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This is What It's Like: Researching Your Stocks From A View at 38,000 Feet

By: Roy MacNaughton

This is a story worth reading about. It might save you a lot of time and money. It's about an innovative site that just went live the last weeks of 2007. It was conceived then born out of necessity and objective, third party market research. Ian Campbell, the individual investor who created it was sick and tired of doing financial research the slow and tiresome way.

Campbell liked to manage his own stock portfolio. But there was a pain associated with this. It was a pain that needed to be alieviated; a vexing problem that needed a relevant solution. It was too laborious to do the analyses, pouring over piles of charts, other web sites, trying to make sense of all the inputs for so many different companies. Additionally, often the information he needed and wanted, just wasn't there. He reasoned that there must be thousands of investment advisers and other investors - just like him - who craved such a solution to this onerous problem. During the last 12 months, he has brought to the market a website focused on Small Cap Canadian Mining and Oil & Gas stocks. Examine and investigate this man's credentials; you'll find that for more than 35 years, Campbell has been viewed as a leading Canadian expert in the rendering of independent business valuation opinions.

In fact, he's famous for writing the definitive Canadian books on it. In fact, Campbell has recently been honored by the Canadian Institute of Chartered Business Valuators. There is now an annual university research grant issued in his name.

I wanted to know why and how Campbell had come up with the idea for this particular website. He said that his own frustration with the data overload on the Internet, coupled with the untold hours it took him to manage his own portfolio, led him to realize there had to be a quicker, better way to do this.

As a long-time marketer myself, I was particularly pleased to see that Campbell did not fall into the trap of building a service based only on his needs. Campbell knew that he could show others how to save time and money with this new way of researching just as if they were a company acquirer. To further test his concept in depth, he had to conduct market research. Campbell had a seasoned market researcher work with him to craft and distribute a detailed questionnaire targeted at thousands of individuals in the U.S. and Canada. Each had at least $100K in the market and was interested in individually managing or having an investment adviser handle his or her portfolio.

The actual 'services' in the site concept were a direct result of this research. But for me, where the rubber hits the road, it's about how the website provides member access to an interesting, yet very efficient way of looking at one's stocks. I try to put myself into this picture and imagine what it is like looking down on a particular investment from three different altitudes.

First, there is the Macro-economic overview, as if you were a plane way up at 38,000 feet of altitude, looking down at the very big picture. Next is each indutry's overview (viewed within the context of the macro-economic overview above). Finally, there are companies listed within the specific industries presented on the site. This is data composed of specific research that was conducted on or with that company on the site.

From my marketer's viewpoint, this site allows one to look at the major questions one must ask: (1) where is this company now? (2) Where do they say they want to be? By when? Thirdly, how are they going to get there? What specically are they going to do to get there? Being able to look down from a 38,000 foot vantage point forces the stock researcher to become aware of and take into consideration all the other inputs that affect the competitive environment in which this company has to compete.

From the mid-altitude point, the researcher is assisted by taking into consideration all the pertinent specific industry inputs, allowing them to decide for themselves whether or not this particular company has the ability and resources to move upwards...or not. The researhing investor, or his adviser, is then free to make his own decisions whether to sell, buy...or not...or not.

©Copyright, Roy MacNaughton, 2008



Article Source: http://www.rightbiz.com

To learn more, go to: www.stockresearchdd.com Roy MacNaughton is a business writer and coach. He's a seasoned marketer, with more than 25 years of international experience, including eight years online. His specialty is finding investment "niches" that can be exploited and/or added to his own portfolio. Check his blog at: www.UmarketingU.com

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