User:Giaeditor/Global Intelligence Alliance

Global Intelligence Alliance
Global Intelligence Alliance (GIA) is a strategic Market Intelligence and advisory group that was formed in 1995. Its founders included specialists in Market Intelligence and management consulting, industry analysts and technology experts.

The company offers a range of customized solutions that are namely targeted at heads of Strategic Planning, Marketing, Business Development, Market Intelligence or Competitive Intelligence, Research & Development, Product Management, and Supply Chain Management. These include Monitoring Services, Strategic Analysis, Rapid Response Research, Intelligence software and Workshops.

GIA Group has 12 own offices around the world and work for large international companies. Through the network of GIA Member companies, GIA’s services cover over 100 countries.

GIA regularly publishes White Papers and global surveys on intelligence-related topics.

GIA was acquired by M-Brain in September 2014 and the merger was completed in April 2015.

Chicago, US Essen, Germany Helsinki, Finland Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia New York, US Paris, France Reading, UK São Paulo, Brazil Shanghai, China Singapore St. Petersburg, Russia Stockholm, Sweden Toronto, Canada

GIA’s industry expertise areas
Automotive Chemicals Construction & Property Development Consumer & Retail Energy, Resources & Environment Financial Services Private Equity Logistics & Transportation Manufacturing & Industrial Pharmaceuticals & Healthcare Telecommunication, Technology & Media

The intelligence industry
The business information industry hosts a wide range of sub-industries of which “intelligence” is one of the most ambiguous, terminology-wise. The discipline of systematically monitoring and analyzing one’s operating environment for accurate and confident decision making is frequently referred to as either Market Intelligence (MI), Competitive Intelligence (CI), Business Intelligence (BI) or even competitor analysis or market research. Some companies methodically use several of these terms in-house to describe the different activities under business information management, while others have chosen one overarching term to translate as anything that has to do with “keeping the organization’s radar out”.