competitive-analysis-templates

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npx skills add https://github.com/slgoodrich/agents --skill competitive-analysis-templates

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Competitive Analysis Templates

Templates for analyzing competitors, enabling sales teams, and defining strategic market positioning.

When to Use This Skill

Auto-loaded by agents:

  • market-analyst – For competitor deep-dives, battle cards, and positioning maps

Use when you need:

  • Analyzing competitor strategies and offerings
  • Creating sales battle cards
  • Building feature comparison matrices
  • Tracking competitive intelligence
  • Conducting win/loss analysis
  • Defining differentiation strategy
  • Monitoring competitive threats
  • Positioning against alternatives

What is Competitive Analysis?

Competitive analysis helps you:

  • Understand your market position and competitive landscape
  • Identify differentiation opportunities and white space
  • Enable sales teams to win competitive deals
  • Inform product roadmap and strategic decisions
  • Monitor competitive threats and market shifts

NOT: Copying competitors or building feature parity BUT: Finding defensible differentiation and strategic positioning

Good competitive analysis: Actionable, evidence-based, honest about trade-offs, regularly updated

Bad competitive analysis: Feature lists without context, outdated, biased, not used by teams


Evidence Standards

Core principle: All competitive intelligence must be based on verifiable public sources. Strategic analysis and recommendations are core value, but factual claims require source attribution.

Research requirements:

  1. Use verifiable public sources

    • Competitor websites, product pages, and documentation
    • Pricing pages (with URLs and date accessed)
    • Review sites (G2, Capterra, TrustRadius) with specific review citations
    • News articles, press releases, and public announcements
    • Product demos, trials, and publicly available materials
  2. Source attribution

    • Every claim about competitor features, pricing, or strategy must cite source
    • Format: “[Feature/Claim] (Source: [URL], accessed [Date])”
    • Review quotes must cite specific review with link
    • When multiple sources confirm: cite 2-3 representative sources
  3. When data is unavailable

    • Explicitly note: “[Pricing not publicly available]”, “[Requires product trial]”
    • Never fabricate competitor information to complete analysis
    • Recommend steps to gather missing data (demo request, trial signup)
    • Note limitation in battle card or analysis
  4. What you CANNOT do

    • Fabricate competitor features, pricing, or capabilities
    • Invent user testimonials or review quotes
    • Make up market share numbers or competitive statistics
    • Create fictional customer case studies
  5. What you SHOULD do (core value)

    • Provide strategic analysis of competitive landscape
    • Identify differentiation opportunities based on research
    • Recommend positioning strategy against competitors
    • Guide battle card creation and sales enablement
    • Teach competitive intelligence methodologies
    • Help interpret competitive data for strategic decisions

When in doubt: If public information is unavailable, note the limitation explicitly rather than inventing data. Your strategic expertise in competitive analysis and positioning is your primary value.


Three Core Templates

1. Competitor Deep-Dive Analysis

Purpose: Comprehensive competitive intelligence for strategic decisions

Use when:

  • Quarterly competitive reviews
  • Market entry planning
  • Product roadmap planning
  • Understanding new competitive threat
  • Executive briefings

Key sections:

  • Company overview (size, funding, strategy)
  • Product analysis (features, UX, pricing)
  • Go-to-market strategy (sales, marketing)
  • SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats)
  • Customer intelligence (reviews, win/loss)
  • Competitive response strategy

Template: assets/competitor-deep-dive-template.md

Complete template with all sections, example content, intelligence sources

Time investment: 8-12 hours initial, 2-3 hours quarterly updates

Comprehensive guide: references/competitive-intel-guide.md

Intelligence gathering, research techniques, analysis frameworks, organizing intelligence


2. Battle Card (Sales Enablement)

Purpose: Quick-reference competitive enablement for sales teams

Use when:

  • Sales team faces competitor regularly
  • New competitive threat emerges
  • Need to improve win rates vs. specific competitor
  • Onboarding new sales reps

Key sections:

  • Quick stats (foundational context)
  • When you’ll face them (common scenarios)
  • Where we win (strengths with proof)
  • Where they win (their strengths + how to counter)
  • Common objections & responses
  • Discovery questions (uncover our advantages)
  • Proof points (customer stories, data)

Template: assets/battle-card-template.md

Sales-ready format, specific talk tracks, objection handling, proof points

Format: 1-2 pages maximum (quick reference for calls)

Update frequency: Immediately on competitor changes, monthly review

Comprehensive guide: references/battle-card-guide.md

Creating effective battle cards, sales enablement, training, maintenance, metrics


3. Positioning & Perceptual Mapping

Purpose: Strategic market positioning and visual competitive landscape

Use when:

  • Strategic planning (annual/quarterly)
  • Defining product strategy
  • Finding market white space
  • Developing messaging
  • Repositioning product

Key sections:

  • Perceptual maps (visual market positioning)
  • Positioning statement (April Dunford framework)
  • Differentiation matrix
  • Value proposition map (jobs, pains, gains)
  • Strategic positioning grid
  • Brand positioning
  • Messaging framework

Template: assets/positioning-map-template.md

Perceptual mapping formats, positioning frameworks, differentiation analysis

Use cases: Strategic planning, market entry, messaging development

Comprehensive guide: references/positioning-guide.md

Positioning frameworks, differentiation strategies, perceptual mapping, repositioning


Choosing the Right Template

For strategic planning → Use all three:

  1. Deep-dive analysis (understand landscape)
  2. Positioning map (define your position)
  3. Battle cards (enable execution)

For sales enablement → Battle cards:

  • Quick reference during calls
  • Specific talk tracks and counters
  • Updated frequently

For product strategy → Deep-dive + Positioning:

  • Feature gap analysis
  • Market white space
  • Differentiation strategy

For one competitor → Start with deep-dive, then battle card

For market overview → Positioning map first (landscape), then selective deep-dives


Competitive Intelligence Process

1. Gather Intelligence

Primary sources:

  • Competitor website, demos, trials
  • Customer reviews (G2, Capterra, TrustRadius)
  • Win/loss interviews
  • Customer feedback

Secondary sources:

  • Press releases, news
  • Job postings (strategic direction)
  • Social media, podcasts
  • Analyst reports

Source citation requirements:

  • Document URL and access date for every source
  • Cite specific G2/Capterra reviews with links for user quotes
  • Note when information is unavailable: “[Pricing not public]”
  • Never fabricate data to fill intelligence gaps
  • Recommend additional research steps for missing data

Detailed guide: references/competitive-intel-guide.md

Research techniques, intelligence sources, ethical guidelines, source citation best practices


2. Analyze Patterns

Look for:

  • Feature launch velocity (product strategy)
  • Market expansion signals
  • Pricing changes
  • Partnership announcements
  • Messaging shifts

Framework: Use SWOT analysis

  • Strengths: What they do well (facts, evidence)
  • Weaknesses: Exploitable gaps (customer complaints, missing features)
  • Opportunities (for them): Anticipate their moves
  • Threats (to us): How they could hurt us

3. Act on Insights

Product decisions:

  • Close critical gaps (table stakes)
  • Exploit weaknesses (differentiation)
  • Defend strengths (maintain advantage)

Positioning:

  • Find defensible differentiation
  • Avoid head-to-head on their strengths
  • Position in category where you win

Sales enablement:

  • Create battle cards (competitive situations)
  • Train on objection handling
  • Share win stories

Positioning Frameworks

April Dunford’s 5 Components

Work through in this order:

1. Competitive Alternatives: What would customers use if you didn’t exist?

2. Unique Attributes: What can you do that alternatives can’t?

3. Value (Benefits): What do those unique attributes enable?

4. Target Customer: Who cares most about that value?

5. Market Category: What context makes your value obvious?

Example:

For Series A B2B SaaS companies who need to scale pipeline without growing SDR headcount, [Product] is an AI-powered sales development platform that books 10x more qualified meetings. Unlike Salesforce which requires large SDR teams, we use AI to automate the entire top-of-funnel.

Complete framework: references/positioning-guide.md

Positioning strategies, differentiation, perceptual mapping, validation


Perceptual Mapping

Purpose: Visualize competitive landscape, find white space

Common axes:

  • Price vs. Capabilities
  • Ease of Use vs. Power
  • Horizontal vs. Vertical
  • Self-serve vs. Enterprise

Strategic insights:

  • White space (underserved segments)
  • Crowded areas (avoid competing)
  • Movement over time (strategic direction)

Template: assets/positioning-map-template.md

Multiple perceptual map formats, strategic analysis


Battle Card Best Practices

Format:

  • 1-2 pages maximum (quick reference)
  • Bullets, not paragraphs
  • Specific talk tracks (exact words)
  • Print-friendly

Content:

  • Be honest about weaknesses (builds credibility)
  • Use customer language (outcomes, not features)
  • Include proof points (quotes, data, case studies)
  • Provide discovery questions (uncover advantages)

Maintenance:

  • Update immediately on competitor changes
  • Monthly review, quarterly refresh
  • Sales feedback loop
  • Track win rates

Detailed guide: references/battle-card-guide.md

Creating, training, maintenance, metrics


Organizing Competitive Intelligence

Repository Structure

/Competitive Intelligence
  /Competitor A
    - Deep-dive analysis.md
    - Battle card.md
    - Product screenshots/
    - Reviews analysis.md
  /Competitor B
    [Same structure]
  /Market Maps
    - Positioning map.md
    - Feature comparison.xlsx
  /Win-Loss Analysis
    - Quarterly summaries

Update Cadence

Continuous: Monitor for major changes (Google Alerts, RSS)

Monthly:

  • Scan competitor websites, blogs, changelogs
  • Read recent reviews
  • Update battle cards if needed

Quarterly:

  • Deep-dive analysis refresh
  • Win/loss review
  • Positioning assessment
  • Sales team competitive briefing

Detailed guide: references/competitive-intel-guide.md

Monitoring strategies, intelligence distribution


Common Mistakes to Avoid

Feature parity obsession:

  • Problem: Building everything competitors have
  • Fix: Focus on defensible differentiation

Outdated intelligence:

  • Problem: Stale battle cards, wrong pricing
  • Fix: Regular update cadence, monitoring systems

Too comprehensive:

  • Problem: 50-page analysis nobody reads
  • Fix: Right level of detail for audience (battle card vs. deep-dive)

Ignoring weaknesses:

  • Problem: Only highlighting strengths
  • Fix: Honest assessment of trade-offs

Not using the intelligence:

  • Problem: Analysis sits in drive, not actioned
  • Fix: Clear distribution, sales training, product impact

For Solo Operators / Small Teams

Simplified approach:

Focus: 2-3 most important competitors only

Monthly routine (2-3 hours):

  • Check competitor websites for changes
  • Read 5-10 recent G2 reviews
  • Scan their blog/changelog
  • Update battle card if needed

Quarterly deep-dive (half day):

  • Full product trial
  • Read 20-30 reviews
  • Update positioning map
  • Refresh analysis doc

Templates to use:

  • Battle card (1 page version)
  • Simplified positioning map
  • Lightweight deep-dive (key sections only)

Templates and References

Assets (Ready-to-Use Templates)

Copy-paste these for immediate use:

  • assets/competitor-deep-dive-template.md – Comprehensive competitive analysis
  • assets/battle-card-template.md – Sales enablement quick reference
  • assets/positioning-map-template.md – Strategic positioning & perceptual maps

References (Deep Dives)

When you need comprehensive guidance:

  • references/competitive-intel-guide.md – Intelligence gathering, research, analysis
  • references/battle-card-guide.md – Creating effective battle cards, sales enablement
  • references/positioning-guide.md – Positioning frameworks, differentiation strategies

Related Skills

  • product-positioning – Product positioning frameworks
  • go-to-market-playbooks – GTM and launch strategy
  • roadmap-frameworks – Product roadmaps
  • market-sizing-frameworks – Market opportunity assessment