Article

Head of Market and Competitive Intelligence at BT answers questions

Topic: Change ManagementPublished March 26, 2021

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 427 legacy views

This article is the third in a series. We talk to the Head of Market and Competitive Intelligence at BT, Andrew Beurschgens. In this series, we ask people we respect within Competitive Intelligence eight pertinent questions. At the end of this series of questions, we will analyse the answers and publish a report. 1. In your view, what's Competitive Intelligence?rnThe process and the outcome that curates all source information that is legally and ethically collected and analysed to create the knowledge and the foreknowledge of the market around us as a prelude to decision making and action 2. In your view, what's the true benefit of CI?rnDecision support, bigger picture, choices and the opportunity in some instances to be one step ahead 3. How would you advise a company with no experience in Competitive Intelligence to get started? rnAsk them to articulate what their business is. What five questions keep them up at night about that external environment - customers, competitors, suppliers? Why they win, and why they lose? Who are their competitors, and do you understand why they buy from you? Why they do not, or if you are in the heart of growth, what happens when it stops? What are the options and how the market could evolve, and what do we do as a result? 4. What analytical tools do you recommend?rnwin-loss, business model canvass, value proposition, scenario analysis, driver analysis, comb analysis 5. Competitive Intelligence is becoming too much about risk mitigation, copying the competitor and the last dataset. And not enough about growth, exploration and creation. It can stop people from being original, risky and creative enough. Do you agree?rnYes - blue ocean views, not red oceans 6. Without giving away anything confidential, what's the best result you have achieved with CI?rnThe last outcome we achieved with respect to a decision that was taken. 7. Artificial Intelligence and platforms will transform CI, and there will be no need for human input in the future. The longevity of the job of a Competitive Intelligence analyst is limited? Do you agree? No, human intervention is required. Context established, situation, complication, question, answer - inductively stated or deductively stated. Platforms will be relevant for only elements of the process and argument forming 8. Finally, what's the one piece of advice you would give a CI analyst?rnContinue to be passionate about your craft and take on a strategic perspective linking up the hear and now with what could be the range of tomorrows. Thank you for your time, Andrew. Head of Market and Competitive Intelligence at BTrnIn this article, the Head of Market and Competitive Intelligence at BT, Andrew Beurschgens, answered our questions. This article is the third in the series where we ask great people who really understand Competitive Intelligence their thoughts on the subject.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

In today’s fast-paced digital world, having a reliable, feature-rich, and user-friendly office suite is essential for both individuals and businesses. Whether you’re creating documents, managing spreadsheets, or designing presentations, the right tools can significantly boost your productivity. WPS Office stands out as a powerful, flexible, and free alternative to traditional office software, offering seamless compatibility with Microsoft Office formats and a wide range o

January 18, 2026

Article

As more businesses rely on online systems, apps, and cloud platforms, keeping user access secure has become a top priority. Simple login methods using only usernames and passwords are no longer enough to protect sensitive data. Cyber threats are more common today, and attackers are constantly looking for weak points. This is why many organizations are turning to cloud-based authentication to improve their security. Cloud authentication allows companies to verify users through

January 2, 2026

Article

We’re fast approaching that time of year when friend and family get-togethers and office parties are, well, obligatory. After all, you can’t exactly pretend that Thanksgiving and the Holiday Season don’t exist, and that invitations from your in-laws, workplace, friends and others can be casually ignored. Or that you can corral your beloved partner into NOT throwing a righteous “everyone welcome” Thanksgiving feast or giant Holiday party. But then the ugly truth comes up and

October 24, 2025

Article

We’re fast approaching that time of year when friend and family get-togethers and office parties are, well, obligatory. After all, you can’t exactly pretend that Thanksgiving and the Holiday Season don’t exist, and that invitations from your in-laws, workplace, friends and others can be casually ignored. Or that you can corral your beloved partner into NOT throwing a righteous “everyone welcome” Thanksgiving feast or giant Holiday party. But then the ugly truth comes up and

October 24, 2025