competitive-analysis

Use this skill when analyzing competitive landscapes, comparing features, positioning against competitors, or conducting SWOT analysis. Triggers on competitive analysis, market landscape, feature comparison, SWOT, competitor positioning, market mapping, and any task requiring competitive intelligence or strategic positioning.

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Competitive Analysis

Competitive analysis is the discipline of systematically understanding the market landscape - who your competitors are, what they do well, where they fall short, and how your product should be positioned to win. Done well, it drives better roadmap decisions, sharper positioning, and defensible differentiation. Done poorly, it leads to feature-copying, defensive product thinking, and strategy driven by fear rather than insight. This skill gives an agent the frameworks, templates, and judgment to run rigorous competitive analysis - from quick landscape scans to full strategic briefs.


When to use this skill

Trigger this skill when the user:

  • Needs to map the competitive landscape for a product or market
  • Wants to conduct a SWOT analysis on their product or a competitor
  • Asks to compare features between products or build a comparison matrix
  • Needs to define or refine product positioning against competitors
  • Wants to create a 2x2 positioning map or perceptual map
  • Needs to analyze competitor pricing models or packaging
  • Wants to set up ongoing competitor monitoring
  • Is preparing a competitive brief for stakeholders, investors, or sales
  • Needs to understand Porter's Five Forces for a market or industry

Do NOT trigger this skill for:

  • Internal product roadmap prioritization with no competitive context - use a product-strategy skill instead
  • Financial due diligence on acquisition targets - competitive analysis informs but does not replace financial modeling

Key principles

  1. Analyze objectively, not emotionally - Resist the urge to minimize competitor strengths or inflate their weaknesses. An honest assessment, including where competitors are genuinely better, is the only kind that produces useful strategy. Teams that dismiss strong competitors end up blindsided.

  2. Focus on jobs-to-be-done, not features - Features are outputs. What matters is which customer jobs competitors are solving, and how well. A competitor with fewer features who solves the core job 10x better is more dangerous than a feature-rich product that solves it mediocrely.

  3. Update quarterly - Competitive landscapes shift fast. A snapshot older than 90 days is unreliable for strategy. Build a lightweight monitoring process rather than relying on one-time deep dives, and timestamp every artifact.

  4. Differentiate, don't copy - Feature parity is a race to the bottom. When a competitor has a feature you lack, the question is not "should we build it?" but "is this a must-have for our target customer, or for their target customer?" Copy only table-stakes features that block deals; otherwise differentiate.

  5. Indirect competitors matter most - The biggest threat often comes from adjacent markets, not head-to-head rivals. The company solving your customer's problem with a different category of product - spreadsheets, services firms, DIY workarounds - is frequently more dangerous than your nearest feature competitor.


Core concepts

Competitive landscape types define how you map the space before diving into any individual competitor:

  • Direct competitors - Same target customer, same job-to-be-done, same category. Customers evaluate you against these explicitly.
  • Indirect competitors - Same job-to-be-done, different category or approach. Often invisible on battlecards but responsible for many lost deals.
  • Substitutes - Alternative behaviors that eliminate the need for any software solution at all (e.g., spreadsheets, manual processes, outsourced services).
  • Potential entrants - Well-resourced companies in adjacent markets with high strategic motivation to enter your space.

Porter's Five Forces is the foundational framework for assessing industry attractiveness and structural competitive intensity. The five forces are: threat of new entrants, bargaining power of buyers, bargaining power of suppliers, threat of substitute products, and rivalry among existing competitors. See references/analysis-frameworks.md for the full template.

Competitive moats are durable structural advantages that resist displacement even when a competitor has a better product or more resources. Key moat types: network effects (very high durability), switching costs, data advantage (all high), economies of scale, brand, regulatory/compliance (medium), and technology patents (variable). When assessing competitors, identify which moat they are building - it predicts how a market will consolidate over time.

Positioning maps (perceptual maps) are 2x2 grids that plot competitors on two axes representing the most strategically meaningful dimensions in the market. The goal is to find open space where customer demand exists but no strong competitor lives. See references/analysis-frameworks.md for construction guide.


Common tasks

Map the competitive landscape

Framework: the four-layer scan

  1. Define the customer and job first - "Our customer is [persona] trying to [job-to-be-done]. They currently solve this with [alternatives]."
  2. List all categories - Direct, indirect, substitutes, potential entrants. Aim for 8-15 entries before filtering.
  3. Score each on two dimensions - Relevance to your target customer (High / Medium / Low) and strategic importance (must-watch / monitor / low priority).
  4. Produce a tiered list - Tier 1 (2-4 must-watch), Tier 2 (4-6 monitor), Tier 3 (track passively).

Landscape snapshot template:

Market: [name]
Dated: [YYYY-MM-DD]

Tier 1 - Must Watch
- [Competitor]: [One sentence on why they matter]

Tier 2 - Monitor
- [Competitor]: [One sentence]

Tier 3 - Track Passively
- [Competitor]: [One sentence]

Key trends reshaping the landscape:
- [Trend 1]
- [Trend 2]

Conduct SWOT analysis

SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) is most useful when it leads to strategic options, not just a four-box list. Always close a SWOT with a "so what?" layer that derives strategic implications from crossing quadrants.

SWOT template:

Subject: [product / company] | Date: [YYYY-MM-DD]

STRENGTHS (internal, positive)
- [What do you do better than anyone? What do customers consistently praise?]
- [What assets, IP, or relationships are hard to replicate?]

WEAKNESSES (internal, negative)
- [Where do you lose deals or get criticized?]
- [What are the known product gaps or resource limitations?]

OPPORTUNITIES (external, positive)
- [What market trends play to your strengths?]
- [Which segments are underserved? What adjacent markets are accessible?]

THREATS (external, negative)
- [Which competitors are best positioned to take share?]
- [What tech shifts, regulatory changes, or macro forces could hurt you?]

STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS
- SO (strengths + opportunities): [offensive action]
- ST (strengths + threats): [defensive action]
- WO (fix weakness to capture opportunity): [investment priority]
- WT (weakness exposed to threat): [risk mitigation]

Build feature comparison matrix

A feature matrix answers: "Which competitors have what, and how do we compare?" Use it for sales enablement, roadmap input, and positioning, not as a scorecard of who "wins."

Construction rules:

  1. List only features that matter to the buying decision - omit table-stakes that everyone has and no one values distinctively.
  2. Use consistent evidence - don't use hands-on testing for yourself and marketing copy for competitors. Use the same source type for each row.
  3. Rate with nuance - avoid binary checkmarks. Use: Full / Partial / Roadmap / No.
  4. Source and date every cell. A matrix with no timestamps is worse than useless.

Matrix format:

Feature Area | Feature         | Your Product | Comp A  | Comp B  | Comp C
-------------|-----------------|--------------|---------|---------|-------
Core         | [Feature 1]     | Full         | Full    | Partial | No
Core         | [Feature 2]     | Full         | Partial | No      | No
Security     | SSO/SAML        | Full         | Full    | No      | Full
Integrations | [Integration 1] | Full         | No      | Full    | No

Key: Full = complete | Partial = limited/incomplete | Roadmap = announced | No = absent
Sources: [Comp A: pricing page + trial, YYYY-MM-DD] ...

Create positioning maps (2x2)

A 2x2 positioning map (perceptual map) reveals where competitors cluster and where open space exists. The axes must represent genuine customer trade-offs - dimensions customers actually care about when choosing.

Axis selection rules: Each axis must have real variance across competitors. Axes must be nearly orthogonal - "price" and "features" are correlated; "price" and "ease of use" are not. Validate axes against top reasons customers switch to or from you. Common pairs: SMB vs Enterprise / point solution vs platform (B2B SaaS); managed vs self-hosted / narrow vs broad scope (developer tools); business users vs technical users / batch vs real-time (data/analytics).

Template:

High [Axis Y]
     |
  C  |      A
  ---+------------- High [Axis X]
     |  B       D
Low  |
     Low [Axis X]

[Your product]: [position and why it is strategically defensible]
Open space: [quadrant with demand but no strong competitor]

Analyze competitor pricing

Pricing intelligence is high-value and hard to keep accurate. Follow this process:

  1. Capture public data - Pricing page, G2/Capterra reviews, job postings (ACV targets reveal deal size), SEC filings (ARR and customer count reveal ARPU).
  2. Classify the model - Flat-rate / per-seat / usage-based / hybrid. Note any freemium, free trial, or open-source component.
  3. Reconstruct packaging - What features are in each tier? Hard limits (seats, API calls, storage)?
  4. Estimate street vs. list price - SaaS companies typically discount 20-40% off list in enterprise deals. Assume a 25% floor unless you have better signal.
  5. Identify pricing as a lever - Are they using low price to land SMB and expand up? Racing to commoditize? Building an enterprise moat via switching costs?

Monitor competitors systematically

One-time analysis goes stale. Build a lightweight ongoing process:

Signal sources (low to high effort):

SourceEffortFrequency
G2/Capterra new reviewsLowWeekly via RSS or email alert
LinkedIn job postingsLowBi-weekly search by company
Changelog / release notesLowWeekly via RSS
Blog, content, press alertsMediumWeekly + daily Google Alerts
Hands-on product trialsHighQuarterly
Win/loss call analysisHighPer deal

Monitoring cadence: Weekly - flag material signals. Monthly - update feature matrix and pricing for Tier 1. Quarterly - full landscape refresh, SWOT update, new positioning map, circulate competitive brief.


Write competitive briefs for stakeholders

A competitive brief is a 1-2 page document that gives product, sales, marketing, or leadership a current, opinionated view of one competitor.

Brief structure:

COMPETITIVE BRIEF: [Competitor Name]
Prepared: [date] | Next review: [date +90 days]

TL;DR: [2-3 sentences: who they are, why they matter, our stance]

SNAPSHOT: Founded: | Funding: | Employees: | Key customers:

THEIR POSITIONING: [Direct quote from homepage]

WHY CUSTOMERS CHOOSE THEM: [Top 3 reasons - honest, evidence-based]

WHY CUSTOMERS CHOOSE US: [Top 3 reasons - evidence-based, not wishful]

WHERE THEY ARE INVESTING: [Hiring/changelog/funding signals + implication]

RECOMMENDED RESPONSE
- Sales: [what reps say when this competitor comes up]
- Product: [roadmap implications, if any]
- Marketing: [messaging implications]

Anti-patterns / common mistakes

MistakeWhy it's wrongWhat to do instead
Benchmarking only direct competitorsMisses the most disruptive threats, which usually come from adjacent categoriesInclude indirect competitors and substitutes in every landscape map
Feature matrix without strategic interpretationA matrix tells you what exists; it says nothing about what customers valueAlways add a "so what" layer: which gaps are deal-blockers vs. irrelevant?
Using competitor marketing copy as ground truthMarketing copy is aspirational and optimistic by designValidate claims against G2 reviews, hands-on trials, and win/loss feedback
SWOT without strategic implicationsWithout the SO/ST/WO/WT layer, SWOT is a list of observations with no actionAlways close SWOT with the four cross-quadrant strategic options
Copying competitor features reactivelyFeature parity is a treadmill; you never catch up and you never differentiateEvaluate each gap against your target customer's job-to-be-done before scheduling
Outdated competitive decks (over 6 months old)Fast-moving markets make stale analysis actively misleadingTimestamp every artifact and build a quarterly refresh into planning cycles

References

For detailed templates and worked examples on specific frameworks, read the relevant file from references/:

  • references/analysis-frameworks.md - Porter's Five Forces template, full SWOT template with SO/ST/WO/WT grid, and positioning map construction guide with worked examples

Only load a references file when the current task requires it.


Related skills

When this skill is activated, check if the following companion skills are installed. For any that are missing, mention them to the user and offer to install before proceeding with the task. Example: "I notice you don't have [skill] installed yet - it pairs well with this skill. Want me to install it?"

  • product-strategy - Defining product vision, building roadmaps, prioritizing features, or choosing frameworks like RICE, ICE, or MoSCoW.
  • brand-strategy - Defining brand positioning, voice and tone guidelines, brand architecture, or storytelling frameworks.
  • sales-enablement - Creating battle cards, competitive intelligence, case studies, or ROI calculators for sales teams.
  • pricing-strategy - Designing pricing models, packaging products into tiers, building freemium funnels,...

Install a companion: npx skills add AbsolutelySkilled/AbsolutelySkilled --skill <name>

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