Discover Competitive Analysis
npx machina-cli add skill product-on-purpose/pm-skills/discover-competitive-analysis --openclawname: discover-competitive-analysis description: Creates a structured competitive analysis comparing features, positioning, and strategy across competitors. Use when entering a market, planning differentiation, or understanding the competitive landscape. phase: discover version: "2.0.0" updated: 2026-01-26 license: Apache-2.0 metadata: category: research frameworks: [triple-diamond, lean-startup, design-thinking] author: product-on-purpose
Competitive Analysis
A competitive analysis provides structured insight into the competitive landscape, helping product teams understand where they stand relative to alternatives and identify opportunities for differentiation. Rather than exhaustively cataloging every competitor, an effective analysis focuses on actionable insights that inform product strategy.
When to Use
- Before entering a new market or launching a new product
- When planning differentiation strategy for an existing product
- During quarterly or annual strategic planning reviews
- When evaluating build vs. buy decisions
- After losing deals to understand competitive positioning
- When onboarding new product team members to the market context
Instructions
When asked to create a competitive analysis, follow these steps:
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Define the Scope Clarify what you're analyzing: a specific feature area, overall product positioning, or pricing strategy. Identify 3-5 key competitors—direct competitors (same solution), indirect competitors (different solution to same problem), and potential disruptors.
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Gather Intelligence Research each competitor through public sources: websites, pricing pages, G2/Capterra reviews, press releases, job postings, and customer testimonials. Note what you can verify vs. what you're inferring.
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Build the Feature Matrix Create a comparison grid of key capabilities. Focus on features that matter to your target customers, not exhaustive checklists. Use consistent ratings (e.g., Full, Partial, None, Unknown).
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Analyze Positioning Map competitors on a 2x2 positioning matrix using dimensions relevant to your market (e.g., price vs. features, ease of use vs. power, SMB vs. enterprise). Identify white space opportunities.
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Assess Strengths and Weaknesses For each competitor, document genuine strengths (what they do better than you) and weaknesses (where they fall short). Avoid dismissing competitors—respect drives better strategy.
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Identify Strategic Implications Translate observations into actionable recommendations: where to compete head-on, where to differentiate, what messaging to emphasize, and what gaps represent opportunities.
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Note Confidence Levels Mark which conclusions are based on verified data vs. inference. Competitive intelligence has varying reliability—be honest about uncertainty.
Output Format
Use the template in references/TEMPLATE.md to structure the output.
Quality Checklist
Before finalizing, verify:
- Scope is clearly defined (what market, segment, use case)
- 3-5 competitors are analyzed, including direct and indirect
- Feature comparison focuses on customer-relevant capabilities
- Positioning map uses meaningful, differentiated dimensions
- Strengths acknowledge where competitors genuinely excel
- Recommendations are specific and actionable
- Sources and confidence levels are documented
Examples
See references/EXAMPLE.md for a completed example.
Source
git clone https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills/blob/main/skills/discover-competitive-analysis/SKILL.mdView on GitHub Overview
Discover Competitive Analysis provides a structured view of the competitive landscape to help product teams understand where they stand and identify differentiation opportunities. It focuses on 3-5 key competitors, a feature matrix, and a positioning map to generate actionable implications for product strategy. The output emphasizes confidence notes and practical recommendations rather than exhaustive lists.
How This Skill Works
Follow these steps to produce actionable insights: define the scope (what market and which competitors), gather intelligence from public sources, and build a feature matrix with consistent ratings. Next, analyze positioning with a 2x2 map, document strengths and weaknesses for each competitor, and translate observations into strategic implications and recommendations. Include notes on confidence levels to reflect verified data vs. inferences.
When to Use It
- Before entering a new market or launching a new product
- Planning differentiation strategy for an existing product
- During quarterly or annual strategic planning reviews
- Evaluating build vs. buy decisions
- Onboarding new product team members to the market context
Quick Start
- Step 1: Define scope and select 3-5 competitors (direct and indirect).
- Step 2: Gather intelligence from public sources and build a feature matrix with consistent ratings (Full, Partial, None, Unknown).
- Step 3: Analyze positioning, map on a 2x2, and outline strategic implications and recommended actions.
Best Practices
- Define the scope clearly (market, segment, use case) and identify 3-5 competitors (direct and indirect).
- Focus the feature matrix on customer-relevant capabilities, not an exhaustive checklist.
- Use meaningful positioning dimensions (e.g., price vs. features, SMB vs. enterprise).
- Document sources and mark confidence levels for each conclusion.
- Translate observations into specific, actionable recommendations for competition, differentiation, and messaging.
Example Use Cases
- A SaaS startup entering a new market analyzes 3-5 competitors to identify feature gaps and differentiators.
- A pricing-focused analysis maps rivals on price vs. features to spot white space.
- A build-vs-buy evaluation uses a feature matrix to compare capabilities across alternatives.
- A quarterly strategy review benchmarks competitors to adjust messaging and roadmap.
- New product team members are onboarded with a market context briefing based on the competitive landscape.