From UK Police Intelligence to academia: Support versus specialist - Interview with Nadia Tuominen (S2E2)
Summary
Listen to Nadia Tuominen's path from crime science student to intelligence analyst in London’s Metropolitan Police, where she learned mostly on the job in a changing organization. She explains how austerity and lack of development pushed her to leave for sports integrity in tennis, then into the financial sector to work on economic crime. A later shift into academia and training lets her “close the circle” by teaching police officers and practitioners, creating qualifications she wishes had existed earlier. Across her journey, she emphasizes intelligence as a reasoning process, the importance of frameworks, elevating analysts from “support staff” to specialists, and helping people think better rather than just learn tools. Nadia emphasizes the need for analysts to be proactive, build relationships, and continuously develop their skills to adapt to the changing landscape of intelligence work.
Key takeaways
* Intelligence is a reasoning process for decision-making, not magic or perfect prediction.
* Definitions of intelligence should fit each organization’s mission and context, rather than chasing one universal formula.
* Frameworks like the UK National Intelligence Model, though imperfect, become clearly valuable once you work in less-structured private-sector environments.
* Analysts should be treated as specialists, not generic “support staff,” to improve respect, pay, and decision quality.
* Training should focus on how analysts think (cognition, self-awareness, bias) as much as on tools and structured techniques.
* Biases are unavoidable and not inherently bad; the aim is to understand and manage them, not pretend they can be removed.
* Many law enforcement analysts lack formal, portable qualifications, so building accessible, practice-based education helps careers and professionalizes the field.
Resources and references mentioned
* NIM https://library.college.police.uk/docs/npia/NIM-Code-of-Practice.pdf
* ICD 203 https://www.dni.gov/files/documents/ICD/ICD-203.pdf
* Intelligence Architecture Mind Map - https://github.com/Errum/IntelArchitectureMap
* Psychology of intelligence Analysis - https://www.cia.gov/resources/csi/static/Pyschology-of-Intelligence-Analysis.pdf
* Analyst & Decision-Maker Conference - https://i2group.com/events/analyst-decision-maker-conference-2026
Chapters
02:59 Journey into Intelligence and Law Enforcement
05:56 Training and Development in Intelligence Analysis
09:12 Transitioning from Law Enforcement to Sports Integrity
12:07 Understanding Intelligence Frameworks
14:51 Exploring Financial Crime and Economic Crime
17:49 The Role of Academia in Intelligence Analysis
20:51 Training and Cognitive Function in Intelligence
23:59 Defining Intelligence: Perspectives and Processes
27:10 The Importance of Forward-Looking Intelligence
29:57 Analysts as Specialists, Not Support Staff
37:13 The Role of Analysts in Decision Making
38:25 Understanding AI and Its Implications
40:30 Critical Thinking in AI Usage
42:35 Explainability and Trust in AI
44:22 Evaluating AI vs Human Intelligence
46:24 The Importance of Input in AI
48:28Training and Experience in Intelligence Analysis
55:33 Measuring the Value of Intelligence
01:01:05 The Dialogue of Intelligence
01:04:17 The Future of AI in Intelligence
01:12:10 Preparing for a Career in Intelligence