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Working in the World of “Decision Support” Career Paths for Business Intelligence Skills Sets

Working in the World of “Decision Support” Career Paths for Business Intelligence Skills Sets. Professor Paul Kinsinger. Some Background…. 29 years of professional intelligence experience in the public and private sectors First career was with the CIA’s analysis directorate

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Working in the World of “Decision Support” Career Paths for Business Intelligence Skills Sets

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  1. Working in the World of “Decision Support”Career Paths for Business Intelligence Skills Sets Professor Paul Kinsinger

  2. Some Background… • 29 years of professional intelligence experience in the public and private sectors • First career was with the CIA’s analysis directorate • Eleven years consulting with private sector and teaching business intelligence at Thunderbird • Course is GB 5712—Business Intelligence and Corporate Security…3 credit elective…taught every semester

  3. A Working Definition… Business intelligence is… a systematic, targeted and timely effort to collect, synthesize, and analyze information on the external operating environment in order to produce actionable insight. When combined with internal company information, it should give a manager as complete a picture as possible of the total decision making environment.

  4. The External Environment Competitors: Capabilities, Plans and Intentions Industry Structure and Trends Corporate Security Threats The Focus Business Intelligence Political, Economic, and Social Forces Technology Developments and Sources Markets and Customers

  5. Introducing Business Intelligence BI focuses on the “outside,” and should be seen as a company’s “radar” unit, scanning the external environment for opportunities and dangers

  6. It’s not just another term for Market Research…. “Good BI is broader in scope and more forward-looking than market research.”

  7. It’s also not Industrial Espionage!

  8. What Do Companies Use BI For? 1. Assessing Competitor(s) Strategies • response to new product launch or new market entry • benchmarking best practices • predicting next moves • evaluating a new entrant • evaluating new leadership

  9. Assessing a Possible Merger for Merck • Assuming that the merger materializes, assess the potential new company formed between partner A and partner B • Profile of new company • Determine synergies • Identify and assess strengths and weaknesses • Analyze the impact of the potential new company on Merck • Recommend course of action for Merck

  10. What Do Companies Use BI For? 2. Defining A Competitive Landscape • New business doesn’t really know what it’s up against… • others that do exactly the same thing • stronger players thinking of entry • threatening new technologies

  11. What Do Companies Use BI For? 3. Discovering and Assessing Industry Trends • Who Else is Doing What, and Why? • Anything we can do, too? • Anything we can do to leapfrog? • Anything we can avoid?

  12. What Do Companies Use BI For? 4. Targeting Opportunities • Who are the best partner prospects for us? • Who are the best acquisition opportunities? • Who should we be trying to sell to/merge with?

  13. Scouting an Acquisition Opportunity for a Mexican Retail Company • Confirm financial due diligence • Describe and assess target’s go-forward strategy • Conclude whether target would be open to acquisition inquiry • Determine how best to negotiate with target if/when opportunity arose

  14. The Ingredients of BI Find it out Business Intelligence Information Insight • Figure it out

  15. Finding It Out: Leveraging Secondary Sources • Web sites • The business press • Market research/investment bank reports • Financial statements • Sophisticated data bases • Trade journals • Papers given at conferences

  16. Finding It Out: Utilizing Primary Sources • Suppliers • Distributors • Customers • Industry experts/Market analysts • Current and former employees • Academics • Chat/user groups • First-hand observations

  17. Figuring It Out: Closing Information Gaps and Developing Insight Competitive Analytical Tools: • SWOT’s • Value Chain Analysis • 5 Forces • 4 P’s • Strategy Chain Analysis • Wargaming • Personality Intelligence Assessments

  18. The Business Intelligence Process Identifying Needs Collecting and... ...Analyzing the data Delivering Conclusions Driving Decisions

  19. Careers in Business/Competitive Intelligence Key Resources: • The Society of Competitive Intelligence Professionals (SCIP)…@scip.org • 27 US chapters and 3 in Canada • 13 in Europe • 3 in Asia • 3 in Latin America • 1 in South Africa • Competitive Intelligence Magazine • SCIP.online

  20. Core Careers in BI/CI…Two Tracks Corporate in-house Consulting FTE Vertical Horizontal PTE

  21. Companies where T-birds are doing “in-house” BI/CI • Ernst&Young • Unilever • American Express • Microsoft • Merck • ING • Flowserve

  22. “What do I like most about my job?” “The best part of my job is the constant learning, the ability to stretch my brain on a regular basis…With the dynamics inside the professional services industry currently, as well as the overall business environment, there's tons of thought-provoking situations and opportunities…another aspect of my job I enjoy is access to the top layers of the organization and feeling like I can make a difference by helping our leadership think differently or more broadly about their decisions.” Michelle Settecase, 1995, Ernst&Young

  23. “In reality CI is only one of many things I do” “The CEO, when I first started doing this back about three and a half years ago, implored me to give my reports some added value in the form of recommendations (“what does this all mean?”). Since then, I always add actionable conclusions and recommendations. Ain’t always easy, but at the end of the day, I hear he loves it and that he thinks it’s some of the most important work we do. So, if for no other reason, it’s to assuage the concerns of the CEO, who worries that there could be a “2X4” coming out of nowhere to knock us on our ass.” Chris Kenny, 2001, ING

  24. Consulting firms where T-birds are doing “in-house” BI/CI Proactive Worldwide Navigate International

  25. “What do you like most about your job?” “I love learning about new industries, companies & countries and I love the variety.  I never get bored with the research because I'm constantly learning something new.  I love the fact that no two projects are ever the same, even if they are for the same client or within the same industry.” --Ingrid Lee, 2003 Navigate Int’l “The diversity of the work; no two projects are the same. Having input on the decisions that executives make. When you’re on the phone with a division president or in the room with a client's executive committee and they begin to discuss how they are going to make changes based upon your research, it’s a thrill.” --Chris O’Neill, 2000, Proactive Worldwide

  26. SCIP Salary Survey Results • Average annual base salary for CI professionals in year 2003 was $78,064 (16% increase from 2000) • Average annual bonus for CI professionals in 2003 was $13,989 • CI professionals work 46 hours per week on an average • Median budget for CI activities was $200,000 for the 2003 fiscal year • 42% of the participants reported that they are in CI or Analysis, and 27% of the respondents are in Market Planning, Research or Analysis

  27. Industry Sectors

  28. Leveraging BI Skills Sets in Other Decision Support Fields BI Skills Sets Consulting Core BI Market Research In-house Corporate Outsourced Consulting Entrepreneurship Public Sector Vertical Horizontal Corporate Security

  29. Consulting Consulting • Capgemini Ernst & Young • KPMG • Accenture • Deloitte Touche • PriceWaterhouseCoopers • IBM Global Services • Mercer Management Consulting Global Consulting Management Consulting • McKinsey • Bain • Boston Consulting Group • Booz Allen

  30. Consulting “With regard to research and analysis skills, there is a more than relation here. Consulting firms perform regular competitive analysis. Any person that has worked in a CI setting caneasily sell themselves as great researchers for consulting companies. I, for one, have done a lot of this kind of research.” Luis Marin, 2001, CapGemini

  31. Market Research • Gartner • Frost & Sullivan • InStat/MDR • Dataquest • Forrester • Yankee Group • IDC

  32. “What do you like the most about your job?” “I like the professional autonomy it offers, both in terms of information collection/analysis and business development.  Instead of being a small cog in a large corporate machine, as an analyst I get to examine a market, select my research topics, determine how to collect and analyze information about the topic, and produce a final product.  Then I have to find and acquire customers for my research, something that's often overlooked in the decision support world.” Mike Paxton, 1997, InStat/MDR

  33. “What skills sets are the most important for your job?” “Pattern recognition, highly conceptual thinking, the ability to digest large volumes of information rapidly, and the ability to project forward and extrapolate current conditions into likely future scenarios are the most important core personal characteristics needed, along with a strong sense of intellectual curiosity.  Obviously, strong research skills are a must, such as being able to establish industry contacts and effectively utilize a wide range of information sources.  A strong understanding of competitive strategy and how businesses and industries "work" is also a requisite skill.” Sam Lucero, 2000, InStat/MDR

  34. “What skills sets are the most important for your job?” “A high degree of analytical ability, a high degree of comfort with financial analysis coupled with vertical industry expertise.  The "soft" skills (and I would classify them as being as important as the "hard" skills) would be presentation skills, as much of our job entails presenting to large audiences or C-level execs.  Relationship building (brings in repeat business if the project is executed well) and last but not the least - diplomacy!” Arun Rao, 1996, Gartner

  35. “What skills sets are the most important for your job?” • “Good interviewing skills and ability to "soften up" the interviewee so he/she shares more sensitive information • Good writing skills and ability to write a paper of about 50-150 pages that clearly defines concepts and ideas and presents a logical and coherent analysis of the current and future state of a certain market • Ability to generalize and draw conclusions about market characteristics and trends based on secondary sources and facts and opinions shared by market participants • Ability to extrapolate and develop unit and revenue forecast models based on current market size estimates and qualitative factors such as challenges, drivers, restraints, and market and technology trends • Ability to correlate trends across various market segments” Elka Popova, 1999, Frost & Sullivan

  36. The World of Corporate Security In-House Security Personnel Proactive Due Diligence & General Security Awareness Data Cyber Security Building Security Executive Self-Defense Training Protective Details (Body Guards) Transport Security (Armored Vehicles) Active Due Diligence & Risk Investigations Crisis Coordinators Kidnap & Ransom Specialists Private Security Forces/ Armies

  37. Companies in this field where T-birds work: • Kroll • Control Risk Group • Hill & Associates • Spinelli Coprptation

  38. “What skills sets are the most important for your job?” “What the forensics experts and investigators like most about their jobs would probably be developing investigation strategies to help resolve a client's problem or working with business people to develop solutions to their business issues. The most important skill sets in our companies are some technical expertise (e.g.. accounting, specifically a CFE designation or computer technology-an Encase certification), strong analytic skills, strong communication skills (much of the process is reiterative and the end product is either a written or oral report), and an ability to creatively approach problems.” Helen Fenlon, 1983, Spinelli Corporation

  39. The Public Sector • The Foreign Service (Foreign Ministry) • US Commercial Service (Int’l Trade ministries) • National intelligence agencies • Militaries and the Department of Defense (Defense Ministry) • Department of Energy • Department of Homeland Security (Interior Ministry)

  40. Final Thoughts… “Your BI class,although one of the most challenging classes I took, turned out to be one of the most relevant to my professional experience since graduation. I have found to be very useful the basic approach to gathering relevant information, analyzing and making recommendations or decisions. As a financial professional, it may not be clear how BI interfaces with my everyday activities, but it is actually quite simple-financial analysis is only as good as the assumptions used to arrive at the outcome; therefore, I have to constantly check the plausibility of these assumptions by engaging myself within the competitive environment, form opinions about trends, and most importantly, ask the right questions of my business partners.” Valentine Aganbi, 2001, Unilever

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