Harding International and Associates Inc.

    Corporate Intelligence Awareness Subsidiary
                         

CORPORATE INTELLIGENCE AWARENESS   
Predict Future Outcomes - Secure the Competitive Edge!

Use available people expertise to find out what others don’t know…and act on it before they do!
  • Maximise Information/Knowledge Awareness – Efficiently Gather, Analyze and Process Information.
  • Protect Assets, valuable information, process and operational detail.
  • Sell information/intelligence upward through effective report writing, and strategic relationship building.

Corporate Intelligence Awareness, in people terms, refers to innate human capacity to think creatively when faced with the unknown or unproven.  The greater the capacity of an organization and its people to work with confidence in the dimension of potentials, possibilities and maybes, the greater the ability to predict accurate future business outcomes.



Latest Blog Entries
   

 Tuesday, October 03, 2006


Industry Concerns   
Studies are showing that corporate espionage is on the rise. A new book called "Corporate Intelligence Awareness: Securing the Competitive Edge" tells business leaders how to protect their strategic information and how to use legal and ethical means to uncover their competitors' secrets. The incidence of information theft is on the rise, according to The American Society for Industrial Security in a study that identified the hot commodities as financial data, research and development work, merger and acquisition plans, unannounced product specifications, and prototypes. The emergence of prosperous new industrial communities around the world has made this trend a reality that cannot be ignored. Corporate espionage -- companies spying on other companies to find out competitor secrets -- is at an all-time high,” says Rodger Nevill Harding, a Toronto based business intelligence consultant. A former diplomat for the South African government and recipient of that country’s highest award for his intelligence-gathering and strategy work, he is a firm believer that “Organizations need to develop across-the-board policies to protect their core information assets. At the same time, those companies should develop intelligence-gathering strategies that will seek out competitor information -- these are the ‘rules of war’ for modern business.”
Article extract from PRWEB: Your comments and feedback are welcomed.


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