Sector Intelligence
Provides structured industry context that grounds technical recommendations in
sector-specific realities — regulatory requirements, competitive benchmarks,
technology adoption patterns, and market dynamics.
Guiding Principle
"Technology decisions made in a vacuum ignore the most powerful constraints: regulation, competition, and market timing."
Procedure
Step 1 — Sector Profiling
- Identify the target sector and sub-sector with precision.
- Map the regulatory bodies, compliance frameworks, and reporting requirements.
- Catalog the dominant technology patterns and maturity levels in the sector.
- Identify sector-specific constraints (data sovereignty, transaction volume, uptime requirements).
Step 2 — Competitive Landscape
- Identify technology leaders and laggards in the sector.
- Map common technology stacks and platform choices.
- Benchmark key metrics: deployment frequency, time-to-market, digital maturity.
- Identify emerging technology trends with sector-specific adoption timelines.
Step 3 — Regulatory and Compliance Mapping
- Catalog applicable regulations (GDPR, PCI-DSS, SOX, HIPAA, etc.).
- Map regulatory requirements to technical implementation constraints.
- Identify upcoming regulatory changes that affect technology decisions.
- Assess the compliance posture of the current architecture against requirements.
Step 4 — Intelligence Synthesis
- Produce a sector intelligence brief with prioritized findings.
- Map sector constraints to specific technical recommendations.
- Highlight opportunities created by sector trends.
- Flag risks from regulatory changes or competitive dynamics.
Quality Criteria
- Sector analysis covers regulation, competition, and technology trends.
- Regulatory requirements are mapped to specific technical constraints.
- Benchmarks reference named frameworks or industry reports.
- Intelligence is actionable — every finding connects to a recommendation.
Anti-Patterns
- Providing generic technology advice without sector-specific context.
- Treating compliance as a checklist instead of an architectural constraint.
- Ignoring sector-specific non-functional requirements (latency, availability, data residency).
- Presenting competitive benchmarks without accounting for organizational maturity differences.