AI July 17, 2026 4 min

The Business Case for Putting Market Intelligence in Every Team’s Hands

Markets are moving faster than most planning cycles can keep up with. At the IDC Quanta launch webinar, Jamie Fiorda, SVP of Product Marketing at IDC, made the case for why the real constraint isn't the quality of an organization's market intelligence; it's who actually has access to it, and what that's costing the business.

At the IDC Quanta launch webinar, Jamie Fiorda, SVP of Product Marketing at IDC, laid out why the gap between how fast markets move and how fast organizations understand them is becoming the defining challenge for companies trying to act before conditions shift again. He also laid out where AI-powered intelligence tools fit into closing it.

Fiorda’s starting point was access: who actually gets to use the intelligence a company already has. In most organizations, the market intelligence a company already invests in tends to serve a narrow slice of the business (a research team, maybe a strategy analyst or two), while the insights that could sharpen decisions elsewhere in the company never reach the people making them.

That’s the pattern Fiorda described: intelligence that exists, but sits in a portal most of the organization has no reason to open. The problem isn’t the quality of the research. It’s that the value of it is being rationed by who has access, right as every function in the business is under pressure to move faster on planning that used to have more runway.

Positioning AI as an Intelligence Layer, Not Another Tool

Fiorda’s case for IDC Quanta wasn’t framed as a new subscription or a new dashboard to learn. It was framed as infrastructure: a layer that sits beneath the tools an organization already uses, making the intelligence within them actionable and defensible.

Organizations already have plenty of AI tools. What most of them can’t do is prove their answers are trustworthy. That gap shows up largest in finance: nearly a third of global enterprises still run their finance analytics function with no formal structure at all, department by department, which is exactly where an M&A assumption or a market-sizing input gets challenged first by a board, an investor, or an auditor. Fiorda’s argument centers on embedding intelligence directly into the workflows where strategy is developed, backed by a source a leadership team can point to when that challenge arises.

What This Looks Like Across a Business

Fiorda walked through what that shift means function by function, not as a feature list, but as a picture of how fast an organization can move when intelligence isn’t gated to one team.

A market intelligence team doesn’t change what it does, just how quickly it does it: sizing markets and benchmarking with intelligence flowing directly into the tools they already use.

Finance picks up a use case that’s often entirely new: market sizing inside their own models, risk analysis, revenue validation, all backed by third-party data at the point of decision. IDC research points to real upside here: cognitive technologies applied across due diligence and predictive analytics are projected to drive a 25% increase in M&A returns by 2027, largely because AI-enabled screening surfaces viable targets faster than traditional methods can.

Product gains competitive benchmarking and roadmap validation the same way. Marketing builds segmentation and messaging grounded in actual demand trends instead of assumptions a real shift for CMOs navigating today’s pressure to justify every dollar: IDC research found 52% are already leaning harder into scenario-based planning and 41% report increased pressure to justify marketing ROI, both signs that assumption-driven messaging is no longer good enough. And sales walks into a room with validated, current talking points instead of a battlecard built last quarter.

The strategic point is that all five are pulling from the same source of truth, at the same time, without waiting on each other.

The Question Leaders Must Consider

Fiorda’s close reframed the pitch as a single question for leadership to sit with: if the intelligence an organization already values could reach five functions instead of one, what would that be worth? It’s worth sitting with the scale of that gap: IDC research shows nearly 60% of Chief Data Officers say their organizations need to rethink how they use analytics in decision-making, and only about a third of executives are active users of the intelligence tools already in place. That’s not just a research quality problem. It’s strategic value sitting untouched, simply because of where information lives.

In a landscape changing this quickly, the organizations that move fastest will be the ones where that research actually reaches every team that needs it.

Learn More

Organizations already working with IDC can talk to their account team about which teams could get access next. Those exploring IDC Quanta for the first time can request a demo at idc.com/quanta to see where this fits for your team.

Ryan Smith - Content Marketing Director - IDC

Ryan Smith is the Director of Content Marketing at IDC, where he leads brand-level content and social media strategy, aligning research insights with compelling storytelling to engage technology decision-makers. With a background in both IT and marketing, Ryan brings a unique blend of technical understanding and creative strategy to his work. He’s also a seasoned storyteller, speaker, and podcast host who believes the right message, told the right way, can drive both trust and transformation.

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