en un clic
profile-competitor
// Build a comprehensive competitor profile using Porter's four-component framework. Use when asked to analyze a competitor, predict competitor moves, or assess competitive threats.
// Build a comprehensive competitor profile using Porter's four-component framework. Use when asked to analyze a competitor, predict competitor moves, or assess competitive threats.
Analyze industry structure using Porter's Five Forces. Use when asked to assess industry attractiveness, competitive dynamics, profit potential, or structural threats.
Evaluate market entry opportunities using Porter's entry analysis framework. Use when asked to assess whether to enter a new market, how to enter, or what entry barriers exist.
Audit a competitive strategy for internal consistency using Porter's tests. Use when evaluating whether a strategy hangs together, after formulating strategy, or when diagnosing strategic drift.
Design offensive or defensive competitive moves using Porter's framework. Use when planning competitive actions, responding to competitor moves, or managing industry discipline.
Classify an industry's evolutionary stage and structural type using Porter's criteria. Use when asked to diagnose industry maturity, identify if an industry is emerging/fragmented/declining, or understand industry evolution.
Map strategic groups within an industry using Porter's framework. Use when asked to segment competitors, identify positioning opportunities, or analyze mobility barriers.
| name | profile-competitor |
| description | Build a comprehensive competitor profile using Porter's four-component framework. Use when asked to analyze a competitor, predict competitor moves, or assess competitive threats. |
Build a diagnostic profile of a named competitor using Porter's four-component competitor analysis framework, culminating in a Competitor Response Profile that predicts the competitor's likely behavior.
A structured profile containing findings for all four diagnostic components, a blind-spot assessment, and a Competitor Response Profile answering the four predictive questions.
Work through each diagnostic component in order. For each, gather the data points below using public filings, trade press, management statements, job postings, and other available signals.
Diagnose goals at corporate, business-unit, and functional levels. Goals drive what the competitor will do; misreading them is the most common analytical failure.
If the competitor is a business unit of a diversified company, also ask: What are the parent company's current results, and is the unit performing better or worse than the parent? (A unit performing worse faces intense pressure; a parent with an unbroken growth record will avoid risky moves that jeopardize it.) What role does this unit play in the corporate portfolio -- cash cow, build/growth area, source of stability, harvest/divestment candidate, defensive move protecting other businesses, or high-leverage unit whose performance significantly impacts corporate earnings? Does the unit share R&D, manufacturing, or distribution with sister units (creating overhead pressure or cross-subsidies)? Does top management have emotional attachment to the unit? Can the parent support planned changes across all its business units?
Identify what the competitor believes about itself and the industry. Assumptions reveal exploitable blind spots -- areas where the competitor will not see the significance of events, will perceive them incorrectly, or will perceive them only very slowly.
Define the competitor's key operating policies in each functional area and how it seeks to interrelate those functions. Strategy may be explicit or implicit -- one always exists in one form or the other. Identify it across: target markets, product line, pricing, distribution, selling approach, manufacturing, R&D, and finance.
Appraise strengths and weaknesses by asking these synthesizing questions:
After completing all four components, answer these four questions -- this is the deliverable:
Cross-reference findings from Component 2 (Assumptions) against Component 4 (Capabilities) and external reality. Flag every assumption that is inaccurate or outdated. These are the competitor's blind spots -- moves that exploit them carry a lower probability of immediate retaliation, and retaliation, once it comes, is less effective.
# Competitor Profile: [Name]
## Industry Context
[1-2 sentences]
## 1. Future Goals
[Findings organized by the 11 sub-questions + parent company analysis if applicable]
## 2. Assumptions
[Findings organized by the 8 sub-questions]
### Blind Spots Identified
- [Each inaccurate or outdated assumption, with evidence of divergence from reality]
## 3. Current Strategy
[Key operating policies by functional area and how they interrelate]
## 4. Capabilities
[Core | Growth | Quick Response | Adaptability | Staying Power]
## Competitor Response Profile
1. **Satisfied with current position?** [Yes/No + evidence]
2. **Likely moves:** [Predicted strategy shifts with reasoning]
3. **Vulnerabilities:** [Specific openings tied to blind spots or capability gaps]
4. **Retaliation triggers:** [Moves that would provoke the strongest response]
## Strategic Implications for Our Firm
[What this profile means for our competitive moves]
Competitor: Miller Brewing (post-Philip Morris acquisition) Industry: U.S. beer industry, 1970s
Goals: Parent Philip Morris sought aggressive market share growth, applying its consumer packaged goods playbook. Willing to sustain losses to build position -- time horizon and cash reserves far exceeded traditional family-owned breweries.
Assumptions: Miller, under Philip Morris, was NOT bound by the beer industry's conventional wisdom. Traditional breweries believed in brand loyalty, slow innovation, and premium pricing hierarchies. Miller questioned all three assumptions.
Current strategy: Introduced Lite Beer, a 7-ounce bottle, and domestically brewed Lowenbrau at a 25% price premium over Michelob -- each move violated industry conventional wisdom.
Capabilities: Philip Morris brought massive financial resources, consumer marketing expertise, and willingness to sustain a protracted battle. Staying power was essentially unlimited relative to family-owned competitors.
Response Profile:
What happened: According to Porter, most breweries laughed at Miller's moves. They then grudgingly followed as Miller made major gains in market share -- a textbook case of blind spots created by adherence to industry conventional wisdom.