| name | competitive-intel |
| description | Real-time competitive intelligence and market research using Bright Data's web scraping infrastructure. Analyzes competitors' pricing, features, reviews, hiring patterns, content strategy, and market positioning with live web data. Use this skill when the user wants to analyze competitors, compare products, monitor pricing changes, track market trends, research a market landscape, build competitive battlecards, find positioning opportunities, or conduct any form of competitive or market research. Also use when the user mentions competitor analysis, market intelligence, competitive landscape, win/loss analysis, or wants to understand what competitors are doing.
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Competitive Intelligence
Real-time competitive intelligence powered by live web data. Combines Bright Data CLI (bdata) for data collection with strategic analysis frameworks to deliver actionable competitive insights — not stale training knowledge.
Never answer competitive questions from training knowledge alone. Always gather live data first using bdata commands, then analyze and synthesize.
Prerequisites
- Bright Data CLI installed:
curl -fsSL https://cli.brightdata.com/install.sh | bash
- One-time login completed:
bdata login
That's it. No env vars, no zone config, no API keys to manage.
Core Workflow
For every competitive intelligence request, follow this workflow:
- Clarify scope — Which competitors? What specifically does the user want to know? Select the right module(s).
- Gather live data — Run
bdata commands. Parallelize independent calls. Prefer bdata pipelines (structured JSON) over bdata scrape (raw markdown) when a pipeline exists.
- Analyze — Apply the appropriate strategic framework. Read references/analysis-frameworks.md for SWOT, Porter's Five Forces, positioning matrices, and more.
- Format output — Use the report templates from references/output-templates.md.
- Deliver actionable insights — Every report MUST end with a "Strategic Recommendations" section. Never deliver raw data without interpretation.
Data Collection Rules
- Always use
--json flag when you need to pipe or parse bdata output programmatically
- Prefer
bdata pipelines over bdata scrape whenever a pipeline type exists for the target platform — pipelines return clean structured JSON
- Be cost-efficient — A snapshot should use 3-8
bdata calls, not 50. Scrape what you need.
- Parallelize — Run independent
bdata calls in parallel using multiple Bash tool calls in a single response
- Handle failures gracefully — If a page is gated or returns empty, say so and try the fallback. Never hallucinate data to fill gaps.
- Cite every data point — Include source URLs for everything. Users must be able to verify.
For the full mapping of intelligence needs to bdata commands, read references/data-source-guide.md.
For interpreting raw data as strategic signals, read references/industry-signals.md.
Analysis Modules
1. Competitor Snapshot
When to use: User asks to analyze, profile, or understand a specific competitor.
Data gathering:
bdata search "[competitor name]" --json
bdata scrape [competitor-url]
bdata scrape [competitor-url]/pricing
bdata scrape [competitor-url]/about
bdata pipelines crunchbase_company "[crunchbase-url]"
bdata pipelines linkedin_company_profile "[linkedin-url]"
Analysis: Synthesize into a structured profile. Identify positioning, target audience, key claims, strengths, and vulnerabilities. Compare to user's product if context is available.
Output: Use the Competitor Snapshot template from references/output-templates.md.
2. Pricing Intelligence
When to use: User wants to compare pricing, understand pricing models, or find pricing positioning opportunities.
Data gathering:
bdata scrape [competitor-a-url]/pricing
bdata scrape [competitor-b-url]/pricing
bdata scrape [competitor-c-url]/pricing
bdata pipelines amazon_product "[amazon-url]"
bdata pipelines walmart_product "[walmart-url]"
bdata search "[competitor] pricing review" --json
Analysis: Extract plan names, prices, feature lists, and limits from each page. Normalize into a comparison matrix. Identify pricing model types (per-seat, usage-based, freemium, enterprise-only). Flag positioning signals and recommend opportunities.
Output: Use the Pricing Intelligence template from references/output-templates.md.
3. Review Intelligence
When to use: User wants to understand customer sentiment, find competitor pain points, or identify exploitable gaps.
Data gathering:
bdata search "[competitor] site:g2.com" --json
bdata search "[competitor] site:capterra.com" --json
bdata scrape [g2-url]
bdata scrape [capterra-url]
bdata pipelines google_maps_reviews "[google-maps-url]" 30
bdata pipelines amazon_product_reviews "[amazon-url]"
bdata pipelines google_play_store "[play-store-url]"
bdata pipelines apple_app_store "[app-store-url]"
Analysis: Categorize sentiment (positive/neutral/negative). Extract top praised features, top complaints, and feature requests. Identify comparison mentions ("switched from X", "better than Y"). Complaints are the user's positioning opportunity.
Output: Use the Review Intelligence template from references/output-templates.md.
4. Hiring Signal Analysis
When to use: User wants to infer a competitor's strategic direction from their hiring patterns.
Data gathering:
bdata search "[competitor] linkedin company" --json
bdata pipelines linkedin_job_listings "[linkedin-company-url]"
bdata search "[competitor] careers" --json
bdata scrape [careers-url]
Analysis: Categorize roles by department. Analyze hiring velocity (scaling vs. stable vs. contracting). Identify technology signals from job descriptions. Look for geographic expansion signals. Interpret seniority mix (hiring leaders = new initiative; hiring ICs = scaling existing).
Output: Use the Hiring Signal Analysis template from references/output-templates.md.
5. Content & SEO Battle
When to use: User wants to understand competitors' content strategy or search positioning for specific keywords.
Data gathering:
bdata search "[keyword 1]" --json
bdata search "[keyword 2]" --json
bdata search "[keyword 3]" --json
bdata search "site:[competitor.com]" --json
bdata scrape [competitor-url]/blog
bdata scrape [top-ranking-article-url]
Analysis: Map which competitors rank for which keywords. Estimate content volume and publishing frequency. Identify topic clusters each competitor invests in. Find content gaps — topics nobody covers well that the user could own.
Output: Use the Content & SEO Battle template from references/output-templates.md.
6. Market Landscape Map
When to use: User wants to understand all players in a market, find white space, or map the competitive landscape.
Data gathering:
bdata search "[industry] companies" --json
bdata search "best [product category] tools" --json
bdata search "[product category] alternatives" --json
bdata scrape [g2-category-url]
bdata scrape [competitor-1-url]
bdata scrape [competitor-2-url]
bdata pipelines crunchbase_company "[crunchbase-url]"
Analysis: Categorize players by tier (enterprise, mid-market, SMB, open-source). Build a positioning map (e.g., price vs. feature breadth). Identify white space — underserved segments or positioning no one owns. Note market trends, recent entrants, and consolidation signals.
Output: Use the Market Landscape Map template from references/output-templates.md.
Multi-Module Analysis
When the user asks for a comprehensive competitive analysis (e.g., "full battlecard", "deep dive", "board meeting prep"), combine multiple modules:
- Start with Competitor Snapshot for each competitor
- Add Pricing Intelligence for comparison
- Add Review Intelligence for customer sentiment
- Optionally add Hiring Signals and Content & SEO for strategic depth
- Wrap everything in the Executive Summary template from references/output-templates.md
For full battlecards, use the Competitive Battlecard template.
Choosing the Right Module
| User says... | Module to use |
|---|
| "Analyze [competitor]", "Tell me about [company]" | Competitor Snapshot |
| "Compare pricing", "How much does [X] cost" | Pricing Intelligence |
| "What do customers think", "Reviews of [X]", "Pain points" | Review Intelligence |
| "What are they hiring for", "Job postings", "Where are they expanding" | Hiring Signal Analysis |
| "How do they rank", "Their content strategy", "SEO" | Content & SEO Battle |
| "Who are the players", "Market landscape", "Competitive landscape" | Market Landscape Map |
| "Full battlecard", "Deep competitive analysis", "Board prep" | Multi-Module (combine all) |
Output Quality Standards
- Every data point must have a source URL — no unattributed claims
- Separate facts from analysis — clearly distinguish scraped data from Claude's interpretation
- End with "So What?" — every report must have actionable strategic recommendations
- Be honest about gaps — if data is unavailable, say so. Never fill gaps with training knowledge presented as live data.
- Date-stamp the analysis — include "Data collected on [date]" so users know freshness