Deep Data Dive - S. Florida Business & Wealth

Deep Data Dive

Jim Swift’s Cortera helps customers make the right business decisions

By ARNIE ROSENBERG | Photography by Larry Wood

As a kid, Jim Swift and his friends played a game as they walked to and from school each day. Watching how many trucks were coming and going from the manufacturing plants, and what kinds of trucks they were, they tried to guess how each business was doing.

Some things haven’t changed.

As CEO of Cortera, Swift still is aggregating information, analyzing it and developing business intelligence for customers with more data and depth than your everyday Dun & Bradstreet report.

“If I know what companies buy and how it’s changing over time, it’s a real useful fact to help understand what they do and if they’re growing and whether they’re reputable,” he says. “If you’ve got five times more trucks leaving your docks in the afternoon than you did a year ago, you’re probably selling more stuff.”

Swift, 51, admits to an obsession with crunching numbers. A self-described sports geek growing up, he was absorbed in player statistics, baseball cards and box scores—“before data was digitized,” he says. He came to South Florida in 1999 to join Seisint, a startup aimed at providing better information to companies.

At the time, that was easier said than done. Technology still was way too slow and way too expensive, Swift remembers. But the tech-savvy company found solutions to those stumbling blocks.

“I saw the need from early in my career,” Swift says. “In the early ’90s, it was clear what was possible with consumer analytics if you had the right data, and I saw the massive need for information about companies. It’s a matter of supply and demand. If I’m demanding more, faster intelligence about stuff, I’m going to build faster computers to solve that.”

Seisint did that so well that the venture-backed startup was acquired in 2004 by LexisNexis for $775 million. Yet, even as COO of LexisNexis Risk Management, Swift came back to his obsession. While corporate records show corporate filings and UCC filings, Swift realized a key piece was missing. Combining existing data with a credit bureau would add that all-important insight into what companies buy.

“Regardless of what your SIC [Standard Industrial Classification] code might be, I want to know what’s important to you based on where you spend your money and how you treat your suppliers.” He’s committed to “understanding what goes on inside companies based on what comes and goes and what they buy.”

Today, the Boca Raton-based company has grown to more than 100 employees and several thousand customers, in industries from distribution to manufacturing to services. It’s expanding into the banking and insurance segments, where clients use Cortera intelligence to help answer the question, “What’s the risk of this business?”

Moreover, some 50 million people a year visit Cortera websites, where they get free business profiles, demographic and other data, “just to help people find things and build awareness,” he says.

Still, the centerpiece of Cortera’s operation is its Deep Dive Report. At 20 pages or more, it reports a company’s risk behavior scorecard, comprising its Cortera payment rating, payment risk segment, industry benchmark and spending growth index; its credit risk and payment behavior; breakdowns on what’s spent on materials and operations; and information ranging from the details of its truck fleet to tax liens and judgments.

“It makes sense intuitively,” Swift says. “I now have banks and others using the data we’ve pulled together to get a statistical lift in their ability to do things like predict loan defaults.”

Swift isn’t one to let the world, and especially technology, pass him by. Staying on the cutting edge, he believes, means more market interaction with customers, more people in Cortera’s network and more data.

“‘Analytics’ is a word a lot of people throw around,” he says. “What it means for me is taking data and making sense of it for a specific business purpose, and saving people as much time in the process as possible.

“I already have more data than people know what to do with, and they can’t consume the raw data. It would be paralyzing.” In the end, he says, “it’s figuring out how I can take this data and help people make a more effective decision.”

You May Also Like
Powering the Creator Economy 

In South Florida’s increasingly influential creator economy, Olivia Ormos is less focused on content than on what powers it.  As founder of mavn, the Miami entrepreneur is building the infrastructure layer

Read More
A woman in a black outfit stands holding a microphone in front of a MAVN sign, with two black chairs and display boards reading “influencer marketing done right” and “where creators, brands, + culture collide.”. South Florida Business & Wealth
Building Through the Bottleneck 

 Demand remains strong across South Florida, but rising costs, stalled deals, and execution challenges are reshaping how projects move from concept to completion  South Florida’s construction market is not slowing down. It

Read More
A mature man with gray hair and glasses, wearing a gray suit and white shirt, stands indoors and buttons his jacket. There is a brick wall with framed art and a beige couch in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth
MHC Fund II Expands Space Coast Retail Footprint with $16M Acquisition

The purchase of Shoppes at Victoria Square underscores continued investor confidence in high-performing retail centers tied to Florida’s aerospace-driven growth corridor

Read More
Aerial view of a shopping center with stores, including Ross Dress for Less, Ulta Beauty, and Five Below, in front of a large parking lot with scattered cars and a residential neighborhood in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth
Related Ross Invests in Waterfront Vision at Phillips Point

A $1 million Trinity Park upgrade anchors a broader $120 million transformation, blending office, public space, and cultural programming

Read More
Two modern mid-rise buildings with large windows and beige exteriors stand among palm trees under a blue sky with scattered clouds. Cars and pedestrians are visible along the street in front of the buildings. South Florida Business & Wealth
Other Posts
Night of Literary Feasts Returns with Exclusive Author Dinners 

The Broward Public Library Foundation’s Literary Feast returns with author-led dinners, a community-wide celebration, and proceeds supporting local literacy programs

Read More
Five adults, dressed in semi-formal attire, stand together smiling at an indoor event. The group includes three men in jackets and two women in dresses, with other guests visible in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth
Glow Together

Women United Pamper Party

Read More
From Service to Leadership: Rob Ceravolo

NAVY | Lt. Commander
Founder. Fighter Pilot. Strategic Advisor

Read More
A man in a navy blazer, white shirt, and blue pants stands on a polished concrete floor inside a large, empty industrial warehouse with metal walls and minimal lighting. South Florida Business & Wealth
From Service to Leadership: DeAnn Hazey

ARMY | Sergeant, E5
Executive Director, Government & Community Affairs,
Nicklaus Children’s Health System

Read More
A woman in a green, ruffled dress and heels stands confidently in a large, empty, industrial space with sunlight streaming in from behind her. South Florida Business & Wealth