--- name: competitive-brief description: Create a competitive analysis brief for one or more competitors or a feature area. Use when informing product strategy or feature prioritization, building sales battle cards, prepping board or investor materials, or deciding where to differentiate vs. achieve parity. argument-hint: "" --- # Competitive Brief > If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see [CONNECTORS.md](../../CONNECTORS.md). Create a competitive analysis brief for one or more competitors or a feature area. ## Usage ``` /competitive-brief $ARGUMENTS ``` ## Workflow ### 1. Scope the Analysis Ask the user: - **Competitor(s)**: Which specific competitor(s) to analyze? Or a feature area to compare across competitors? - **Focus**: Full product comparison, specific feature area, pricing/packaging, go-to-market, or positioning? - **Context**: What decision will this inform? (product strategy, sales enablement, investor/board materials, feature prioritization) ### 2. Research **Via web search**: - Product pages and feature lists - Pricing pages and packaging - Recent product launches, blog posts, and changelogs - Press coverage and analyst reports - Customer reviews and ratings (G2, Capterra, TrustRadius) - Job postings (signal of strategic direction) - Social media and community discussions If **~~knowledge base** is connected: - Search for existing competitive analysis documents - Find win/loss reports or sales battle cards - Pull prior competitive research If **~~chat** is connected: - Search for competitive mentions in sales or product channels - Find recent deal feedback involving competitors ### 3. Generate the Brief #### Competitor Overview For each competitor: - Company summary: founding, size, funding/revenue if public, target market - Product positioning: how they describe themselves, who they target - Recent momentum: launches, funding, partnerships, customer wins #### Feature Comparison Compare capabilities across key areas relevant to the analysis. See **Feature Comparison Matrices** below for rating scales and matrix templates. #### Positioning Analysis Analyze how each competitor positions themselves — target customer, category claim, key differentiator, and value proposition. See **Positioning Analysis Frameworks** below for the positioning statement template and message architecture levels. #### Strengths and Weaknesses For each competitor: - **Strengths**: Where they genuinely excel. What customers praise. - **Weaknesses**: Where they fall short. What customers complain about. - Be honest and evidence-based — do not dismiss competitors or inflate their weaknesses. #### Opportunities Based on the analysis: - Where are there gaps in competitor offerings we could exploit? - What are customers asking for that no one provides well? - Where are competitors making bets we disagree with? - What market shifts could advantage our approach? #### Threats - Where are competitors investing heavily? - What competitive moves could disrupt our position? - Where are we most vulnerable? - What would a "nightmare scenario" competitive move look like? #### Strategic Implications Tie the analysis back to product strategy: - What should we build, accelerate, or deprioritize based on this analysis? - Where should we differentiate vs. achieve parity? - How should we adjust positioning or messaging? - What should we monitor going forward? ### 4. Follow Up After generating the brief: - Ask if the user wants to dive deeper on any section - Offer to create a one-page summary for executives - Offer to create sales battle cards for competitive deals - Offer to draft a "how to win against [competitor]" guide - Offer to set up a monitoring plan for competitive moves ## Competitive Landscape Mapping ### Identifying the Competitive Set Define competitors at multiple levels: **Direct competitors**: Products that solve the same problem for the same users in the same way. - These are the products your customers actively evaluate against you - They appear in your deals, in customer comparisons, in review site matchups **Indirect competitors**: Products that solve the same problem but differently. - Different approach to the same user need (e.g., spreadsheets vs dedicated project management tool) - Include "non-consumption" — sometimes the competitor is doing nothing or using a manual process **Adjacent competitors**: Products that do not compete today but could. - Companies with similar technology, customer base, or distribution that could expand into your space - Larger platforms that could add your functionality as a feature - Startups attacking a niche that could grow into your core market **Substitute solutions**: Entirely different ways users solve the underlying need. - Hiring a person instead of buying software - Using a general-purpose tool (Excel, email) instead of a specialized one - Outsourcing the process entirely ### Landscape Map Position competitors on meaningful dimensions: **Common axes**: - Breadth vs depth (suite vs point solution) - SMB vs enterprise (market segment focus) - Self-serve vs sales-led (go-to-market approach) - Simple vs powerful (product complexity) - Horizontal vs vertical (general purpose vs industry-specific) Choose axes that reveal strategic positioning differences relevant to your market. The right axes make competitive dynamics visible. ### Monitoring the Landscape Track competitive movements over time: - Product launches and feature releases (changelogs, blog posts, press releases) - Pricing and packaging changes - Funding rounds and acquisitions - Key hires and job postings (signal strategic direction) - Customer wins and losses (especially your wins/losses) - Analyst and review coverage - Partnership announcements ## Feature Comparison Matrices ### Building a Feature Comparison 1. **Define capability areas**: Group features into functional categories that matter to buyers (not your internal architecture). Use the categories buyers use when evaluating. 2. **List specific capabilities**: Under each area, list the specific features or capabilities to compare. 3. **Rate each competitor**: Use a consistent rating scale. ### Rating Scale Options **Simple (recommended for most cases)**: - Strong: Market-leading capability. Deep functionality, well-executed. - Adequate: Functional capability. Gets the job done but not differentiated. - Weak: Exists but limited. Significant gaps or poor execution. - Absent: Does not have this capability. **Detailed (for deep-dive comparisons)**: - 5: Best-in-class. Defines the standard others aspire to. - 4: Strong. Fully-featured and well-executed. - 3: Adequate. Meets basic needs without differentiation. - 2: Limited. Exists but with significant gaps. - 1: Minimal. Barely functional or in early beta. - 0: Absent. Not available. ### Comparison Matrix Template ``` | Capability Area | Our Product | Competitor A | Competitor B | |----------------|-------------|-------------|-------------| | [Area 1] | | | | | [Feature 1] | Strong | Adequate | Absent | | [Feature 2] | Adequate | Strong | Weak | | [Area 2] | | | | | [Feature 3] | Strong | Strong | Adequate | ``` ### Tips for Feature Comparison - Rate based on real product experience, customer feedback, and reviews — not just marketing claims - Features exist on a spectrum. "Has feature X" is less useful than "How well does it do X?" - Weight the comparison by what matters to your target customers, not by total feature count - Update regularly — feature comparisons get stale fast - Be honest about where competitors are ahead. A comparison that always shows you winning is not credible. - Include the "why it matters" for each capability area. Not all features matter equally to buyers. ## Positioning Analysis Frameworks ### Positioning Statement Analysis For each competitor, extract their positioning: **Template**: For [target customer] who [need/problem], [Product] is a [category] that [key benefit]. Unlike [competitor/alternative], [Product] [key differentiator]. **Sources for positioning**: - Homepage headline and subheadline - Product description on app stores or review sites - Sales pitch decks (sometimes leaked or shared by prospects) - Analyst briefing materials - Earnings call language (for public companies) ### Message Architecture Analysis How does each competitor communicate value? **Level 1 — Category**: What category do they claim? (CRM, project management, collaboration platform) **Level 2 — Differentiator**: What makes them different within that category? (AI-powered, all-in-one, developer-first) **Level 3 — Value Proposition**: What outcome do they promise? (Close deals faster, ship products faster, never miss a deadline) **Level 4 — Proof Points**: What evidence do they provide? (Customer logos, metrics, awards, case studies) ### Positioning Gaps and Opportunities Look for: - **Unclaimed positions**: Value propositions no competitor owns that matter to buyers - **Crowded positions**: Claims every competitor makes that have lost meaning - **Emerging positions**: New value propositions driven by market changes (AI, remote work, compliance) - **Vulnerable positions**: Claims competitors make that they cannot fully deliver on ## Win/Loss Analysis Methodology ### Conducting Win/Loss Analysis Win/loss analysis reveals why you actually win and lose deals. It is the most actionable competitive intelligence. **Data sources**: - CRM notes from sales team (available immediately, but biased) - Customer interviews shortly after decision (most valuable, least biased) - Churned customer surveys or exit interviews - Prospect surveys (for lost deals) ### Win/Loss Interview Questions For wins: - What problem were you trying to solve? - What alternatives did you evaluate? (Reveals competitive set) - Why did you choose us over alternatives? - What almost made you choose someone else? - What would we need to lose for you to reconsider? For losses: - What problem were you trying to solve? - What did you end up choosing? Why? - Where did our product fall short? - What could we have done differently? - Would you reconsider us in the future? Under what conditions? ### Analyzing Win/Loss Data - Track win/loss reasons over time. Are patterns changing? - Segment by deal type: enterprise vs SMB, new vs expansion, industry vertical - Identify the top 3-5 reasons for wins and losses - Distinguish between product reasons (features, quality) and non-product reasons (pricing, brand, relationship, timing) - Calculate competitive win rates by competitor: what % of deals involving each competitor do you win? ### Common Win/Loss Patterns - **Feature gap**: Competitor has a specific capability you lack that is a dealbreaker - **Integration advantage**: Competitor integrates with tools the buyer already uses - **Pricing structure**: Not always cheaper — sometimes different pricing model (per-seat vs usage-based) fits better - **Incumbent advantage**: Buyer sticks with what they have because switching cost is too high - **Sales execution**: Better demo, faster response, more relevant case studies - **Brand/trust**: Buyer chooses the safer or more well-known option ## Market Trend Identification ### Sources for Trend Identification - **Industry analyst reports**: Gartner, Forrester, IDC for market sizing and trends - **Venture capital**: What are VCs funding? Investment themes signal where smart money sees opportunity. - **Conference themes**: What are industry events focusing on? What topics draw the biggest audiences? - **Technology shifts**: New platforms, APIs, or capabilities that enable new product categories - **Regulatory changes**: New regulations that create requirements or opportunities - **Customer behavior changes**: How are user expectations evolving? (e.g., mobile-first, AI-assisted, privacy-conscious) - **Talent movement**: Where are top people going? What skills are in demand? ### Trend Analysis Framework For each trend identified: 1. **What is changing?**: Describe the trend clearly and specifically 2. **Why now?**: What is driving this change? (Technology, regulation, behavior, economics) 3. **Who is affected?**: Which customer segments or market categories? 4. **What is the timeline?**: Is this happening now, in 1-2 years, or 3-5 years? 5. **What is the implication for us?**: How should this influence our product strategy? 6. **What are competitors doing?**: How are competitors responding to this trend? ### Separating Signal from Noise - **Signals**: Trends backed by behavioral data, growing investment, regulatory action, or customer demand - **Noise**: Trends backed only by media hype, conference buzz, or competitor announcements without customer traction - Test trends against your own customer data: are YOUR customers asking for this or experiencing this change? - Be wary of "trend of the year" hype cycles. Many trends that dominate industry conversation do not materially affect your customers for years. ### Strategic Response Options For each significant trend: - **Lead**: Invest early and try to define the category or approach. High risk, high reward. - **Fast follow**: Wait for early signals of customer demand, then move quickly. Lower risk but harder to differentiate. - **Monitor**: Track the trend but do not invest yet. Set triggers for when to act. - **Ignore**: Explicitly decide this trend is not relevant to your strategy. Document why. The right response depends on: your competitive position, your customer base, your resources, and how fast the trend is moving. ## Output Format Use tables for feature comparisons. Use clear headers for each section. Keep the strategic implications section concise and actionable — this is where the value is for the reader. ## Tips - Be honest about competitor strengths. Dismissing competitors makes the analysis useless. - Focus on what matters to customers, not what matters to product teams. Customers do not care about architecture elegance. - Pricing is hard to compare fairly. Note the caveats (different packaging, usage-based vs seat-based, enterprise custom pricing). - Job postings are underrated competitive intelligence. A competitor hiring ML engineers signals a strategic direction. - Customer reviews are gold. They reveal what real users love and hate, unfiltered by marketing. - The most valuable part of competitive analysis is the "so what" — the strategic implications. Do not skip this. - Competitive analysis has a shelf life. Note the date and flag areas that change quickly.