checking. Information matching and verification from data broker services.