Competitive Analysis
When to Activate
- Entering a new market and need to understand the competitive landscape
- A new competitor enters your space or an existing one makes a significant move
- Preparing sales battlecards or competitive positioning
- Informing product roadmap decisions with competitive context
- Conducting a strategic planning exercise (annual planning, board prep)
- Win/loss rate declining and need to understand competitive dynamics
- Evaluating an acquisition target's competitive position
First Questions
- What is the specific competitive question you're trying to answer?
- Who are you competing against today? (Not who you think — who does sales actually face in deals?)
- What market or category are you analyzing?
- What decisions will this analysis inform? (Pricing, positioning, product roadmap, go-to-market)
- How much time do you have for this analysis? (Quick assessment vs. deep dive)
- What internal data do you have? (Win/loss data, sales call recordings, customer feedback)
- Is this a one-time analysis or an ongoing competitive intelligence program?
Competitive Landscape Mapping
Step 1: Identify All Competitors
Direct Competitors: Same product, same customer, same problem.
- These are the alternatives you most frequently encounter in deals.
- Usually 3-7 primary direct competitors.
Indirect Competitors: Different product, same customer, same problem.
- They solve the same problem in a fundamentally different way.
- Example: Zoom (video) vs. in-person meetings vs. phone calls.
Substitute Competitors: Non-consumption or DIY alternatives.
- Spreadsheets, manual processes, hiring someone, building internally.
- Often the biggest competitor, especially for new categories.
Potential Future Competitors: Companies that could enter your space.
- Adjacent players expanding their product scope.
- Platform companies adding features that overlap with your product.
- Well-funded startups in adjacent spaces.
Step 2: Prioritize Competitors
Not all competitors deserve equal analysis. Prioritize based on:
| Factor | Weight |
|---|
| Frequency in competitive deals | High |
| Win rate against them | High |
| Market share / growth rate | Medium |
| Strategic threat (future) | Medium |
| Customer overlap | Medium |
Focus deep analysis on your top 3-5 competitors. Monitor the rest.
Feature Comparison Matrix
Building the Matrix
| Feature / Capability | Your Product | Competitor A | Competitor B | Competitor C |
|---|
| Core feature 1 | Rating/detail | Rating/detail | Rating/detail | Rating/detail |
| Core feature 2 | ... | ... | ... | ... |
| Integration X | ... | ... | ... | ... |
| Pricing model | ... | ... | ... | ... |
| Support level | ... | ... | ... | ... |
Rating System
- Leading: Best-in-class implementation. Clear advantage.
- Competitive: On par with alternatives. Not a differentiator.
- Lagging: Below competitor quality. A weakness.
- Missing: Feature not available.
Feature Matrix Caution
- Feature parity comparisons favor incumbents. If you compete on features, you lose to whoever has more.
- Use the feature matrix to identify gaps, but compete on value and positioning, not feature lists.
- Update quarterly — competitor features change constantly.
Pricing Analysis
What to Capture
| Element | Your Product | Competitor A | Competitor B |
|---|
| Pricing model | Per seat/usage/flat | ... | ... |
| Starting price | ... | ... | ... |
| Mid-market price | ... | ... | ... |
| Enterprise price | ... | ... | ... |
| Free tier / trial | ... | ... | ... |
| Discounting behavior | ... | ... | ... |
| Contract terms | ... | ... | ... |
Pricing Intelligence Sources
- Competitor websites (public pricing pages).
- G2, Capterra, TrustRadius reviews (users sometimes mention pricing).
- Sales team intelligence (what prospects tell you about competitor pricing).
- Customer interviews (what they paid before switching).
- Job postings (sometimes reveal tool stack and budget signals).
Pricing Analysis Insights
- Are you priced above, at, or below competitors? Is that intentional?
- How does your pricing model differ? (Per seat vs. usage vs. flat)
- What is the value-to-price ratio for each competitor?
- Where are competitors using pricing as a competitive weapon (aggressive free tiers, deep discounts)?
Messaging Analysis
How to Analyze Competitor Messaging
Examine these assets for each competitor:
- Website homepage: What problem do they lead with? What language do they use?
- Pricing page: How do they frame their tiers? What features do they gate?
- Product pages: What capabilities do they highlight first?
- Case studies: What outcomes do they showcase? Who are their reference customers?
- Social media: What tone do they take? What content themes dominate?
- Ad copy: What messages are they paying to amplify? (Use Facebook Ad Library, Google Ads Transparency)
- Review sites: What do their customers praise and complain about?
Messaging Comparison Template
| Dimension | Your Messaging | Competitor A | Competitor B |
|---|
| Primary headline | ... | ... | ... |
| Key value prop | ... | ... | ... |
| Target audience language | ... | ... | ... |
| Social proof | ... | ... | ... |
| Primary CTA | ... | ... | ... |
| Differentiator claim | ... | ... | ... |
| Tone/voice | ... | ... | ... |
Finding Messaging Gaps
- What valuable capability does nobody talk about? (Opportunity to own a message.)
- What claims do all competitors make? (Table stakes — don't differentiate on these.)
- What language do customers use that no competitor uses? (Customer-centric messaging opportunity.)
SWOT Per Competitor
Template (Do One Per Top Competitor)
COMPETITOR: [Name]
STRENGTHS WEAKNESSES
- [What they do well] - [Where they fall short]
- [Market advantages] - [Product gaps]
- [Resources, brand, scale] - [Organizational issues]
- [Customer love points] - [Common customer complaints]
OPPORTUNITIES (for us) THREATS (to us)
- [Their weaknesses we exploit] - [Their advantages that hurt us]
- [Market gaps they ignore] - [Their likely next moves]
- [Customer segments they - [Resource advantages they have]
underserve] - [Platform/ecosystem advantages]
Competitive Positioning Map (2x2)
How to Build
- Choose two dimensions that matter most to your target customers.
- Place each competitor on the 2x2 grid based on those dimensions.
- Identify whitespace — positions no competitor occupies.
Common Axis Pairs
- Ease of use ←→ Power/Complexity (vertical) vs. Individual ←→ Enterprise (horizontal)
- Price ←→ Premium (vertical) vs. Narrow/Specialized ←→ Broad/Platform (horizontal)
- Speed to value ←→ Customization depth vs. SMB ←→ Enterprise
Example
High Ease of Use
│
Canva ● │ ● Figma
│
SMB ──────────────┼─────────────── Enterprise
│
● GIMP │ ● Adobe Creative Suite
│
High Complexity
Positioning Map Insights
- Where is the whitespace? Can you position there credibly?
- Are you clustered with competitors? If so, you need sharper differentiation.
- Is the whitespace empty because there's no demand, or because nobody has claimed it?
Win/Loss Analysis
The Most Valuable Competitive Intelligence Source
Win/loss analysis tells you why customers chose you or a competitor, from the customer's mouth.
How to Run Win/Loss Analysis
- Sample: Interview 10-20 recent won deals and 10-20 recent lost deals.
- Timing: Interview within 30 days of the decision. Memory fades fast.
- Interviewer: Not the salesperson who handled the deal. Use marketing, product, or a third party.
- Questions:
- What alternatives did you evaluate?
- What were your top 3 decision criteria?
- How did we compare on those criteria?
- What nearly made you choose differently?
- What was the deciding factor?
Win/Loss Data Template
| Factor | Won Deals | Lost Deals | Gap |
|---|
| Pricing cited as factor | 30% | 65% | -35% |
| Product capability cited | 70% | 40% | +30% |
| Ease of use cited | 60% | 25% | +35% |
| Integration needs unmet | 10% | 45% | -35% |
| Support/service factor | 20% | 50% | -30% |
Turning Win/Loss Into Action
- Win reasons → Strengthen positioning. Double down on what's working in messaging and sales.
- Loss reasons → Fix or position around. If fixable, add to product roadmap. If structural, adjust positioning to avoid those deals.
- Competitive patterns → Update battlecards. Use customer language about competitors in sales enablement.
Battlecard Creation Template
Battlecard Structure (1-2 Pages Per Competitor)
BATTLECARD: [Competitor Name]
Last Updated: [Date]
QUICK OVERVIEW
- What they are: [1-sentence description]
- Target market: [Who they serve]
- Pricing: [Model and range]
- Key differentiator: [Their primary claim]
WHEN WE WIN AGAINST THEM
- [Scenario 1 where we have advantage]
- [Scenario 2]
- [Scenario 3]
WHEN WE LOSE TO THEM
- [Scenario 1 where they have advantage]
- [Scenario 2]
- [Warning signs in the deal]
THEIR STRENGTHS (Acknowledge, Don't Dismiss)
- [Strength 1 — and how to reframe or neutralize]
- [Strength 2]
THEIR WEAKNESSES (What to Probe)
- [Weakness 1 — discovery questions to surface this]
- [Weakness 2]
LANDMINE QUESTIONS (Ask the Prospect)
- "[Question that exposes competitor weakness]"
- "[Question that highlights your strength]"
- "[Question about a requirement they can't meet]"
OBJECTION HANDLING
- "They're cheaper" → [Response]
- "They have [feature] and you don't" → [Response]
- "Everyone uses them" → [Response]
CUSTOMER PROOF POINTS
- [Case study or quote from a customer who switched from this competitor]
- [Metric: "Customers who switch see X% improvement in..."]
Battlecard Rules
- Update monthly or immediately after a significant competitor change.
- Write in sales language, not marketing language. Be direct and actionable.
- Never disparage competitors. Acknowledge strengths, reframe, and redirect.
- Include discovery questions that surface the competitor's weaknesses organically.
- Test battlecards with sales team and iterate based on their feedback.
Competitive Monitoring Cadence
Weekly (15 minutes)
- Check competitor social media for announcements.
- Scan industry news for competitor mentions.
- Review any alerts (Google Alerts, social listening tools).
Monthly (1-2 hours)
- Review competitor websites for changes (pricing, messaging, features).
- Check review sites (G2, Capterra) for new competitor reviews.
- Collect competitive intelligence from sales team (deal-level insights).
- Update battlecards if needed.
Quarterly (Half day)
- Full competitive landscape review.
- Update feature comparison matrix.
- Update pricing analysis.
- Conduct win/loss analysis batch.
- Present competitive update to leadership and product team.
Annually (Full day)
- Deep competitive strategy review.
- Update competitive positioning map.
- Reassess competitor priority list.
- Input competitive insights into annual planning and product roadmap.
Competitive Intelligence Sources
Public Sources
- Competitor websites (use Wayback Machine for historical changes)
- Press releases and news coverage
- Review sites (G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, Product Hunt)
- Social media (company and employee accounts)
- Job postings (reveal strategic priorities, tech stack, team growth)
- Patent filings (reveal R&D direction)
- SEC filings (public companies — revenue, strategy, risk factors)
- Conference presentations and webinars
- Podcast appearances by competitor leadership
Customer and Market Sources
- Win/loss interviews
- Prospect feedback during sales process
- Customer advisory board discussions
- Industry analyst reports (Gartner, Forrester, IDC)
- Industry conferences and events
Internal Sources
- Sales team (most direct competitive intelligence)
- Customer success team (why customers considered switching)
- Support team (feature requests that reference competitors)
- Product team (technology and architecture assessments)
Ethical Guidelines
- Only use publicly available information and voluntarily shared information.
- Never misrepresent yourself to gain competitive intelligence.
- Never ask competitors' employees to share confidential information.
- Never reverse-engineer proprietary technology in violation of terms of service.
Quality Gate
Before presenting competitive analysis: