Marketing & SEO

Competitor Analysis Framework

Map your competitive landscape so you know exactly how you're different — and can prove it to buyers.

Competitor Analysis Framework

Map your competitive landscape so you know exactly how you're different — and can prove it to buyers.

Why It Matters

The goal of competitor analysis is not to copy or defeat competitors — it's to understand the conversation buyers are already having in their heads. When a buyer evaluates your product, they're comparing it to something. You need to know what that comparison looks like and how to win it.

A good competitive analysis tells you:

  • Where your differentiation actually lands with buyers
  • Which features are table stakes vs. genuine advantages
  • What messaging angles are already crowded vs. open
  • Where buyers are underserved

The Three-Column Framework

Every product faces three types of competition:

Column 1: Direct competitors Products solving the exact same problem for the exact same customer — same use case, similar feature set, competing for the same budget.

Column 2: Indirect competitors Different approach, same outcome. If you're building project management software, indirect competitors include email, spreadsheets, and just not tracking projects at all.

Column 3: "Do nothing" The most underestimated competitor. For many SaaS products, the biggest obstacle is buyers who don't believe the pain is urgent enough to justify switching from what they do today. The "do nothing" column often reveals the most important positioning insight.

Building the Comparison Matrix

Pick 8-12 dimensions that matter most to your target buyer:

  • Ease of setup (time to first value)
  • Price point (entry / mid / enterprise)
  • AI capabilities (none / basic / advanced)
  • Integration ecosystem
  • Customer support quality
  • Specific features unique to each player

Score each competitor honestly. Where you're behind and it matters, say so — this forces you to decide whether to build the capability or position away from the comparison.

Finding Your Differentiation

After mapping the matrix, identify:

  1. Genuine, defensible advantage — not just "we're better" but why a buyer would believe it
  2. Open positioning claim — something true about you that no competitor is saying (if everyone claims "easy to use," don't say "easy to use")
  3. Switching trigger — the specific situation that makes a buyer ready to leave their current solution

Differentiation Statement Format

"[Product] is the only [category] that [unique differentiator], built for [specific customer] who [specific situation]."

Don't confuse features with differentiation. Differentiation is why a specific buyer, in a specific situation, would choose you over the alternative they're already considering.

Sources for Competitor Research

  • Perplexity — discover competitors and gather positioning intel
  • G2 / Capterra — customer reviews reveal strengths, weaknesses, and churn signals
  • "Alternatives to [competitor]" searches — captures longtail buyer comparisons
  • Reddit — real conversations about what tools buyers have tried and rejected

Ongoing Competitive Intelligence

Set up Google Alerts, G2 review alerts, and RSS feeds for competitor changelogs. Spend 15 minutes per week. Know when competitors change pricing, launch features, or enter new markets.

Deliverable

One markdown file: competitor-matrix.md containing:

  • Competitor list (direct, indirect, do nothing)
  • Feature/attribute comparison matrix
  • Differentiation statement
  • Top 3 open positioning angles

Resources

  • G2 — Category reviews and comparisons
  • Perplexity — Competitive landscape research
  • LLMReference.com — AI model capabilities (for AI-adjacent products)

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