Learn how organizations gain competitive insights by following digital breadcrumbs

 

T he concept of a digital breadcrumb trail isn’t new. In the digital world, intentionally or unintentionally, we leave behind a trail of information that can reveal a lot about us. The web pages we visit, the links that we click on, our location, browsing history, our device — everything reveals something about us. Notice that cookie that you need to accept on a website? That’s a digital breadcrumb you’re leaving behind. These breadcrumbs are used by B2C companies like Google and Facebook to put together our consumer profile and then make billions of dollars by showing us ads of those profiles.

Surprisingly, B2B companies haven’t been able to leverage the power of digital breadcrumbs to develop their market and competitive intelligence strategies. Just like us, companies also leave behind digital breadcrumbs such as a tweet about an event, a job posting on their careers page, a blog post announcing new features, a new case study, changes on the management page, employee feedback on Glassdoor, customer comments on a review site, discussion forums, press announcements, news coverage, and much more. In the context of B2B companies, the word ‘digital breadcrumbs’ was first coined by Meltwater CEO Jørn Lyseggen in his book Outside Insight.

Digital breadcrumbs are any information that might not mean much in isolation, but reveal valuable insights when collected, organized, and analyzed in a structured manner over a period of time.
At Contify, while deploying competitive intelligence tool at some of the world’s leading companies, we’ve discovered novel ways in which the smartest teams use digital breadcrumbs to gain competitive insights. Here are a few handpicked, real-life examples from our experience that illustrates this concept.

Industrial accidents: the digital breadcrumbs that helped a company generate sales leads

Sales teams have one of the most critical and challenging roles in the company – they bring in the money. The sales team of a safety equipment manufacturing firm often complained of missing opportunities because they did not receive the right lead from their marketing team at the right time. As a result, the company was losing revenue opportunities to the competition. The marketing team started to look for leading signals that might point to a requirement for safety equipment. Their experienced salespeople told them that it usually takes an industrial accident for the management, to realize the importance of safety and invest in the right equipment. This information was publicly available as such mishaps are covered by the local news. Similarly, another leading indicator of potential leads was the expansion or announcement of new projects, which results in a new facility being built or tenders announced by the government. By tracking such news reports of industrial accidents, facility openings, and tenders announced by the government, the company was able to build a sales pipeline worth $5 million in the first three months of implementing Contify’s Market and Competitive Intelligence platform.

 

Identifying New Revenue Opportunities for a Safety Equipment Firm

Identifying New Revenue Opportunities for a Safety Equipment Firm

 

Negative news: the digital breadcrumbs that helped a bank avert business risk

When a bank lends money to businesses, it often runs the risk of not getting their money back, should the business fail. Good banks are better at managing their risk exposure. Therefore, instead of just relying on voluntary disclosures by current and potential clients, a European bank, after lending money, proactively tracked negative news on these companies and monitored their filings with the United Kingdom’s Companies House for signals of potential business risks. These signals included publicly available information about management changes, lawsuits involving directors, litigations, fines, money laundering, liquidation, and corruption. With this intelligence practice in place, the bank reduced the time for flagging risky accounts by 80 percent. Learn how this UK-based bank uses Contify’s Market Intelligence platform to manage business risk.

 

Keeping Track of Negative News on Clients for a UK bank

Keeping Track of Negative News on Clients for a UK bank

 

Job postings: the digital breadcrumbs that revealed competitors’ next big move

In a hyper-competitive market, knowing where your competitors are headed is an important strategic advantage. Consider the case of a Fortune India 500 IT services major with $9 billion in annual revenues. The company was looking to focus on blockchain and wanted to ascertain which of their competitors were also focusing on this new space. By looking at the job postings of their competitors for blockchain-related roles in specific regions, their market and competitive intelligence professionals were able to intelligently predict specific competitors they would be up against.

Sales signals: the digital breadcrumbs that enabled a sales team to engage with prospects

A common strategy for B2B companies selling to large enterprises is account-based sales development (ABSD). Instead of trying to sell to everyone and spreading themselves thin, enterprise sales teams focus on a few high-value accounts to deep-dive into. The healthcare division of a Fortune 500 IT major was seeing success with its ABSD strategy but was looking to cut down on the lengthy sales cycle. They realized that account managers that were having personalized conversations with prospects and following up with them frequently were closing deals sooner than the others.

They started tracking their key accounts for conversation starter signals such as event participation, awards, new office opening, and leadership changes. These signals, “the conversation starters”, gave the opportunity to the sales teams to follow-up with the right context without being a nuisance. By scaling this activity across the sales team, they were able to get to a point where 90 percent of their account managers reported finding opportunities to engage with their prospects.

So the question remains, if there is value in tracking these digital breadcrumbs, then why do companies tend to overlook them? We think it is because it’s usually easier said than done. It is overwhelming to identify such signals in extremely noisy places like the internet without the aid of sophisticated tools that are specifically engineered for this purpose. For over a decade, Contify has been helping thousands of users to identify the right signals and follow the digital bread crumbs.

Recently, we wrote a blog post about building a market-intelligent company where we distilled the learnings from implementing a market intelligence program at 100s of companies. As it turns out, the first step towards building a market-intelligent company is to define the goals of your market and competitive intelligence program. As you might have already noticed, in all the examples above, there was a clearly defined goal that helped these companies identify and capture the right digital breadcrumbs.

If you are someone who depends on market intelligence or you’re responsible for running the market intelligence program, I’d love to learn more about your challenges and goals. Also, do take Contify for a spin. We have a free trial and some of the world’s leading companies trust us to deliver Market Intelligence.