Intelligence field
The intelligence field, also known as the intelligence business, the intelligence establishment, the intelligence complex, the intelligence industry, the field of intelligence, or the business of intelligence is the global industry revolving around intelligence in all of its forms. The intelligence field is composed of people, groups, and organizations who deal – directly or indirectly – with intelligence, and/or support those people that do. This industry contains; lawyers, professors and academics, diplomats, biologists, chemists, astronomers, photographers, videographers, information technology specialists, historians, economists, data scientists, graphic designers, food service workers, psychologists and profilers, essayists, intelligence analysts, c-suite executives, hackers, coders, and software developers, among others. Individuals employed by intelligence organizations are usually fully employed officers of intelligence agencies called intelligence officers. Those persons popularly called "spies" make up only a small part of the intelligence field – so small that some scholars have even argued that the work of spying, called espionage, is anachronistic and unnecessary in the modern intelligence field. In other words, just as not everyone in the film industry is an actor, not everyone in the intelligence field is a spy, or even deals with intelligence.
Hager Ben Jaffel and Sebastian Larsson write that:
"In sum, doing intelligence today could mean anything from informing high politics and producing risk assessments, to dealing with the mundanities of the everyday labor of law enforcement, to managing vast databases involving intricate computerized surveillance solutions."One derogatory term that has been used to describe the intelligence field, especially in the United States, is the intelligence-industrial complex.
Global industry leaders
Due to the secretive, often covert, nature of the intelligence field, gaining accurate employment figures or profit and revenue figures in either the public sector or private sector anywhere is difficult for data scientists, human resources officers, or economists. From an etymological perspective, when the professions of intelligence were being developed, the intelligence field deliberately chose words that were mundane and obtuse, so their enemies would not know what these jobs really were. Job postings are even today often intentionally or unintentionally mislabeled by employers. Most of the employment figures below are best-estimates.The one thing that is not measured below is the effectiveness of the industry leaders, because, while those measurements are often performed within the industry, those reports are mostly kept secret or classified.
Public sector
are the collective efforts of a country surrounding intelligence – but confusingly, most of the employment studies today only measure the size of individual intelligence agencies. It is inadequate to measure individual agencies alone, because, for example, the Central Intelligence Agency is only 1/18th of the entire United States Intelligence Community – meaning that the CIA is only one of 18 intelligence agencies in the United States. Comparing the size of the CIA to the size of the KGB is not adequate, because it does not include all of the other people in those governments employed in the industry.The following are, therefore, the top leading intelligence communities where figures are found. These rankings incorporate both the number of employees and the owned physical assets of these communities, like access to satellites and deployment times:
| Rank | Intelligence Community | Estimated employees | Annual budget |
| 1 | United States Intelligence Community | 100,000 –200,000 | $101.6 billion |
| 2 | Chinese intelligence community | ? | |
| 3 | Russian Intelligence Community | ? | |
| 4 | Israeli intelligence community | ? | ₪20 billion |
| 5 | Indian intelligence community | ₹4,2343 crore | |
| 6 | Pakistani Intelligence Community | 15-20% of ₨1.8 – 2.55 trillion | |
| 7 | United Kingdom Intelligence Community | 15,550 | £4.2 billion |
| 8 | Australian Intelligence Community | 7,000 – 10,000 | $44.6 million – $2.05 billion |
| 9 | France | 20,000 | €67 million |
| 10 | Germany | 10,000 | €1 billion |
| 11 | Japan | 5,000 | |
| 12 | South Korea | 60,000 |
The ten most powerful government intelligence agencies, when compared to the relative size of their intelligence communities, are the following:
| Rank | Intelligence agency | Estimated employees | Annual budget | Country |
| 1 | Central Intelligence Agency | 21,575 – 22,000 | $15 billion | United States |
| 2 | Secret Intelligence Service | 3,500 | N/A | United Kingdom |
| 3 | Mossad | 7,000 | ₪10 billion | Israel |
| 4 | Research & Analysis Wing | 5,000 | $100 – 500 million | India |
| 5 | Federal Security Service | 200,000 – 500,000 | ? | Russia |
| 6 | Ministry of State Security | 800,000 | ? | China |
| 7 | Bundesnachrichtendienst | 6,500 | €1.6 billion | Germany |
| 8 | Inter-Services Intelligence | 10,000 | ₨200 – 300 billion | Pakistan |
| 9 | Australian Secret Intelligence Service | Australia | ||
| 10 | Directorate General for External Security | 7,200 | €1 billion | France |
Private sector
Many of the companies below are involved in more industries than only the intelligence field. The following are the most powerful private sector intelligence agencies in the world:| Rank | Company | Estimated employees | Annual revenue | Country |
| 1 | Kroll Inc. | 6,500 | $1.31 billion | United States |
| 2 | K2 Integrity | 350 | $74 – 121 million | United States |
| 3 | Surefire Intelligence | 50 | $5 – 30 million | United States |
| 4 | Booz Allen Hamilton | 34,200 | $2.9 billion | United States |
| 5 | Constellis Holdings | 22,000 | $1 – 5 billion | United States |
| 6 | AggregateIQ | 12–50 | $6 million | Canada |
| 7 | Hakluyt & Company | 200 | £130 million | United Kingdom |
| 8 | Black Cube | 50–200 | $1 – 5 million | Israel |
| 9 | Earth League International | 50 | N/A | United States |
| ? | Leidos | 48,000 | $16 billion | United States |
| ? | CACI International | 25,500 | $9 million | United States |
| ? | Science Applications International Corporation | 24,000 | $7.5 million | United States |
| ? | Palantir Technologies | 4,000 | $3 billion | United States |
| ? | 5 Stones Intelligence | 200 | $15 – 16 million | |
| ? | Pinkerton | 500 | N/A | United States |
| ? | Amazon | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | United States |
| ? | Alphabet Inc. | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | United States |
Criminal intelligence
Where they do exist, the leading criminal intelligence organizations are the following:Industrial cultivation
The global intelligence field, and especially the private sector, is today increasingly diversified in its portfolio, moving away from its core industrial production and management. This industry has often branched-out into secondary and tertiary goods and services, such as union busting, policy recommendation, estimates and planning, sanctioned assassinations, mass surveillance programs, malware production and deployment, and so on. One common adage for the intelligence field is that "intelligence is as intelligence does."However, the singular product which remains at the core of this industry is intelligence. Intelligence as information is to have some secret knowledge of something. To governments and the public sector, this information is knowledge of and/or belonging to the enemy, which will often gain an advantage in armed conflict. To the private sector, intelligence is ususally knowledge of a competitor, and/or "trade secrets" belonging to that competitor – such as blueprints and patents. However, because governments are often liable if they get caught spying on their own citizens, they will often hire-out private intelligence agencies to perform that same intelligence.
Unlike coffee, which is the core product of the coffee industry, or sugar, which is the core product of the sugar industry – intelligence is not a manufactured product, but it is nevertheless collected and cultivated in some manner.
Intelligence work can be conducted by government intelligence agencies, police forces, and military intelligence units. This work can also be engaged by private organizations, including; private intelligence agencies, multinational corporations, private investigators, drug cartels, narcotic cartels, terrorist groups, and others.