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
bdatacommands. Parallelize independent calls. Preferbdata pipelines(structured JSON) overbdata 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
--jsonflag when you need to pipe or parsebdataoutput programmatically - Prefer
bdata pipelinesoverbdata scrapewhenever a pipeline type exists for the target platform — pipelines return clean structured JSON - Be cost-efficient — A snapshot should use 3-8
bdatacalls, not 50. Scrape what you need. - Parallelize — Run independent
bdatacalls 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:
# Step 1: Discover competitor's website and recent news
bdata search "[competitor name]" --json
# Step 2: Scrape key pages (run in parallel)
bdata scrape [competitor-url] # Homepage — positioning, messaging
bdata scrape [competitor-url]/pricing # Pricing tiers and model
bdata scrape [competitor-url]/about # Team, mission, history (try /about, /about-us, /company)
# Step 3: Structured data enrichment (if URLs available)
bdata pipelines crunchbase_company "[crunchbase-url]" # Funding, investors, employee count
bdata pipelines linkedin_company_profile "[linkedin-url]" # Employee count, growth, locations
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:
# Scrape pricing pages for each competitor (run in parallel)
bdata scrape [competitor-a-url]/pricing
bdata scrape [competitor-b-url]/pricing
bdata scrape [competitor-c-url]/pricing
# For e-commerce products
bdata pipelines amazon_product "[amazon-url]"
bdata pipelines walmart_product "[walmart-url]"
# Supplementary: third-party pricing breakdowns
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:
# Find review pages via search
bdata search "[competitor] site:g2.com" --json
bdata search "[competitor] site:capterra.com" --json
# Scrape review pages
bdata scrape [g2-url]
bdata scrape [capterra-url]
# Structured review data (use when direct URLs are available)
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:
# Find LinkedIn company page
bdata search "[competitor] linkedin company" --json
# Get structured job listings
bdata pipelines linkedin_job_listings "[linkedin-company-url]"
# Fallback: scrape careers page directly
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:
# Check SERP rankings for target keywords (run in parallel)
bdata search "[keyword 1]" --json
bdata search "[keyword 2]" --json
bdata search "[keyword 3]" --json
# Estimate competitor's indexed content
bdata search "site:[competitor.com]" --json
# Scrape blog/content pages
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:
# Discover players via multiple search queries (run in parallel)
bdata search "[industry] companies" --json
bdata search "best [product category] tools" --json
bdata search "[product category] alternatives" --json
# Scrape category/comparison pages
bdata scrape [g2-category-url]
# Quick snapshot of each discovered competitor
bdata scrape [competitor-1-url]
bdata scrape [competitor-2-url]
# ... for each key player (limit to top 8-10)
# Enrich key players with funding/size data
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