| name | competitive-positioning |
| description | Analyze competitive landscape and position brand for differentiation. Use when entering markets or responding to competitive threats. |
| origin | ECM |
Competitive Positioning
When to Activate
- Entering a new market and need to understand the competitive landscape
- A new competitor has emerged and is taking market share
- Sales team is losing deals to specific competitors and needs better positioning
- Refreshing competitive intelligence for annual planning
- Building sales enablement materials (battlecards, objection handling)
- Pricing decisions that require competitive context
- Evaluating potential partnerships or acquisitions in the competitive space
First Questions
- Who do your customers consider as alternatives? (Not who you think — who they actually compare you to.)
- Why do you win deals, and why do you lose them?
- What do customers say about competitors in reviews, forums, and sales calls?
- Which competitors are growing fastest, and why?
- Where do you overlap with competitors, and where are you genuinely different?
- Are there non-obvious competitors (spreadsheets, manual processes, "do nothing")?
- What competitive intelligence do you already have, and how current is it?
Competitive Landscape Mapping
Step 1: Identify Competitors
Map competitors in three tiers:
Direct competitors — Same product category, same target customer.
They solve the same problem the same way.
Indirect competitors — Different product category, same customer need.
They solve the same problem a different way.
Substitute competitors — What customers use instead of any purpose-built solution.
Often the real competition (spreadsheets, email, manual processes, hiring an intern).
Step 2: Build Competitor Profiles
For each significant competitor, document:
Company: [Name]
Website: [URL]
Founded: [Year]
Funding/Revenue: [If available]
Headcount: [Approximate]
Target Market: [Who they sell to]
Core Product: [What they sell]
Positioning: [How they describe themselves — use their own words]
Key Strengths: [What they do well]
Key Weaknesses: [Where they fall short]
Pricing Model: [How they charge]
Recent Moves: [Product launches, funding, pivots, hires in last 12 months]
Win Rate Against: [% of deals won/lost vs this competitor, if known]
Common Objections: [What customers say when considering them over you]
Step 3: Competitive Matrix
Create a feature/capability comparison matrix, but go beyond feature checkmarks:
| Capability | Your Brand | Competitor A | Competitor B | Competitor C |
|---|
| [Capability 1] | Strong. [Detail] | Partial. [Detail] | None | Strong. [Detail] |
| [Capability 2] | Planned Q3 | Strong. [Detail] | Basic | None |
| Pricing | $$, per seat | $$$, per seat | $, flat rate | $$, usage-based |
| Best for | [Segment] | [Segment] | [Segment] | [Segment] |
Rules for honest competitive matrices:
- Never misrepresent competitors. Sales teams will lose credibility.
- Acknowledge where competitors are genuinely strong.
- Focus on capabilities that matter to buyers, not every feature.
- Update quarterly — competitive landscapes shift fast.
Positioning Against Competitors
Against a Market Leader
Do not compete head-to-head on their strength. Instead:
- Specialize. "We do X for [specific segment] better than anyone, because we are purpose-built for them."
- Simplify. "They have everything. We have exactly what you need — without the complexity."
- Modernize. "They built their platform ten years ago. We built ours for how teams work today."
- Service gap. "Same capability, but we actually support you." (Only if true.)
Against a Low-Cost Competitor
- Reframe the cost conversation. Total cost of ownership, not sticker price.
- Quantify the gap. "You save $X/month but lose $Y in [productivity/quality/risk]."
- Sell to value-driven buyers. Do not try to win price-sensitive buyers — that is their segment.
Against a Direct Competitor
- Find the wedge. Identify the one dimension where you are clearly superior and make every conversation about that dimension.
- Own a use case. Even if products overlap 80%, own the narrative for a specific workflow or scenario.
- Customer proof. Switcher stories are the most powerful weapon. "They used [Competitor] for two years, switched to us, and saw [Result]."
Against "Do Nothing" / Status Quo
Often the hardest competitor. The customer's current process is free and familiar.
- Quantify the pain. "You're spending 12 hours/week on this manually. That's $X/year."
- Show the risk. "Manual processes break at scale. What happens when you 3x?"
- Reduce friction. Make switching so easy that inertia is not a valid excuse.
Blue Ocean Strategy Basics
When the competitive landscape is crowded, consider creating uncontested market space:
Four Actions Framework
- Eliminate. Which factors that the industry competes on should be eliminated?
- Reduce. Which factors should be reduced well below the industry standard?
- Raise. Which factors should be raised well above the industry standard?
- Create. Which factors should be created that the industry has never offered?
Example — Cirque du Soleil:
- Eliminated: animal acts, star performers, multiple show arenas
- Reduced: fun and humor, thrill and danger
- Raised: artistic music and dance, venue environment
- Created: theme, refined watching environment, multiple productions
The goal is not to beat competitors but to make competition irrelevant by redefining value.
Competitive Response Playbook
When a Competitor Launches a New Feature You Have
- Do not react publicly unless customers are confused
- Arm sales with talking points that differentiate your implementation
- Consider whether to accelerate your own roadmap communication
When a Competitor Launches Something You Lack
- Assess real customer demand (is this a differentiator or a checkbox?)
- If critical: prioritize on roadmap and communicate timeline to at-risk customers
- If non-critical: prepare a positioning response ("We intentionally don't do X because...")
- Never badmouth — acknowledge and redirect
When a Competitor Cuts Price
- Do not match unless you can sustain it profitably
- Reframe the conversation around value and TCO
- If you lose price-sensitive deals, let them go — they were not your ideal customer
- Watch for quality or service degradation from the competitor that you can address
When a Competitor Gets Acquired
- Assess the impact on their product, team, and customers
- Watch for customer uncertainty — acquisitions create switching windows
- Prepare targeted messaging for their customers who may be evaluating alternatives
Battlecard Creation
Battlecards are one-page competitive reference documents for sales teams.
Battlecard Template
# Battlecard: [Your Brand] vs [Competitor Name]
## Last Updated: [Date]
### Quick Summary
[2-3 sentences: who they are, where they compete with us, our key advantage]
### Their Positioning (In Their Own Words)
[Quote from their website or marketing]
### Where They Win
- [Honest strength 1]
- [Honest strength 2]
### Where We Win
- [Our advantage 1 + proof point]
- [Our advantage 2 + proof point]
- [Our advantage 3 + proof point]
### Common Objections & Responses
| Objection | Response |
|---|---|
| "They're cheaper" | "[Value reframe with data]" |
| "They have [Feature X]" | "[Our approach + why it's better for the customer]" |
| "They're the market leader" | "[Why that may not serve this customer's specific needs]" |
### Landmines to Set
Questions to ask prospects that expose competitor weaknesses:
- "Have you asked them about [known weakness area]?"
- "What happens when you need [thing they can't do]?"
- "Can you talk to a customer in your industry who uses them?"
### Switcher Story
[Brief case study of a customer who switched from this competitor to you]
### Trap to Avoid
[One thing NOT to say or do when competing against this player]
Battlecard Maintenance
- Update quarterly at minimum
- Source input from sales (win/loss), product (feature parity), marketing (messaging), and customer success (switcher feedback)
- Keep to one page — if sales will not read it, it is useless
- Make them searchable and accessible (CRM integration, Slack bot, shared drive)
Quality Gate
Before finalizing competitive positioning: