CI expands operations by moving into new facility on Eastend Pearl
July 9th, 2008

Collective Intellect recently moved into a new facility with 10,000 more feet of space from their previous headquarters just down the street.

collective intellect, on Flickr We are now stationed on two floors with the developers taking the ground floor and sales/operations on the second floor. There is some good karma with the space as Google had purchased SketchUp from here.

“After Google purchased SketchUp, the operation outgrew the space. The landlord negotiated a new lease with social media analysis firm Collective Intellect, which expanded its operations.”

Boulder County Business Report

Just outside our front doors is the heart of town and ever-lively Pearl Street Mall which runs between 11th and 15th streets.

The office is open without the need for cubicles as there are numerous free conferences rooms for client/sales calls within close reach of every-one’s desk. It is the perfect space for a social media company since conversation can flow easily across the floor without formality.

collective intellect collective intellect

Our Address is: 1433 Pearl Street, Ste. 200 Boulder CO 80302.

Entrepreneur BizCast with Don Springer & Tim Wolters
September 15th, 2007

Jerry Lewis, of the Boulder County Business Report, interviews Collective Intellect founders Don Springer and Tim Wolters. Access the interview here.

Guide to Social Media Analysis
June 27th, 2007

There’s a new Guide to Social Media Analysis recently published by Nathan Gilliatt of Social Target, who blogs at http://net-savvy.com/executive/. This guide is hefty, and includes 31 profiles of a wide variety of companies (including Collective Intellect) that offer services related to social media monitoring, analysis and consulting. You can read more about it here and purchase your very own copy here.

June 25, 2007: USA Today: Computers trade based on reading news
June 25th, 2007
NEW YORK
It takes a person about 10 minutes to read a 2,500-word, front-page feature story in The Wall Street Journal. Computer programs increasingly being used by investors to parse news stories can process one in about three one-hundredths of a second.

Algorithms — problem-solving programs based on mathematical formulas — are making it easier for investors to filter the massive amount of text produced by news wires, newspapers, industry journals, clinical studies and legal filings for kernels of information, and trade on them in the blink of an eye.

Though the expanding array of news on non-traditional media like blogs and chat pages is a challenge for the robot readers, the speed and efficiency offered by news-mining algorithms are helping hedge funds with just a handful of staff generate as many trades as a giant investment bank and becoming a potential boon to the media industry.

“This is a new class of information technology,” said John Partridge, vice president of industry solutions with StreamBase Systems, a technology provider that specializes in processing and analyzing real-time streaming data.

High-frequency investors such as hedge funds are using news-mining platforms like those offered by StreamBase to troll through thousands of electronic feeds of streaming text to identify key phrases on which to trade.

Popular phrases include “lowers its outlook” or “raises guidance” or even buzzwords like “stellar performance” that could potentially push a stock lower or higher.

Hedge funds, with their rapid-fire trading style, often allow the news-mining platforms to make trades on their own, capitalizing on the technology’s speed

However, longer-term investors are less interested in flooding the market with orders after a particular headline. They are using the platforms to keep track of developments that may affect companies in their portfolios or influence their strategies, technology developers said.

News mining is not just for stock trading, either. For example, French investment bank BNP Paribas’ “weakness indicator” counts the number of times the words weak, weakness or weakening are used in the Federal Reserve’s beige book report on regional U.S. economies.

More than 50 references in a report typically signals the economy is on the brink of a recession.

Hedge fund investors familiar with news-mining technology said an algorithm based on the “weakness indicator” could easily be created to sell dollars and U.S. stocks and buy bonds if more than 50 references were found.

“What the machine is looking for is the same thing that the human is looking for. It can just find it more quickly,” said Richard Brown, business manager of NewsScope, a company owned by Reuters Group that produces machine-readable news.

Rather than just highlight words or phrases, some of the most sophisticated news-mining platforms can take multiple strands of news from wire agencies and websites and score the significance of various items.

For example, headlines from a reputable news organization with the words “Middle East,” “tension” and “hostility” would be given a higher score, especially if oil prices are rising, than an anonymous blog entry with the same key words.

The same headlines would be given an even higher score if other reputable news agencies carried similar stories.

“A lot of times, the content that’s important is not in a single article or document,” said David Leinweber, a financial technology consultant with Leinweber & Co. “the idea of considering individual news stories only as atomic events misses some things,” he said.

On his own blog ” Nerds on Wall Street,” Leinweber noted the example of Accentia, a pharmaceutical company whose share price shot up 70% one morning in October 2006 after the successful trial of a human cancer vaccine was announced in a press release.

However, the press release was based on an article from a medical journal published a month earlier. Also, local press in St. Louis, where Accentia has a plant, reported on the testing a week before the press release, and a blog for patients discussed the drug days before the stock jump.

An investor using news-mining technology could have been buying into the company days, if not weeks, before the big share price rise.

Computers, however, are not perfect when it comes to reading the various forms of language in both standard and non-standard media.

Consultant Leinweber added that machines often have difficulty with subtle double negatives and vague pronouns that human readers can understand easily with context.

For example, machines could potentially stumble when it comes to a sentence such as: “The company’s chief executive said he did not dislike the way that that product sold well there.” A person could scan the sentence and understand it.

The growing amount of text and information available on blogs, chat rooms and online forums also pose challenges to robot readers.

“That’s one of the limitations. When you look at chat room and blog content, it’s the emoticons, it’s the profanity, it’s sarcasm or all caps,” said NewsScope’s Brown.

Still there is growing interest in the investment community in being able harness the information available in so-called social media.

Darren Kelly, senior vice president at Collective Intellect, a company that specializes in filtering and ranking media content, said blogs and online forums can provide a unique window on sentiment surrounding an issue or a stock.

“The usual multiscreen setup that everyone has used in finance for the last 20 years no longer gives them all the information that’s available,” Kelly said.

May 3, 2007: Bloomberg News: HAL 9000-Style Machines, Kubrick’s Fantasy, Outwit Traders
May 3rd, 2007

HAL 9000-Style Machines, Kubrick’s Fantasy, Outwit Traders

Collective Intellect and Wall Street On Demand Form Strategic Partnership to Create Comprehensive Research Platform for Institutional Investors
May 1st, 2007

BOULDER, Colorado, April 30, 2007 – Collective Intellect, Inc., (CI) an innovative provider of solutions enabling executives and institutional investors to obtain highly-relevant and critical pieces of information from unstructured online data sources, and Wall Street On Demand (WSOD). announced that CI’s unique ranked and filtered new media content is now available through WSOD’s financial distribution channel through a strategic partnership agreement.

The combination of WSOD’s robust traditional and proprietary information and Collective Intellect’s new media sources allows investors to gain comprehensive monitoring of the inputs driving investment decisions.

Collective Intellect new media research filters posts to allow investors access to credible new media for truly comprehensive monitoring:

  • Blogs, discussion boards, chat rooms and social media
  • Searchable by ticker or by customized topics
  • Ranked for credibility and filtered by topic and ticker

“Information from social media often precedes traditional newswire reporting. Identifying credible data points is crucial to gauge a sources accuracy” says James Tanner, Chief Executive Officer of Wall Street On Demand, Inc. “Collective Intellect’s sentiment and credibility rankings give our customers predictive insight, supplementing traditional sources.”

“Internet information is truly a disruptive force in media distribution and has changed the way investors conduct research,” says Don Springer, Chief Executive Officer of Collective Intellect. “We’re pleased that Wall Street On Demand’s customers can now access the revolutionary information we provide from within WSOD’s product lineup.”

About Collective Intellect

Collective Intellect, Inc. specializes in comprehensively tracking, filtering and ranking media content for among the largest Wall Street trading firms and the Fortune 500. The company’s breakthrough technology helps analysts and portfolio managers in financial services and a wide range of executives within enterprises uncover valuable, relevant nuggets of information that reside in the vast amount of unstructured data available today, including blogs, message boards and chat rooms as well as traditional media.

Customers include some of the largest trading desks on Wall Street, Fortune 100 consumer goods manufacturers and Fortune 100 pharmaceutical companies. Collective Intellect is headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, and is funded by Appian Ventures and other investors.

About Wall Street On Demand

Wall Street On Demand specializes in the presentation of financial information on web sites. The company designs, develops, and hosts advanced financial interfaces integrating market data, research, news, and other financial content from over 1,500 sources. Wall Street On Demand hosts independent research for ten of the twelve independent research settlement firms and hosts customized online research platforms for each of the big six online brokerage firms.

open data anyone?
March 24th, 2007

I presented at the OpenData conference last week in New York. The event was sponsored by Reuters and organized by Seth Goldstein. This was one of the better events I have ever attended in terms of two way communication and idea generation. In attendance where a veritable who’s who in the attention economy space including the seminal author, Michael Goldhaber.

The immense amount of exhaust information generated by the creation and consumption of social media offers big opportunities for companies capable of mining that information for commercial purposes.

The mining of clickstream data provided for some fairly contentious conversations. The data is mostly gathered clandestinely through browser widgets or purchasing clickstream data from ISP’s. I say clandestinely because even though disclosure is probably provided in the EULAs from the service or widget vendors, these are rarely read through (For instance, I sample, reading through probably 1/100). This data is then mined for a variety of purposes, some innocuous, others could be considered invasive. There is actually an organization set up that describes sort of a bill of rights for the end user called Attention Trust. I particularly liked the quote in Wandering Stan’s blog from the conference:

Chris Law (Aggregate Knowledge): I wish AttentionTrust compliance was widespread…we don’t want to surprise people.
Steve Gilmore: This is bullshit. Have you signed/endorsed the AttentionTrust principles?
Chris Law: No, we’re looking into it.

There were a few companies mining media (social or otherwise) as well as closed data (proprietary data sets) and delivering this information to the financial service sector. This was labeled “Information Arbitrage”. Other companies in this space (besides Collective Intellect) at the conference included Majestic Research, Gerson Lehrman Group, and Monitor110

A lot of innovation is going on in this area, bringing together the fields of text analytics, data mining, social psychology, and finance. The sleeping giants of media are beginning to awake. It should be an interesting few years.

March 21, 2007: KM World: Savvy Services
March 22nd, 2007

Collective Intellect (CI) has launched a new version of its Media Intelligence service, a media research solution targeted to institutional investors, hedge fund traders and the broader financial community.

Media Intelligence employs a three-phase filtering approach to unstructured data. First, Collective Intellect creates “TopicNets” (a collection of content sources related to a single topic for all content areas of interest to institutional investors). With its TopicNet algorithm, CI can identify and rank the most credible sources of information, which, the company says, differentiates it from other unstructured data filtering tools. Second, CI’s technology eliminates irrelevant, duplicate or splog-sourced information. Finally, each individual posting is ranked for relevancy using an adaptive, multi-factor algorithm that incorporates feedback from users through a content voting system. This approach ensures that individual users receive content that is most relevant for their own investment research requirements, says CI.

Major features of Collective Intellect’s new solution include:

  • real-time feeds of blogs, message boards and other types of unstructured data, combined with traditional news media;
  • a simple, easy-to-read user interface that gives traders an immediate view into what’s happening now with the stocks, sectors and industries they track;
  • minute-by-minute content refreshes content;
  • intuitive methods for refining searches about tickers and themes; and
  • hosted desktop and email delivery.
Collective Intellect announces participation in Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado
February 26th, 2007

Boulder, Colo., February 26, 2007 – Collective Intellect, Inc. (CI), specializing in comprehensively tracking, filtering and ranking new media content for Wall Street investors and the Fortune 500, today announced its participation in the Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado (EFCO), a philanthropic program targeted at angel- and venture capital-backed companies based in Colorado, whose mission is to help Colorado entrepreneurs contribute to the long term health and sustainability of Colorado early in the creation of their companies. EFCO will hold grants from Collective Intellect until a liquidity event, when the consideration gets transferred to a Colorado-based Community Foundation.

EFCO designed the program to help young Colorado entrepreneurs begin meaningful philanthropic activities by providing a venue for pre-planned, corporate contributions when their companies achieve liquidity events. Grants are set up during the early stages of capitalization.

As the founders of more than one successful venture-funded Colorado company, Collective Intellect founders Tim Wolters, CTO, and Don Springer, CEO, understand what EFCO wants to achieve by involving entrepreneurs early in their company history. “When a liquidity event happens for your company, there’s a lot going on professionally. It’s not usually a good time to figure out how to manage all the requests to give money,” notes Springer. “Our participation in EFCO helps us prepare in advance to give back to our local community.”
“EFCO offers a tremendous opportunity for local charities as well as to entrepreneurs,” agrees Wolters. “When we’re successful, the community we live and work in shares in our success.”

About Collective Intellect
Collective Intellect, Inc. specializes in comprehensively tracking, filtering and ranking media content for institutional investors and the Fortune 500. Across blogs, discussion boards, social networking websites and other media channels, Collective Intellect uses a combination of advanced artificial intelligence algorithms and old-fashioned human ingenuity to identify emerging New Media and traditional media content. The company’s patent-pending technology helps analysts and portfolio managers in financial services, as well as corporate enterprises, uncover valuable, relevant nuggets of information that reside in the vast amount of unstructured data available today, including blogs, message boards and chat rooms.

Customers include some of the largest trading desks on Wall Street, Fortune 100 consumer goods manufacturers and Fortune 100 pharmaceutical companies. Collective Intellect is headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, and is funded by Appian Ventures and other investors.

About Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado
Four companies – Tendril, Rally Software, Collective Intellect and Me.dium – are the founding grantors for the Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado. The founding trustees are Brad Feld (Foundry Group), Kyle Lefkoff (Boulder Ventures), Tim Connor (Sequel Venture Partners), Ryan Martens (Rally Software), Bill Roberts (Hogan & Hartson), and Michael Platt (Cooley Godward Kronish). In addition, the Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado has formed an alliance with the Entrepreneurs Foundation, an organization formed in 1988 with affiliates in Silicon Valley, Austin, Southern California, New England, Dallas, Portland, Atlanta, Hawaii and Israel.

January 29, 2007: Intelligent Enterprise Blog: Three New BI-Style Tools for Investment Managers
January 30th, 2007

Three New BI-Style Tools for Investment Managers, by Penny Crosman

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