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Information
Broking
The vast information
explosion in virtually every field of knowledge has made it possible
for companies to find a steady stream of new data on an endless
list of subjects, including those which affect the way they do
business and in particular, new business opportunities. But, despite
the existence of such information and their desire to have it,
most companies lack the time and personnel required to sort through
mountains of documents in search of a specific piece of needed
information.
Enter the information broker. This high-tech researcher basically
acts as a liaison between the provider of raw data and the data
consumer. Based on his client's needs, the broker seeks published
and/or electronic sources of specific information, organises it
in a form that best suits the client's
purpose and resells it to the client for a fee.
The deployment of computers into every field of British life has
enabled the information brokerage to become the home business
opportunity of the decade. Before the computer revolution, a small-scale
research service would have not been able to catalogue, store,
retrieve and resell information to clients in a cost effective
way. Now, with the ever growing amount of information , its availability
through computer communications and its bearing on corporate decision
making, information brokering has gained a new importance in the
business world. This new technology has made it possible for home
business owners to do the work of a vast research staff and library.
There are numerous research needs that can be met by your company,
depending on the type of client you have. Some clients will want
market research covering a specific industry, while others will
want information about individual companies. An industry's growth
or decline can be tracked, as can the activity of a company's
competition in the marketplace.
Other clients may want information they can use in public relations
activities, advertising or money-raising activities. A few clients,
particularly academics and students, may want research that can
be used for a wide range of major writing projects. They will
come to you for information that is difficult to track down using
traditional methods of research - telephoning sources, going to
the library, subscribing to specialised periodicals, etc.
In some respects, working as an information specialist resembles
working as a clipping service, but the information broker offers
much more detailed, highly focused information and is a more hi-tech
business opportunity.
You can vary the types of clients served or specialise in a specific
research category. This is a business in which you can focus or
expand your base of operations as far and as fast as you want.
Client
Data
Industry insiders agree that it is a mistake
to think of the market as a single entity. There are a lot of
niche markets with specific information needs. At this time, the
big money in this business is being made serving the business
and professional community, though some information brokerages
may evolve into serving consumer-segment customers in the future.
On a national level, the most profitable types of information
to sell, respectively, are securities and commodities quotes,
legal and medical information and scientific or technical information.
The DTI predicts that although most information demand will come
from business segments, the household market for information services
will be an increasingly consequential factor throughout the new
millenium; non-business consumer information is currently the
fifth most popular information marketed.
On a local level, legal and medical professionals as well as medium
size and large companies represent lucrative markets for the small
and generalised broker. Here, you can serve their marketing, money-raising,
technical and/or public relations needs. For example, suppose
your client is a computer programmer who's creating a business
plan in order to write and sell software to the commercial market.
He wants to know what competing products are already on the shelves,
how much they are selling for, where they are being sold, etc.
He could dredge up this information himself by going to the library
and combing through the Readers Guide to Periodical Literature,
numerous tables of contents and reference books, which would take
several days. He could then spend more time either photocopying
or typing the data, analysing it and entering it into his business
plan. But an information broker could search electronically for
key words and phases in databases containing industry specific
information the programmer needed. He could begin the analysis,
storage and use of data immediately.
Wholesale
Information
Wherever you obtain information (library, reference books, catalogue,
databases) you are going to be reselling it in one form or another.
If someone owns the form of information you resell, you are going
to have to pay for it. Where do you obtain this information and
how much do you pay for it?
Accessing
Electronic Databases.
Although computers
did not create the onset of information science, they did make
information retrieval quick, easy, and affordable for small scale
entrepreneurs. Data in all categories of information, from humanities
to agriculture, mathematics to music, can be found in the electronic
databases of some 2,000 electronic publishers. By means of computer-modem
hook-up and command protocols, you can tap in to these databases,
view the information and retrieve or download it into your own
computer system, later analysing it or otherwise processing it
or your clients at an appropriate time.
Some databases have direct lines and computer hooks with users,
while others are accessed through electronic clearing houses.
In addition to the charges already mentioned for accessing various
databases, you are charged for what are known as types or displays
of information on-line. These may consist of bibliographic entries,
numeric/financial data, abstracts, full texts or articles and
cross references.
Depending on the format or extent of information wanted, there
may be a charge of anywhere from ú10 to well over ú100
for something accessed by your computer from these bases and printed
for use.
Typically, service users pay an initiation fee of some kind plus
charges for connect time on individual databases. Some database
suppliers have cheaper rates for off-hour usage, but others charge
standard rates at all times. Users are billed by invoice or on
their credit cards from month to month.
You are also charged by the communications network whose telephone
system you use to access the data banks.
Additionally, some services have their own carrier phone systems;
Dialogue, for example has a system known as Dialnet. You may also
dial directly into the phone number assigned to the mainframe
data bank itself. Some data banks use 0800 numbers, but they are
not free. The telephone company does not access special phone
charges for calls made on modems, unless the call itself is a
toll call.
Therefore, you will not be charged for a telephone call made to
a local communications network, but you will be charged by the
data network itself for connect time.
Buying
Information from Brokers.
If you are coming into the information business
cold, you may be somewhat insecure about your ability to retrieve
data cost-efficiently. We recommend attending seminars that will
teach you how to obtain information from individual databases
to facilitate the learning process.
Again, practice will be the best means of advancing your skills,
but classes and seminars can cut down on unnecessary time spent
on basic computer tasks. If you chose inexpensive databases to
gain practical experience on-line, you can save money.
Another solution is to use an alternative tutorial method, such
as the one offered through the NASA Industrial Application Centre
(NIAC). This is a non-profit making organisation providing interactive
database searching. The NIAC computer hooks up with its client's
while the client and NIAC refine a search problem over the telephone.
NIAC does the search while the client watches and comments as
required.
According to NIAC, this is an excellent way for a beginner to
obtain on-the-job training in search techniques.
CD Rom
Libraries
Since its introduction
in 1985, CD-Rom has become the key element in the electronic publishing
of encyclopaedias, professional directories, as well as other
large reference works and databases. In addition, CD-Rom disks
are becoming the medium of choice for shipping data cross-country
- sending disks by courier costs less than two pence per megabyte,
cheaper than microwave or satellite technology and as much as
10,000 times cheaper than modem communication on direct-dial lines.
Planning
a Search
Once an information request comes in, you
should clarify the scope of the search so that information is
obtained as quickly and efficiently as possible. Use a search
strategy worksheet to outline how the information will be sought;
refer to the sample at the end of this section.
The biggest hurdle you face as an information broker is defining
exactly what question the client wants answered. Sometimes the
client will state an information request one way but actually
want additional data he has not specified. Or, once the search
has begun, electronic databases may reveal information possibilities
not previously conceived.
Determining whether or when to contact the client for more clarification
will be a valued judgement on your part.
Each search strategy worksheet should serve as a checklist, itemising
all features the customer has requested. Be sure to record all
customer information to facilitate billing.
Approach an electronic search in a logical manner. First, put
down the questions to be answered. You need to identify the scope
of the question, listing it on a form designed for that purpose.
You can design forms to fit the type of searches you typically
conduct (statistical, bibliographical, subject-based, etc). The
form will accompany the information-retrieval process every step
of the way, from the moment the question is refined until the
time the finished material is sent to the client. It should then
be filed away in the client's file.
Define the types of information retrieval required to complete
the project. Are you assigned to telephone a client's competitor
to obtain a sample product the client cannot obtain in person?
Will you have to obtain a list of rare books stored in the local
college library? Neither of these projects require electronic
computer access (though it is possible they could be stored on-line
somewhere). But if you have to track down historical data or market
information contained on some computer system, this is where computer-assisted
data searching begins.
On-line data retrieval should be used whenever possible, mainly
because of the enormous amounts of time saved. Information that
might take hours of manual searching can be retrieved in minutes.
If you believe that your information is retrievable on-line, you
have to determine which database(s) will be most likely to contain
the specific data you need, entering them by name and/or number
on the strategy worksheet. Identify certain concepts that are
synonymous and those that are different but relevant to the overall
question. As revealed by the concept columns in the worksheet,
synonymous terms are listed vertically within the columns, while
different terms are tracked down between them.
You may want to begin your search by doing a free-text exploration
across several databases for key words in the problem. This will
help you get an idea of whether it makes sense for you to pursue
an extensive search in a particular database.
However you search for information, given the parameters of the
job, keep in mind that a pile of data means nothing unless it
can be put to some use by the recipient. Any brokered information
must have meaning, beyond its mere existence or quantity and should
have an application - educational, financial, political, economic,
organisation.
This does not necessarily mean that you have to interpret the
significance of the information you obtain, though some industry
insiders believe this gives a competitive edge. It does mean that
you have to define with your client, as much as possible, the
specific needs underlying his request for information.
All in all information broking represents an ideal home business
opportunity for the new millenium