Teaches the CIA’s basic intelligence and counterintelligence principles for use in the business world Will help executives and entrepreneurs maximize their competitiveness in the increasingly cutthroat new economy Written by a former CIA station chief and clandestine operations officer Every major government on earth recognizes the value of intelligence and employs an intelligence service to collect it for them. Businesses should be no different. Knowing how to gather information about the strength of your competitors, being able to anticipate their next move, and preventing them from stealing your secrets are critical keys to success in the new economy. Executives, entrepreneurs, and business school students must realize that the success of their companies partially depends on their effectiveness in the realm of business intelligence. This book teaches the principles of intelligence and counterintelligence, using the CIA’s methods as a model for the business world. CIA, Inc. explores the major aspects of business intelligence, including competitor intelligence, risk analysis, business and market analysis, counterintelligence, background investigations, due diligence, and security surveys. F. W. Rustmann draws on his experience as a CIA operations officer and a pioneer in the field of corporate intelligence to describe the collection, analysis, authentication, and reporting of intelligence.
I just read this book and I have mixed feelings about it. I was look for concrete techniqes about the way the CIA works and how that will benifit my business. On the other hand the stories in this book are gripping and illustrative of the authors points. To give the author some credit ; we usually remember things in story form longer. I believe the major thesis can be found on the last page of the book , that is; do your homework. Good read!
This one's a 2.5er - It's a starting point. Feels like nearly the first half of the book is an introduction to broader intelligence, not quite as advertised. He spends too many words on "hey, don't forget I was a spook" anecdotes, not enough on business intelligence.