Finding EU material on companies can be tricky; Search Europa is a good starting point before starting more complicated searches.
Categories
- Business Continuity (12)
- Canada (94)
- Communication (43)
- Company Research (49)
- Competitive Intelligence (88)
- Counterfeit Goods (2)
- Courts (55)
- Craigslist (8)
- Detecting Decption (9)
- Dirty Tricks (22)
- Due Diligence (23)
- Economics (7)
- Encryption (12)
- Espionage (25)
- Ethics (5)
- Fitness and Lifestyle Management (28)
- Forensic Science (5)
- Forensics (6)
- Forgery (4)
- Fraud (36)
- Google-Free Wednesday (18)
- GTD (2)
- Handwriting (22)
- How to Become a Professional Private Investigator (42)
- Identity Fraud (32)
- Identity Theft (34)
- Industrial Espionage (34)
- Intellectual Property Rights (19)
- Intelligence Services (28)
- Legislation (21)
- Mathematics (3)
- Methods (115)
- News (54)
- News Media (21)
- Notebooks (14)
- Odds & Sods (12)
- Power User Tips (47)
- Privacy (62)
- Private Investigator (190)
- Report Writing (36)
- Reputation Management (11)
- Risk Management (10)
- Search Engines (152)
- Search Leakage (11)
- Search Strategies (113)
- Security (87)
- Shorthand (1)
- Social Sites (79)
- Sources (100)
- Statistics (8)
- Surveillance (48)
- Survival (6)
- Telephone Resources (5)
- Terrorism (16)
- The Investigator's Computer (57)
- Training & Education (12)
- Twitter (26)
- U.S.A. (11)
- Uncategorized (23)
- United Kingdom (8)
- Web Worker (17)
- Workplace Violence (1)
It seems to me that all Search Europa does is the same as using Google with the operator ‘site:.europa.eu’
This means that you are only searching in the pages of the European Union institutions and I’m not sure whether that is the best way to do company research in Europe.
All company registers in Europe are available online and most offer basic search functions for free.
Alex:
I’m just too lazy to type ‘site:.europa.eu’. I use Europa instead. I find a lot of stuff that would be lost in the clutter of irrelevant search results this way.