Klaus Knorr was one of the first to advocate a wide dissemination of Business Intelligence, starting from the university space; for him it is “the operation to obtain and process information about the external environment in which an organization wants to maximize the achievement of its different goals”. Business intelligence is becoming a major component of corporate strategy and is based on information that is the foundation of any decision-making process. Information as such had received a fundamental scientific treatment without which economic intelligence could not have developed.
In France, the contribution of a group of experts from the Commissariat Général du Plan was published in 1994 under the name of the Martre Report. This work on the “Economic Intelligence and Company Strategy” proposes a definition in the introduction to the report: “Economic intelligence can be defined as all the coordinated actions of research, processing and distribution, with a view to its exploitation, of information useful to economic players. These various actions are carried out legally with all the necessary guarantees of protection to preserve the company's assets, in the best conditions of quality, time and cost. Useful information is that which is needed by the various levels of decision-making in the company or community to develop and consistently implement the strategy and tactics necessary to achieve the objectives defined by the company in
order to improve its position in its competitive environment. These actions, within the company, are organized in an uninterrupted cycle, generating a shared vision of the objectives to be achieved ”
1.2. Strategic economic intelligence revisited
The economy has become global, it is constantly changing. This dynamic gives information, which is at the heart of economic intelligence, a speed of circulation that can lead to radical changes in the economic environment of companies. Whoever masters or attempts to master information can have a significant edge in our competitive world. It also requires the ability to understand our economic, social and financial environment and its interactions very quickly. “Economic intelligence” is defined by ethical means, and its strength lies in the ability to interpret and not in the seditious nature of the information gathered. Economic intelligence is a major component of any strategy.
Economic Intelligence has had difficulty establishing itself in France. Nine years after the Martre report, the government asked MP Bernard Carayon for a new report. Five years after this last report, the 2008 Defense White Paper paid particular attention to economic intelligence in the context of the protection of fragile industrial sectors whose skills may be of a sensitive nature. Finally, in its progress report of January 5, 2010, the “états généraux de l’industrie” (general industry report) underlined the need for French industry to better understand its competitive environment, its potential markets and the opportunities that new technologies can offer. This report insists on support for exports through a better match between production and world demand through economic intelligence and a sustained promotion of “made in France”.
1.2.1. The three major steps for decision support
The proposed model retains three concepts; “Data, Information, Knowledge” which make it possible to define the global concept of economic intelligence by highlighting the central place of “Information”. This global concept leads to the decision-making and the cycle of Strategic Business Intelligence. This work was presented for the first time on 19 April 2005 at the CCI of Montpellier during “Des Matins De La Cité”.
The explosion of a phenomenal amount of data, the need to analyze and visualize it, brings to the forefront the well-known hierarchical model: “Data, Information and Knowledge”. This model is often exploited in the literature on information and knowledge management. Several studies claim that the first appearance of the hierarchy of knowledge can be found in T.S. Elliot's poem “The Rock” in 1934. The poem contained the following lines:
– Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
– Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
In recent literature, several authors cite R.L. Ackoff's 1989 publication “From data to wisdom” as a source of the hierarchy of knowledge. Indeed, this hierarchical model highlights three words: “Data”, “Information”, “Knowledge”1. The relationship between these three words can be represented in the schematic form below, where knowledge takes the highest place to emphasize the fact that a lot of data is needed to acquire knowledge.
Figure 1.1. The three concepts (source: Monino and Lucato 2005)
1.2.2. Modeling the concept of strategic business intelligence
A schematization of the concept of Strategic Economic Intelligence can be proposed from part of the hierarchical model described by Thomas Stearns Eliot in 1934, which establishes a link between wisdom, knowledge and information starting from data. This model leads to wisdom (Ermine et al. 2012) that can be approached through strategic decision-making.
“I want the right information at the right time to make the right decision2. (Porter 1979).
Figure 1.2. Business intelligence model of data to decision-making (source: Monino and Lucato 2005). For a color version of this figure, see www.iste.co.uk/monino/control.zip
1.2.2.1. Data
For a company, data are essential, and there are more and more concerning the environment in which it operates or will operate. We will no longer work on classes of behaviors, but on individual analysis. It is easy to understand that this revolution is leading to the creation of so-called “startup” companies whose aim would be to automatically process the wealth of data that make up what is known as “Big Data”. This is certainly one of the components of what some people call the new industrial revolution. The Internet, digital technology and connected objects have opened up new horizons in a multitude of fields.
As an example, access to data allows quantitative and qualitative analyses to be enriched. We can analyze customer contacts with data collected by a call center, as well as offer this kind of product in limited numbers as E2S-Conseils does. Indeed, the web offers immense information possibilities, Internet users demand clear, precise and immediate information. The responsiveness of the demand for information is a key point in this type of demand. Indeed, it is often necessary to wait to have a more than disappointing result. The start-up E2S-Conseils and the TRIS laboratory of the University of Montpellier are developing an innovative service based on a community platform to buy and sell multi-product and multi-country contacts and appointments.
According to Taylor, the value of information begins with a piece of data, which acquires value as it evolves, to achieve the objective and specify an action for decision-making. Information is a message with a higher level of meaning. It is a raw data that the subject then transforms into knowledge through a cognitive or intellectual operation.
Companies are very aware of the importance of knowledge and even more so of how to “manage”, enrich and benefit from it. Beyond all the factors (financial, technical and other), the knowledge that the company possesses also represents an important survival factor. Whether it is market knowledge, legal, technological, normative or other information.
This implies that in the information cycle, the data collected should be optimized so that needs are identified instantly and processed as quickly as possible. This will highlight the interaction between a multitude of actors (decision-makers, analysts, advisers, technicians,