--- name: competitor-monitoring description: When the user wants to set up ongoing tracking of competitor activity — pricing changes, feature launches, hiring signals, content, or public mentions. Also use when the user mentions "track competitors", "what are competitors doing", "competitor alerts", or "market watch". related: [competitive-analysis, daily-product-digest, review-mining, market-research] reads: [startup-context] --- # Competitor Monitoring ## When to Use - Founder wants to know when competitors change pricing, ship features, or raise funding - Founder wants a recurring "what changed this week" scan of competitor activity - Founder wants to detect strategic shifts from competitor job postings, blog posts, or product updates - Founder wants to stay informed without manually checking 10 websites daily This is the **recurring sibling** of `competitive-analysis` (one-time deep dive). Use this skill for ongoing monitoring, not initial research. ## Context Required - List of 3-7 competitors to track (names, websites, product URLs) - What the founder cares about most (pricing, features, positioning, hiring, funding, content) - Monitoring frequency (weekly recommended for early-stage, biweekly for established markets) - The founder's own positioning (to flag threats and opportunities) ## Workflow 1. **Define the monitoring surface** — for each competitor, identify what to watch: - **Pricing page** — plan changes, new tiers, free plan adjustments - **Changelog / release notes** — new features, deprecations, platform shifts - **Job postings** — engineering roles signal product direction, sales roles signal GTM shifts, exec hires signal strategy changes - **Blog / content** — new positioning, case studies (reveal target customers), thought leadership pivots - **Social media** — founder posts, company announcements, community reactions - **Review sites** — new reviews on G2, Capterra, Trustpilot (sentiment shifts) - **Funding / press** — Crunchbase alerts, press releases, media coverage 2. **Set up the monitoring stack** — recommend tools and manual checks: - **Automated:** Google Alerts (brand mentions), Visualping or ChangeTower (page change detection), Crunchbase alerts (funding), LinkedIn job alerts - **Manual weekly scan:** pricing pages, changelogs, recent blog posts, latest job postings - **Quarterly deep dive:** full `competitive-analysis` refresh 3. **Run the scan** — check all sources for the monitoring period and flag changes. 4. **Analyze signals** — for each change detected: - What changed (factual description) - What it signals (interpretation — are they moving upmarket? entering your segment? struggling with churn?) - Threat level (none / watch / respond / urgent) - Recommended action (if any) 5. **Generate the report** — produce a concise weekly/biweekly competitor intel brief. ## Output Format ```markdown ## Competitor Intel Brief — Week of [Date] ### Summary [1-2 sentence overview: "Quiet week. Competitor A shipped a free tier. No pricing changes elsewhere."] ### Changes Detected **[Competitor A]** - **What changed:** [factual description] - **Signal:** [what this likely means strategically] - **Threat level:** [None / Watch / Respond / Urgent] - **Recommended action:** [what to do, if anything] **[Competitor B]** - No changes detected this period. ### Job Posting Signals | Competitor | New Roles | Signal | |-----------|-----------|--------| | [A] | 3 enterprise AEs, VP Sales | Moving upmarket | | [B] | ML engineer, data scientist | Building AI features | ### Emerging Patterns - [Pattern observed across multiple competitors or over time] ### Action Items - [ ] [Specific action for the founder] ``` ## Frameworks & Best Practices **Reading job postings as strategy signals:** | Role Type | What It Signals | |-----------|----------------| | Enterprise AEs / Sales Engineers | Moving upmarket or launching enterprise tier | | DevRel / Community Manager | Investing in developer ecosystem or community-led growth | | ML/AI Engineers | Building AI features or data products | | International roles / specific geo | Expanding to new markets | | Product Marketing Manager | Repositioning or launching new product lines | | Head of Partnerships | Platform/ecosystem strategy | | Lots of support hires | Scaling fast or struggling with quality | **Threat level framework:** - **None:** Routine activity, no impact on you - **Watch:** Interesting move, could affect you in 3-6 months — add to next strategy discussion - **Respond:** Directly affects your positioning, pricing, or target market — needs a plan within 2 weeks - **Urgent:** Launches directly competing feature, undercuts your pricing, or targets your exact ICP — needs immediate response **Common mistakes:** - Monitoring too many competitors (pick 3-5, not 15) - Reacting to every move instead of identifying patterns - Confusing competitor activity with competitor success (they shipped a feature — doesn't mean it works) - Ignoring indirect competitors and new entrants - Not archiving snapshots (you'll want to see how their pricing page looked 6 months ago) ## Related Skills - `competitive-analysis` — for the initial deep dive and periodic refresh - `daily-product-digest` — for broader market monitoring beyond specific competitors - `review-mining` — for tracking competitor sentiment on review platforms - `market-research` — for understanding market shifts driving competitor behavior ## Examples **Prompt:** "Set up competitor monitoring for our 4 main competitors in the email marketing space." **Good output includes:** Monitoring surface for each competitor (pricing pages, changelogs, job boards, blogs), recommended tool stack for automated alerts, and a template for the weekly intel brief. **Prompt:** "What have our competitors been up to this week?" **Good output includes:** Scan of changelogs, pricing pages, blog posts, job postings, and social accounts for each tracked competitor. Flagged changes with signal interpretation and threat levels. Actionable summary.