The nature of intelligence operations
within organizational settings is rapidly changing. While governments
have long histories of developing specialized units with extensive
collection and analysis capabilities, growing numbers of globally
active corporations are emphasizing their need for similar capabilities.
Internationally active non-profit and non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) are also experiencing expanded collection and analysis
needs. Since neither businesses nor NGOs can reliably depend on
official support for defensive risk-analysis and proactive
intelligence needs they are increasingly developing in-house operations.
The emergence of in-house operations
is changing the intelligence environment, as the relationships
among institutional actors shift and the nature of organizational
collection and analysis needs is redefined. It is precisely this
growing awareness amidst an environment of shifting institutional
relationships that offers an excellent climate for acquiring or
enhancing the skills needed to develop a solid career in the emerging
discipline of competitive intelligence.