Meyer Intelligence Request briefing

OSINT is useful when public evidence is tied to a decision.

Open sources can show behavior early. The work still requires source discipline, corroboration, confidence assessment, and a clear decision question.

The work stays tied to the decision.

OSINT, or open-source intelligence, uses public and legally accessible sources to assess competitors, counterparties, suppliers, regulation, capital activity, and reputation risk.

Public evidence still needs analyst judgment.

Filings, job posts, logistics data, litigation records, product language, executive movement, and stakeholder commentary can be public and still easy to misread.

  • Public records
  • Commercial and market signals
  • Stakeholder and media activity

One source can start a watch. It rarely closes the call.

MI looks for source quality, independent confirmation, timing fit, and whether the evidence affects the decision owner.

  • Source quality
  • Corroboration
  • Decision exposure

Questions leaders ask before they engage MI.

How does Meyer Intelligence work?

MI frames the leadership decision, sets watch requirements, judges evidence quality, and briefs what changed, what is confirmed, what remains open, and which action the evidence supports.

Send the decision context. We will come prepared.

Share the decision, timing pressure, and outside activity. We will review the context before responding and come prepared with the first evidence questions.

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