From nickcrew-claude-ctx-plugin
Analyzes competitors using SWOT, Porter's Five Forces, feature matrices, positioning maps, and battle cards to inform product strategy, sales, and competitive positioning.
npx claudepluginhub nickcrew/claude-cortexThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
This skill provides structured frameworks for competitive intelligence—from gathering information on competitors through applying analytical frameworks (SWOT, Porter's Five Forces, positioning maps, feature matrices) to synthesizing insights into strategic recommendations. Good competitive analysis reveals where to attack, where to defend, and how to position your product to win.
Creates structured competitive analyses comparing features, positioning, and strategy across 3-5 competitors. Use for market entry, differentiation planning, or understanding competitive landscapes.
Conducts competitor analysis including SWOT, feature matrices, pricing comparisons, teardowns; creates battle cards, positioning maps, and SEO-optimized comparison pages.
Analyzes competition with Porter's Five Forces, Blue Ocean Strategy, and positioning maps to identify differentiation opportunities and market positioning for startups and pitches.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
This skill provides structured frameworks for competitive intelligence—from gathering information on competitors through applying analytical frameworks (SWOT, Porter's Five Forces, positioning maps, feature matrices) to synthesizing insights into strategic recommendations. Good competitive analysis reveals where to attack, where to defend, and how to position your product to win.
| Framework | Use Case | Output |
|---|---|---|
| SWOT Analysis | Internal + external audit per competitor | 2×2 matrix |
| Porter's Five Forces | Industry-level threat assessment | Force ratings + strategy |
| Feature Matrix | Product comparison for sales/product | Comparison table |
| Positioning Map | Visual differentiation | 2×2 or 2-axis plot |
| Battle Card | Sales competitive enablement | 1-page quick reference |
| Win/Loss Analysis | Understanding why deals are won or lost | Pattern report |
| Competitive monitoring | Ongoing intel tracking | Change log |
Before researching, clarify:
Competitor tiers:
| Tier | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 (Primary) | Direct, head-to-head competition for same buyer | Feature-for-feature match |
| Tier 2 (Secondary) | Adjacent solutions solving same problem differently | Different approach/category |
| Tier 3 (Indirect) | Status quo / manual alternatives | Spreadsheets, custom-built tools |
Never rely on competitor websites alone—they only show strengths.
Primary sources (no login required):
Review sites (customer voice — most valuable):
Social signals:
Paid research (optional):
Information to collect per competitor:
Company overview: Founded, HQ, employees, funding, estimated revenue
Target customer: Segment, ICP, use case
Product: Core features, differentiators, recent launches
Pricing: Model (per seat, usage, flat), tiers, pricing page public?
Go-to-market: Sales motion (PLG, inside sales, enterprise sales), channels
Positioning: Tagline, key messages, what they claim to do best
Weaknesses: Negative reviews, common complaints, gaps
Recent moves: Last 3 major announcements or product launches
Conduct a SWOT for each major competitor and for your own company.
Template:
Competitor: [Name]
Date: [Quarter/Year]
STRENGTHS (internal, positive)
- What do they do better than anyone?
- Why do customers choose them?
- What resources/assets give them an advantage?
WEAKNESSES (internal, negative)
- Where do customers complain the most? (G2, Capterra)
- What features are they missing?
- What business model or technical constraints limit them?
OPPORTUNITIES (external, positive)
- What market trends benefit them?
- What adjacent markets could they expand into?
- What partnerships could amplify them?
THREATS (external, negative)
- What could disrupt their current advantage?
- New entrants, regulatory changes, technology shifts?
- How could you attack them?
Apply at the industry level to understand structural attractiveness and competitive intensity.
Force 1: Threat of New Entrants (How easy is it to enter this market?)
Force 2: Bargaining Power of Buyers (How much leverage do customers have?)
Force 3: Bargaining Power of Suppliers (How dependent are you on key vendors?)
Force 4: Threat of Substitutes (Can buyers solve the problem a completely different way?)
Force 5: Rivalry Among Existing Competitors (How intense is competition?)
Strategic implications by force rating:
If buyers have high power → compete on switching costs, contracts, integrations
If new entrants threat is high → build moats (network effects, data, brand, distribution)
If rivalry is intense → differentiate aggressively; avoid head-to-head on price
Used by product teams to spot gaps and by sales teams to win deals.
Matrix template:
| Feature | Your Product | Competitor A | Competitor B | Competitor C |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core features | ||||
| Feature 1 | ✅ Full | ✅ Full | ⚠️ Partial | ❌ No |
| Feature 2 | ✅ Full | ❌ No | ✅ Full | ✅ Full |
| Differentiating features | ||||
| Your key differentiator | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| Integrations | ||||
| Salesforce | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ |
| Slack | ✅ | ⚠️ Beta | ✅ | ❌ |
| Commercial | ||||
| Pricing (per seat/mo) | $15 | $20 | $12 | $18 |
| Free plan | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ |
| Enterprise tier | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ |
| SOC 2 Type II | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ |
Legend: ✅ Full support | ⚠️ Partial/Beta | ❌ Not available
A 2-axis map reveals whitespace and where you're differentiated.
Process:
Interpretation:
A battle card is a 1-page cheat sheet for sales reps facing a specific competitor.
Battle card structure:
COMPETITOR: [Name]
When you encounter them: [Trigger signals — what they say, what buyer says]
WHY WE WIN
- [Differentiator 1 in customer language]
- [Differentiator 2 in customer language]
- [Differentiator 3 in customer language]
THEIR STRENGTHS (acknowledge honestly)
- [Strength 1] — our response: "That's true, and..."
- [Strength 2] — our response: ...
LANDMINES (questions to ask that expose competitor weaknesses)
- "How does [Competitor] handle [scenario where they're weak]?"
- "What happens when your team grows past [their scaling limit]?"
- "Have you tried to export your data? How long did that take?"
TRAPS (what they'll say about us — and our counter)
- They say: "You're more expensive." Counter: "Our LTV:CAC data from customers shows..."
- They say: "You're a startup." Counter: "[Customer logos] trusted us with mission-critical work"
PROOF POINTS
- Win against this competitor: [Customer name/industry] chose us because [reason]
- G2 rating: Ours [X.X] vs theirs [Y.Y]
Context: New project management tool targeting engineering + product teams. Analyzing Jira, Linear, and Asana.
Research sources used: G2 reviews (50 per competitor), pricing pages, job postings, Twitter, Reddit r/projectmanagement.
Summary findings:
| Dimension | Jira | Linear | Asana |
|---|---|---|---|
| Target user | Enterprise engineering | Engineering-forward teams | Any team (marketing, ops, eng) |
| Core strength | Deep customization, Atlassian ecosystem | Speed, developer UX, GitHub integration | Workflow automation, breadth |
| Pricing | $8.15/user/mo (Standard) | $8/user/mo | $13.49/user/mo |
| Key weakness (from reviews) | "Too complex for smaller teams", "setup takes months" | "Not suitable for non-eng teams", "limited reporting" | "Expensive at scale", "too many features = complexity" |
| Recent move | AI features in Jira (2024) | Launched Cycles (sprint-like) | Acquired Asana AI assistant |
Positioning gap identified: No tool strongly serves mixed teams (engineering + product) with fast UX AND non-developer accessibility. Jira is too heavy; Linear is too dev-focused; Asana is too generic.
Recommended positioning: "The project management tool for product teams that ship software — fast like Linear, accessible like Asana."
| Feature | Our Tool | Jira | Linear | Asana |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GitHub integration (2-way) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ⚠️ 1-way |
| AI standup summary | ✅ | ⚠️ Beta | ❌ | ⚠️ Limited |
| Non-eng team support | ✅ | ⚠️ | ❌ | ✅ |
| Sprint planning | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ⚠️ |
| Setup time | < 30 min | Days–weeks | < 1 hour | 1–2 hours |
| Free plan | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ |
| Pricing (team) | $12/user | $8.15/user | $8/user | $13.49/user |
| SOC 2 Type II | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Mobile app | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Advanced reporting | ⚠️ | ✅ | ⚠️ | ✅ |
Analysis: Our key differentiators are AI-native standup summaries and mixed-team support. Our gap: advanced reporting needs investment before pursuing enterprise deals.