| name | competitor-analysis |
| description | Profiles 5 competitors, identifies white space, and delivers a positioning recommendation — not a feature comparison table. Use this skill — proactively and without waiting to be asked — whenever entering a new market, before defining bets in product strategy, when pricing needs a competitive anchor, or when losing deals to a specific competitor. Also triggers for: "competitive analysis", "competitor research", "who are my competitors", "market landscape", "white space", "differentiation angle", "competitive positioning", "market entry risk", "losing to X", "pricing strategy", "threat assessment", "who owns this segment", "competitive brief", "how do we differentiate", "what are competitors doing". Produces a decision-ready competitive map: 5 competitor profiles, white space analysis, and a Where-to-Win recommendation with explicit areas to ignore.
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Competitor Analysis
Core Philosophy
Competitive intelligence is only useful when it informs a decision. The output is not a feature comparison table — it's a positioning recommendation with explicit trade-offs. You should finish knowing where you can win, where you can't compete, and what you're choosing not to do.
The common failure: spending weeks cataloguing competitor features without answering the strategic question underneath: where should we play, and how do we win there?
When to Use
- Before defining or updating product strategy
- When entering a new market or launching a new product area
- When pricing decisions need a competitive anchor
- Before a major feature launch to identify differentiation angle
- When a key metric drops and a competitor move might be the cause
Workflow
1. Define the Competitive Question
Start here, not with a list of competitors. What decision does this analysis need to inform?
- "Should we enter segment X?" → focus on who owns that segment and their moat
- "How should we price tier Y?" → focus on competitor pricing and positioning
- "Why are we losing deals to Z?" → focus on Z's strengths and your gaps
2. Identify 5 Direct Competitors
Direct = same target customer, same job-to-be-done, close substitutes.
Exclude: aspirational giants (Google, Amazon unless genuinely competing), adjacent tools, and legacy players your customers don't actually evaluate.
Sources: customer interviews ("what else did you consider?"), G2/Capterra, sales lost-deal notes, job listings.
3. Profile Each Competitor
For each of the 5:
| Dimension | What to capture |
|---|
| Positioning | Who they say they're for, their primary differentiation claim |
| Target segment | Who actually buys them — company size, role, industry |
| Core strengths | The 3-5 things they do best |
| Pricing | Model and price point |
| Key weakness | One real gap: missing segment, missing feature, UX failure |
| Recent moves | Funding, launches, pivots in the last 6-12 months |
4. Find the White Space
Across all 5 profiles, ask:
- Which customer segments are underserved or forced to compromise?
- Which jobs-to-be-done are poorly solved across the entire competitive set?
- Where are all competitors avoiding (too hard, too niche, too different)?
- What would a customer quote directly as a frustration with all current options?
5. Produce the Positioning Recommendation
The deliverable is a bet, not a report:
- Where to win: The segment + problem where you have a defensible advantage
- How to win: Your differentiated approach (not "we're better at everything")
- What to ignore: Where you deliberately won't compete and why
- Watch list: 1-2 competitors or market moves to monitor over the next 6 months
Output Format
## Competitive Brief — [Product / Market / Feature]
### Competitive Question
[The specific decision this analysis informs]
### Competitor Profiles
| Competitor | Segment | Core Strength | Pricing | Key Weakness | Recent Move |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
### White Space
[Underserved segments or unmet needs across the competitive set]
### Positioning Recommendation
- Where to win: [segment + problem]
- How: [differentiated approach]
- What to avoid: [deliberate non-competition areas]
- Watch list: [2 competitors or moves to monitor]
Antipatterns
- Feature parity as the goal: If your strategy is "match everything competitor X has," you'll lose on price to the incumbent. Win on a dimension they can't or won't compete on.
- Including irrelevant giants: Google and Salesforce are not your competitors unless your customer actually evaluates them. Their presence signals unclear ICP.
- Analysis without a question: A 20-page competitive overview that no one acts on. Start from the decision, work backward.
- Outdated intel: Competitive landscapes shift in 6-12 months. Verify pricing, positioning, and recent moves.
- Copying the leader: "They do X, so we should too" ignores that you're starting later with less distribution.