When a competitor comes up on a deal, /competitive-strategist builds battlecards and objection scripts, so you can win the positioning fight. — Claude Skill
Een Claude-skill voor Claude Code door Nick Jensen — uitvoeren met /competitive-strategist in Claude·Bijgewerkt op 11 apr 2026
Build competitive battlecards, win/loss analyses, and market maps.
- Competitor feature comparison matrices
- Battlecard generation with objection scripts
- Win/loss analysis frameworks with interview guides
- Market landscape positioning maps
- Competitive alert monitoring templates
Voor wie
Build battlecards, win/loss analyses, and market landscape maps
Skills voor deze rol bekijkenEquip reps with objection handling for top 3 competitors
Skills voor deze rol bekijkenBrief the team on competitor moves and positioning shifts
Skills voor deze rol bekijkenWat het doet
Run /competitive-strategist with a competitor's website and pricing page to get a structured battlecard with strengths, weaknesses, and 8-10 objection responses.
Feed /competitive-strategist your last 20 deal outcomes — it identifies which competitor claims cost deals and which positioning angles won.
Use /competitive-strategist to generate a 2x2 positioning map of your market with quadrant labels, competitor placements, and white-space opportunities.
Paste a specific competitor claim into /competitive-strategist to get a 3-part response: acknowledge, reframe, and redirect to your differentiator.
Hoe het werkt
Identify the competitor and provide context: their product, pricing, positioning, and recent moves.
The skill structures a competitive analysis covering features, pricing, market positioning, and messaging.
It generates ready-to-use battlecards with side-by-side comparisons and talk tracks.
Distribute the output to your sales team or iterate on specific objection scenarios.
Voorbeeld
Competitor: Acme Analytics. They just launched a free tier and are positioning as 'the simple alternative.' Our deals are losing on perceived complexity. We win on depth and integrations.
Acme = simplicity play. They sacrifice depth for speed-to-value. Our angle: 'Simple to start, complete when you scale.' Counter their free tier with our 14-day trial of the full product — show what they'll outgrow.
"Acme is simpler": 'Acme is great for teams that need basic dashboards. When your team asks for cohort analysis, custom events, or warehouse sync — that's where you'll need to migrate. Our customers get both simplicity and depth.' "Acme is free": 'Free plans lock you into their data model. Migration cost from free to paid at Acme is the same as starting with us — except you won't have to migrate twice.'
| Feature | Us | Acme | | Custom events | Unlimited | 5 max | | Integrations | 40+ | 12 | | Data retention | 24 months | 6 months | | Free tier | 14-day full trial | Limited forever-free |
Verbeterde metrieken
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Competitive Strategist
Expert competitive intelligence and positioning guidance for winning in crowded markets — from research methodologies to sales enablement and everything in between.
Philosophy
Competitive strategy isn't about copying competitors or tearing them down:
- Know yourself first — You can't position against others until you know your own strengths
- Focus on customers, not competitors — What they need matters more than what rivals do
- Be honest — Lies and FUD destroy credibility faster than any competitor
- Stay current — Markets move fast; stale intel costs deals
How This Skill Works
When invoked, apply the guidelines in rules/ organized by:
research-*— Competitive research methodologies and intelligence gatheringanalysis-*— Win/loss analysis and market landscape mappingbattlecard-*— Battlecard creation, structure, and maintenancepositioning-*— Positioning against alternatives and differentiationmessaging-*— Competitive messaging and objection handlingenablement-*— Sales enablement for competitive situationsmonitoring-*— Competitive monitoring systems and alerts
Core Frameworks
The Competitive Intelligence Cycle
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ │
│ ┌──────────┐ ┌──────────┐ ┌──────────┐ │
│ │ GATHER │───▶│ ANALYZE │───▶│ SHARE │ │
│ │ (Intel) │ │ (Insight)│ │ (Enable) │ │
│ └──────────┘ └──────────┘ └──────────┘ │
│ ▲ │ │
│ │ ┌──────────┐ │ │
│ └──────────│ UPDATE │◀─────────┘ │
│ │ (Iterate)│ │
│ └──────────┘ │
│ │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Competitive Positioning Matrix
| Positioning Type | When to Use | Key Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Head-to-head | You're stronger on key dimensions | Direct comparison |
| Niche down | Competitor owns general category | Own a specific segment |
| Reframe | Competitor's strength is irrelevant | Change the criteria |
| Leapfrog | New capability they can't match | Future-oriented vision |
| Coexist | Different jobs to be done | Complement, don't compete |
Competitor Tiers
| Tier | Description | Monitoring Frequency | Depth of Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Direct competitors, same ICP | Weekly | Deep battlecards |
| Secondary | Adjacent solutions, partial overlap | Monthly | Overview cards |
| Emerging | Startups, potential disruptors | Quarterly | Watch list |
| Alternatives | Status quo, DIY, spreadsheets | Ongoing | Pain point mapping |
Win/Loss Analysis Framework
Deal Outcome
│
├── Won Against Competitor
│ ├── What differentiated us?
│ ├── What did they say about competitor?
│ └── What would have changed their mind?
│
└── Lost to Competitor
├── What was the deciding factor?
├── Where did we fall short?
└── What could we have done differently?
The Battlecard Structure
| Section | Purpose | Update Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Overview | Quick context, what they do | Quarterly |
| Positioning | How we win, key differentiators | Monthly |
| Landmines | Questions to ask that expose weaknesses | As discovered |
| Objection Handling | Responses to "Why not [competitor]?" | As encountered |
| Proof Points | Customer quotes, case studies | As available |
| Pricing Intel | Known pricing, packaging | As discovered |
Competitive Response Spectrum
| Situation | Response | Example |
|---|---|---|
| They launch feature you have | Emphasize experience, depth | "We've had this for 2 years, here's what we've learned" |
| They launch feature you don't | Roadmap or reframe | "We're focused on X because customers told us Y matters more" |
| They cut price | Hold on value | "You get what you pay for — here's the TCO comparison" |
| They spread FUD | Correct with facts | "That's not accurate — here's the truth with proof" |
| They announce funding | Ignore or pivot to stability | "We've been profitable since 2019" |
Intelligence Sources (Ranked by Value)
- Win/loss interviews — First-party, high signal
- Sales call recordings — Real objections, real context
- Customer feedback — Why they chose you (and considered others)
- G2/Capterra reviews — Volume of sentiment data
- LinkedIn activity — Hiring, messaging, customer posts
- Job postings — Strategic direction signals
- Press/funding news — Major moves, positioning shifts
- Product trials — Hands-on intel (respect ToS)
Anti-Patterns
- FUD tactics — Spreading fear, uncertainty, doubt backfires
- Obsessing over competitors — Customer needs > competitor moves
- Stale battlecards — Outdated intel loses deals
- One-size-fits-all — Different competitors need different strategies
- Ignoring the real competitor — Often it's "do nothing" or spreadsheets
- Attacking instead of differentiating — Negative selling repels buyers
- Hoarding intel — Unshared intelligence is worthless
- Copying competitors — You become undifferentiated
Reference documents
title: Section Organization
1. Competitive Research (research)
Impact: CRITICAL Description: Primary and secondary research methodologies, intelligence gathering techniques, ethical competitive analysis.
2. Win/Loss Analysis (analysis)
Impact: CRITICAL Description: Structured win/loss programs, interview techniques, pattern identification, and actionable insights.
3. Battlecard Creation (battlecard)
Impact: CRITICAL Description: Battlecard structure, content organization, landmines, objection handling, and maintenance cadence.
4. Market Landscape (landscape)
Impact: HIGH Description: Market mapping, competitor categorization, alternative solutions, and ecosystem analysis.
5. Positioning Strategy (positioning)
Impact: HIGH Description: Differentiation frameworks, positioning against alternatives, messaging hierarchy, and proof points.
6. Competitive Messaging (messaging)
Impact: HIGH Description: Objection handling scripts, comparison frameworks, competitive claims, and response strategies.
7. Feature Comparison (comparison)
Impact: MEDIUM-HIGH Description: Feature comparison strategies, capability matrices, honest comparison pages, and selection criteria.
8. Sales Enablement (enablement)
Impact: MEDIUM-HIGH Description: Competitive selling training, discovery questions, trap-setting landmines, and deal strategy support.
9. Monitoring Systems (monitoring)
Impact: MEDIUM Description: Competitive monitoring setup, alert systems, tracking competitor moves, and intelligence distribution.
title: Win/Loss Analysis Programs impact: CRITICAL tags: win-loss, analysis, sales, insights, program
Win/Loss Analysis Programs
Impact: CRITICAL
Win/loss analysis is the highest-signal competitive intelligence source. First-party data from people who actually chose between you and competitors beats everything else.
Win/Loss Program Structure
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Win/Loss Program │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ │
│ ┌─────────────┐ ┌─────────────┐ ┌─────────────┐ │
│ │ CAPTURE │ │ ANALYZE │ │ ACTION │ │
│ │ • CRM data │─▶│ • Patterns │─▶│ • Product │ │
│ │ • Interviews│ │ • Themes │ │ • Sales │ │
│ │ • Surveys │ │ • Segments │ │ • Marketing │ │
│ └─────────────┘ └─────────────┘ └─────────────┘ │
│ │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Program Components
| Component | Description | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| CRM Tracking | Capture competitor and loss reason in every deal | Every deal |
| Win Interviews | Deep dive with customers who chose you | 10%+ of wins |
| Loss Interviews | Deep dive with prospects who chose competitor | 20%+ of losses |
| Quarterly Analysis | Pattern identification and reporting | Quarterly |
| Stakeholder Readout | Share insights with product, sales, marketing | Quarterly |
Interview Best Practices
Timing
| Timing | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Immediately (< 2 weeks) | Fresh memory, detailed recall | Emotion may cloud judgment |
| 30 days post-decision | Settled perspective, implementation context | Details fade |
| 90+ days | Can assess if decision was right | Poor recall, different person may respond |
Recommendation: 2-4 weeks post-decision for best balance.
Who Should Interview
Best Interviewers (in order):
1. Dedicated win/loss analyst (neutral, trained)
2. Product marketing (understands product/market)
3. Third-party firm (maximum objectivity)
4. Success team (for wins, relationship exists)
Avoid:
✗ The sales rep who lost the deal (defensive)
✗ Executive (intimidating, biased questions)
✗ Product team alone (may push for features)
Good Interview Questions
Discovery Phase:
✓ "Walk me through how you first identified you needed a solution."
→ Understands trigger and context
✓ "Who else was involved in the evaluation?"
→ Maps buying committee
✓ "What criteria mattered most, and why?"
→ Reveals true priorities
Evaluation Phase:
✓ "How did you narrow down your options?"
→ Shows elimination criteria
✓ "What was your impression of [us/competitor] in the evaluation?"
→ Open-ended, non-leading
✓ "What did [competitor] do particularly well?"
→ Surfaces their strengths
✓ "Where did they fall short of your expectations?"
→ Surfaces their weaknesses
Decision Phase:
✓ "What was the deciding factor in your choice?"
→ Single most important insight
✓ "Was there anything that almost changed your mind?"
→ Close-call insights
✓ "What would you tell someone else evaluating these options?"
→ Summarized recommendation
Bad Interview Questions
✗ "Why did you choose the wrong solution?"
→ Judgmental, puts them on defense
✗ "We have [feature], doesn't that matter?"
→ Leading, makes them justify
✗ "Was it price?"
→ Closed-ended, suggests answer
✗ "Don't you think [competitor] has problems with X?"
→ Leading, fishing for agreement
✗ "Would you switch if we had [feature]?"
→ Hypothetical, unreliable
Win/Loss Analysis Framework
Data Capture Template
## Deal Information
- **Company:** [Name]
- **Deal Size:** $[Amount]
- **Segment:** SMB / Mid-Market / Enterprise
- **Industry:** [Industry]
- **Outcome:** Won / Lost
- **Competitor(s):** [Names]
- **Sales Rep:** [Name]
- **Date Closed:** [Date]
## Decision Factors (Ranked)
| Factor | Our Rating | Competitor Rating | Weight |
|--------|-----------|-------------------|--------|
| [Factor 1] | 1-5 | 1-5 | High/Med/Low |
| [Factor 2] | 1-5 | 1-5 | High/Med/Low |
## Key Quotes
> "[Direct quote about why they chose/rejected us]"
## Themes Identified
- [Theme 1]
- [Theme 2]
## Action Items
- [ ] [Specific follow-up]
Analysis Patterns to Track
| Category | Metrics | Insight |
|---|---|---|
| By Competitor | Win rate vs each competitor | Who we beat, who beats us |
| By Segment | Win rate by company size | Where we're strong/weak |
| By Industry | Win rate by vertical | Industry fit signals |
| By Decision Factor | Top 5 reasons won/lost | What actually matters |
| By Deal Size | Win rate by ACV | Pricing position |
| Over Time | Trend in win rates | Improving or declining |
Quarterly Readout Template
## Win/Loss Quarterly Report - Q[X] [Year]
### Executive Summary
- **Overall Win Rate:** [X]% (vs [X]% last quarter)
- **Interviews Conducted:** [X] wins, [X] losses
- **Key Insight:** [One-sentence summary]
### Win Rate by Competitor
| Competitor | Deals | Win Rate | Trend |
|------------|-------|----------|-------|
| [Comp A] | [X] | [X]% | ↑/↓/→ |
| [Comp B] | [X] | [X]% | ↑/↓/→ |
### Top Win Themes
1. **[Theme]** - [X]% of wins mentioned this
2. **[Theme]** - [X]% of wins mentioned this
### Top Loss Themes
1. **[Theme]** - [X]% of losses mentioned this
2. **[Theme]** - [X]% of losses mentioned this
### Recommended Actions
| Action | Owner | Priority |
|--------|-------|----------|
| [Action] | [Team] | P1/P2/P3 |
### Quotes of the Quarter
> "[Impactful win quote]" - [Company], Won
> "[Impactful loss quote]" - [Company], Lost to [Competitor]
Anti-Patterns
- Only interviewing losses — Wins tell you what's working
- Sales rep sole source — They have blind spots and biases
- No action from insights — Analysis without change is wasted effort
- Blaming sales for losses — Use data to enable, not punish
- Waiting for statistically significant samples — Act on patterns, iterate
- Generic "price" as loss reason — Dig deeper, price is often proxy
- Interviewing too late — Memory degrades fast, interview within 30 days
title: Battlecard Creation and Maintenance impact: CRITICAL tags: battlecard, sales-enablement, competitive, objection-handling
Battlecard Creation and Maintenance
Impact: CRITICAL
Battlecards are the single most important competitive enablement asset. A great battlecard gives sales confidence. A stale or bad one costs deals.
Battlecard Purpose
A battlecard answers ONE question:
"How do I win against [Competitor]?"
Everything in the card serves that purpose.
Battlecard Structure
| Section | Purpose | Length | Update Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quick Facts | At-a-glance context | 3-5 bullets | Quarterly |
| Positioning | How we win | 2-3 paragraphs | Monthly |
| Landmines | Questions that expose weaknesses | 5-10 questions | As discovered |
| Objection Handling | Responses to "why not them?" | 5-10 objections | As encountered |
| Proof Points | Evidence we win | 3-5 examples | As available |
| Pricing Intel | What we know about their pricing | Variable | As discovered |
| Don't Say | What backfires | 3-5 items | As learned |
Battlecard Template
# [Competitor Name] Battlecard
**Tier:** Primary / Secondary
**Last Updated:** [Date]
**Owner:** [Name]
---
## Quick Facts
- **What they do:** [One sentence]
- **Founded:** [Year]
- **Funding/Size:** [Amount raised or company size]
- **Target market:** [Who they sell to]
- **Key customers:** [Notable logos]
---
## When We Win
We consistently beat [Competitor] when:
1. **[Scenario 1]** — [Why we win here]
2. **[Scenario 2]** — [Why we win here]
3. **[Scenario 3]** — [Why we win here]
### Our Key Differentiators
| Differentiator | Why It Matters | Proof Point |
|----------------|----------------|-------------|
| [Diff 1] | [Benefit] | [Evidence] |
| [Diff 2] | [Benefit] | [Evidence] |
| [Diff 3] | [Benefit] | [Evidence] |
---
## When We Lose
We tend to lose to [Competitor] when:
1. **[Scenario 1]** — [What to do about it]
2. **[Scenario 2]** — [What to do about it]
---
## Landmines
Questions to ask early that expose [Competitor's] weaknesses:
| Question | Why It Works | If They Push Back |
|----------|--------------|-------------------|
| "[Question 1]?" | [Exposes X weakness] | [Response] |
| "[Question 2]?" | [Exposes Y weakness] | [Response] |
| "[Question 3]?" | [Exposes Z weakness] | [Response] |
---
## Objection Handling
### "Why not just go with [Competitor]?"
**Response:**
> "[Script that acknowledges, differentiates, and provides proof]"
### "[Competitor] has [Feature]. Do you?"
**Response:**
> "[Script that addresses the feature comparison]"
### "[Competitor] is cheaper."
**Response:**
> "[Script that reframes value vs cost]"
---
## Proof Points
| Customer | Context | Quote |
|----------|---------|-------|
| [Company] | Evaluated [Competitor] | "[Quote]" |
| [Company] | Switched from [Competitor] | "[Quote]" |
---
## Pricing Intel
- **Model:** [Subscription / Usage / etc.]
- **Range:** [What we know]
- **Discounting:** [Typical discount behavior]
- **Source:** [How we know this]
---
## Don't Say
| Don't Say | Why | Say Instead |
|-----------|-----|-------------|
| "[Bad claim]" | [Backfires because...] | "[Better framing]" |
---
## Resources
- [Link to detailed comparison]
- [Link to relevant case study]
- [Link to demo script]
Good Battlecard Practices
✓ Written for the reader (sales rep), not the writer (PMM)
→ Scannable, actionable, usable in real-time
✓ Specific proof points, not vague claims
→ "Company X switched and reduced deploy time by 40%"
✓ Honest about where we lose
→ Sales needs to know when to walk away
✓ Updated regularly with new intel
→ Calendar reminder for monthly review
✓ Landmines actually work
→ Test them with reps, iterate
Bad Battlecard Practices
✗ Feature list comparisons only
→ Features don't win deals, outcomes do
✗ Outdated information
→ "They don't have X" when they launched it 6 months ago
✗ No proof points
→ Claims without evidence are noise
✗ Written like a product brief
→ Walls of text no one reads
✗ FUD and attacks
→ "They're terrible" vs "Here's where we're better"
✗ Single version for all situations
→ Enterprise vs SMB needs different emphasis
Landmine Question Formulas
| Formula | Example | Exposes |
|---|---|---|
| Scale question | "How many [units] do you handle today?" | Scalability limits |
| Integration question | "Which tools does this need to work with?" | Ecosystem gaps |
| Support question | "What level of support do you expect?" | Service limitations |
| Security question | "What compliance requirements do you have?" | Security gaps |
| Timeline question | "When do you need to be live?" | Implementation time |
| Total cost question | "What's your budget for implementation + year 1?" | Hidden costs |
Good Landmines
✓ "How important is [capability we have, they don't]?"
→ Plants the seed before they mention competitor
✓ "What happens when [edge case we handle well]?"
→ Exposes limitations in their standard demo
✓ "Have you talked to customers who've been using it for 2+ years?"
→ Exposes newer competitors or churn issues
✓ "Who on your team will manage this day-to-day?"
→ Exposes complexity/ease of use differences
Bad Landmines
✗ "Do you know [Competitor] had a security breach?"
→ FUD, even if true, looks desperate
✗ "Wouldn't you rather work with an established company?"
→ Too obvious, transparent sales tactic
✗ Questions you don't have a good answer to yourself
→ They might turn it around on you
Maintenance Cadence
| Task | Frequency | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| Full content review | Quarterly | PMM |
| Pricing/intel update | Monthly | PMM + Sales |
| New objection additions | As they come | Sales + PMM |
| Proof point refresh | Monthly | PMM |
| Stakeholder feedback | Quarterly | PMM |
Anti-Patterns
- Battlecard graveyard — Created once, never updated
- PMM in a vacuum — No sales input = unusable cards
- Feature obsession — Leads with features not buyer outcomes
- Competitor bashing — Tone matters, stay professional
- Too long — If sales can't scan it in 2 min, they won't use it
- Generic everything — Same card for all segments/personas
title: Feature Comparison Strategies impact: MEDIUM-HIGH tags: comparison, features, comparison-pages, matrices
Feature Comparison Strategies
Impact: MEDIUM-HIGH
Feature comparisons are high-stakes content. Done well, they accelerate deals. Done poorly, they destroy credibility or invite lawsuits.
Comparison Content Types
| Type | Use Case | Risk Level | Legal Review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Internal matrix | Sales reference | Low | Recommended |
| Public comparison page | SEO, buyer research | High | Required |
| Demo comparison | Live selling | Medium | Recommended |
| RFP response | Formal evaluation | High | Required |
| G2/review site claim | Marketing | Medium | Required |
The Honest Comparison Framework
1. Be accurate — Verify every claim
2. Be current — Check quarterly minimum
3. Be fair — Include their strengths too
4. Be specific — Vague comparisons invite challenges
5. Be provable — "Faster" needs benchmarks
Good Comparison Table Structure
| Capability | You | Competitor | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| [Capability 1] | ✓ Full support | ✓ Partial | [Explanation] |
| [Capability 2] | ✓ Native | ✗ Via integration | [Explanation] |
| [Capability 3] | ✗ Roadmap Q3 | ✓ Available | [Honest acknowledgment] |
Comparison Page Best Practices
Good Comparison Page
# [Your Product] vs [Competitor]
## Overview
Both [Your Product] and [Competitor] help teams [job to be done].
Here's how they differ:
| Factor | [Your Product] | [Competitor] |
|--------|---------------|--------------|
| Best for | [Segment] | [Segment] |
| Pricing | [Model] | [Model] |
| Key strength | [Strength] | [Strength] |
## Detailed Comparison
### [Category 1]
[Honest comparison with specific examples]
### [Category 2]
[Honest comparison with specific examples]
## When to Choose [Competitor]
Be honest: [Competitor] might be better if:
- [Scenario 1]
- [Scenario 2]
## When to Choose [Your Product]
[Your Product] is likely better if:
- [Scenario 1]
- [Scenario 2]
## What Customers Say
"[Quote from customer who evaluated both]"
— [Name], [Title] at [Company]
## Try Both
We're confident in our product. Sign up for [Your Product] free,
and try [Competitor] too. Make the best choice for your team.
*Last updated: [Date]. We check accuracy quarterly.*
Bad Comparison Page
# Why [Your Product] is Better Than [Competitor]
[Competitor] is outdated and expensive. Here's why everyone is
switching to [Your Product]:
✗ [Competitor] has terrible support
✗ [Competitor] is always down
✗ [Competitor] is going out of business
Choose [Your Product] and never look back!
---
Why this is bad:
- Unsubstantiated claims
- No specifics
- No "last updated" date
- No acknowledgment of competitor strengths
- Could invite legal action
- Destroys credibility with savvy buyers
Legal Considerations
| Claim Type | Risk | How to Handle |
|---|---|---|
| Performance benchmarks | Medium | Use third-party or documented methodology |
| Feature availability | Low | Verify and date-stamp |
| Pricing | Medium | Note "as of [date]" and "per public pricing" |
| Customer quotes | Low | Get written permission |
| Market position claims | High | Cite source (Gartner, G2, etc.) |
| Subjective comparisons | Low-Medium | Frame as opinion, not fact |
Language Guidelines
| Don't Say | Say Instead | Why |
|---|---|---|
| "[Competitor] is bad at X" | "We approach X differently by..." | Avoids defamation risk |
| "[Competitor] doesn't have X" | "As of [date], [Competitor's] public documentation doesn't include X" | Accuracy with caveat |
| "[Competitor] is expensive" | "[Competitor] pricing starts at $X for Y" | Factual, not judgmental |
| "Everyone is switching from [Competitor]" | "We've welcomed X customers from [Competitor] this year" | Specific and provable |
| "[Competitor] has security issues" | "We offer [security feature] that [description]" | Focus on your strength |
Feature Comparison Categories
| Category | What to Compare | Example Dimensions |
|---|---|---|
| Core functionality | The main job to be done | Breadth, depth, quality |
| Integrations | Ecosystem connectivity | Number, depth, native vs third-party |
| Scalability | Growth handling | Limits, performance at scale |
| Security | Protection and compliance | Certifications, features, architecture |
| Ease of use | User experience | Time to value, learning curve |
| Support | Help and service | Channels, response time, coverage |
| Pricing | Total cost | Model, transparency, value |
Good Feature Claims
✓ "Sub-100ms average API response time (measured across 1M requests in June 2024)"
→ Specific, measurable, dated
✓ "Rated 4.8/5 on G2 for ease of use (as of Q2 2024, 500+ reviews)"
→ Third-party validation, cited
✓ "Native integrations with 50+ tools including [list top 5]"
→ Specific number, examples
✓ "SOC 2 Type II certified since 2022"
→ Verifiable, dated
Bad Feature Claims
✗ "Fastest in the market"
→ Unsubstantiated superlative
✗ "Better support than anyone else"
→ Subjective, unprovable
✗ "More features than competitors"
→ Vague, which features? which competitors?
✗ "Enterprise-grade security"
→ Meaningless buzzword
Comparison Update Process
| Task | Frequency | Owner | Verification |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accuracy check | Monthly | PMM | Review competitor docs/product |
| Date stamp update | Quarterly | PMM | Add "Last verified: [date]" |
| Customer quote refresh | Quarterly | PMM | Check permission still valid |
| Legal review | Annually | Legal | Full page review |
| Competitive landscape changes | As needed | PMM | Monitor competitor releases |
Handling Competitor Claims About You
When competitors make false claims:
1. Document the claim (screenshot, URL, date)
2. Prepare factual correction
3. Decide response level:
- Ignore (if obscure/irrelevant)
- Correct privately (if sales team needs it)
- Correct publicly (if widespread)
- Legal action (if defamatory and damaging)
Response template:
"[Competitor] has stated [claim]. Here's the accurate information:
[facts with evidence]. We've documented this at [URL] and are happy
to discuss with any customer who has questions."
Anti-Patterns
- Outdated comparisons — Claiming they lack features they've since added
- Cherry-picking — Showing only dimensions you win on
- Ignoring their strengths — Makes you look dishonest
- Unverifiable claims — "We're faster" with no benchmarks
- Legal landmines — Claims that could trigger C&D letters
- Feature-only focus — Features don't tell the whole story
- Set and forget — Competitors change, comparisons must too
title: Sales Enablement for Competitive Situations impact: MEDIUM-HIGH tags: sales-enablement, training, competitive-selling, discovery
Sales Enablement for Competitive Situations
Impact: MEDIUM-HIGH
Sales enablement bridges competitive intelligence and deal execution. The best intel is useless if sales can't access and apply it.
Enablement Asset Hierarchy
| Asset | Purpose | Format | Access |
|---|---|---|---|
| Battlecards | Quick reference in live calls | 1-2 page doc | Always open |
| Objection scripts | Word-for-word responses | Searchable doc/wiki | Quick lookup |
| Competitive demos | Side-by-side comparison | Video/live demo | Before key calls |
| Win stories | Social proof and confidence | Case study/quote | Deal support |
| Landmine questions | Discovery strategy | List with context | Deal prep |
| Kill sheets | Deep competitive dives | Long-form doc | Strategic deals |
Competitive Enablement Program
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Competitive Enablement Cycle │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ │
│ ┌──────────┐ ┌──────────┐ ┌──────────┐ │
│ │ INTEL │───▶│ ENABLE │───▶│ APPLY │ │
│ │ • Win/loss│ │ • Training│ │ • Selling│ │
│ │ • Research│ │ • Assets │ │ • Deals │ │
│ └──────────┘ └──────────┘ └──────────┘ │
│ ▲ │ │
│ │ ┌──────────┐ │ │
│ └──────────│ FEEDBACK │◀─────────┘ │
│ │ • Results│ │
│ │ • Intel │ │
│ └──────────┘ │
│ │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Sales Training Components
| Component | Frequency | Duration | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Competitive boot camp | Onboarding | 2-4 hours | Foundation knowledge |
| Competitor deep-dives | Quarterly | 1 hour each | Primary competitor expertise |
| Win/loss review | Monthly | 30 minutes | Pattern recognition |
| Objection role-play | Bi-weekly | 30 minutes | Response fluency |
| New intel briefing | As needed | 15 minutes | Stay current |
Discovery Questions for Competitive Intelligence
Qualification Stage
Goal: Understand competitive landscape early
✓ "What other solutions are you considering?"
→ Direct, often answered honestly early
✓ "How are you solving this today?"
→ Reveals status quo competitor
✓ "What prompted you to look for a solution now?"
→ Reveals trigger, possibly competitor frustration
✓ "Have you used tools like this before?"
→ Reveals experience with competitors
Evaluation Stage
Goal: Plant seeds, gather intel
✓ "What criteria are most important in your evaluation?"
→ Understand how they'll compare
✓ "Have you talked to [Competitor] yet? What was your impression?"
→ Direct competitor perception
✓ "What would need to be true for you to choose us?"
→ Surfaces objections before they become blockers
Landmine Question Training
Teach reps to plant seeds that expose competitor weaknesses:
| Weakness | Landmine Question | How to Train |
|---|---|---|
| Scalability | "What happens when you 10x your current volume?" | Role-play with answer |
| Implementation | "How long do you expect implementation to take?" | Show typical competitor timelines |
| Support | "What level of support do you need?" | Share competitor support reviews |
| Integration | "Walk me through your current tech stack" | Identify competitor gaps |
| Security | "What compliance requirements do you have?" | Know competitor certifications |
Good Enablement Practices
✓ Accessible in workflow
→ Battlecards in CRM/Gong/Chorus, not buried in folders
✓ Regularly updated
→ Monthly review cadence minimum
✓ Feedback loop active
→ Reps contribute intel, not just consume
✓ Role-play exercises
→ Practice makes fluent, not perfect
✓ Win/loss stories shared
→ Real examples trump theory
Bad Enablement Practices
✗ PDF dump on SharePoint
→ No one will find or read it
✗ One-time training
→ Knowledge decays, competitors evolve
✗ No feedback mechanism
→ Missing field intel, assets go stale
✗ Generic content
→ Not tailored to deal stage or segment
✗ Competitive bashing focus
→ Reps need to sell value, not attack
Competitive Deal Strategy Framework
Pre-Call Prep (5 minutes):
1. Who's the competitor?
2. Where do we win against them?
3. Where do we typically lose?
4. What landmines should I plant?
5. What objections should I anticipate?
Post-Call Debrief (2 minutes):
1. Did competitor come up?
2. What did prospect say about them?
3. What objections did I handle?
4. What new intel did I learn?
5. What do I need for next call?
Enablement Content Templates
Quick Competitive Cheat Sheet
# vs [Competitor] — Quick Guide
## In One Sentence
We beat [Competitor] when [scenario] because [differentiator].
## 3 Things to Remember
1. [Key differentiator 1]
2. [Key differentiator 2]
3. [Key landmine question]
## #1 Objection + Response
**"[Common objection]"**
→ "[Response script]"
## Proof Point
"[Customer quote about choosing us over competitor]"
— [Name], [Company]
Deal Support Request
# Competitive Deal Support Request
**Rep:** [Name]
**Deal:** [Company, size, stage]
**Competitor:** [Name(s)]
**Timeline:** [When is decision]
## Situation
[Brief context on the deal and competitive dynamics]
## What I Need
- [ ] Customer reference who evaluated [Competitor]
- [ ] Specific claim verification
- [ ] Updated pricing intel
- [ ] Executive involvement
- [ ] Other: [specify]
## Key Objections I'm Facing
1. [Objection 1]
2. [Objection 2]
Measuring Enablement Effectiveness
| Metric | How to Measure | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Win rate vs competitor | CRM data | Increasing trend |
| Battlecard usage | Content analytics | >80% access monthly |
| Intel contributions | Feedback submissions | >2 per rep per month |
| Objection resolution | Call review | Confident, accurate responses |
| Time to productive | New rep ramp | Handle competitive call by week 4 |
Sales Team Intelligence Loop
| What Sales Provides | What PMM Provides |
|---|---|
| Real objections heard | Scripted responses |
| Competitor pricing quotes | Pricing comparison analysis |
| New feature announcements | Battlecard updates |
| Win/loss context | Pattern analysis |
| Customer quotes | Reference coordination |
Anti-Patterns
- Enablement in isolation — PMM creates, sales ignores
- Overloaded reps — Too much content, can't find anything
- No reinforcement — Train once, never revisit
- Feature-focused training — Missing the "how to sell" angle
- Punishing losses — Use data to enable, not blame
- Static materials — Content goes stale quickly
- No success stories — Theory without proof
title: Market Landscape Mapping impact: HIGH tags: market-landscape, competitive-analysis, market-map, ecosystem
Market Landscape Mapping
Impact: HIGH
A market landscape map helps everyone — product, sales, marketing, leadership — understand where you fit and who you're really competing against. It's your strategic context.
Types of Market Maps
| Map Type | Purpose | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Competitor Grid | Direct comparison on key dimensions | Sales enablement, positioning |
| Market Quadrant | Show category leadership | Marketing, analyst relations |
| Ecosystem Map | Show integrations/partners | Platform positioning |
| Category Evolution | Show market maturity | Strategy, investor discussions |
| Alternative Landscape | Show all options (including status quo) | Full competitive picture |
Competitor Grid Framework
ENTERPRISE
│
│
┌────────────┼────────────┐
│ │ │
│ [Comp A] │ [You] │
│ │ │
SPECIALIZED ├────────────┼────────────┤ COMPREHENSIVE
│ │ │
│ [Comp B] │ [Comp C] │
│ │ │
└────────────┼────────────┘
│
│
SMB
Good Grid Dimensions
| Dimension | Opposite | What It Shows |
|---|---|---|
| Enterprise | SMB | Market segment focus |
| Specialized | Comprehensive | Feature breadth |
| Self-serve | High-touch | GTM motion |
| Modern | Legacy | Technology approach |
| Platform | Point solution | Integration strategy |
| Vertical-focused | Horizontal | Industry specificity |
| Developer-first | Business-user | Buyer persona |
Choosing Your Axes
Good axis selection:
✓ Reflects dimensions buyers actually care about
✓ Puts you in a favorable (but honest) position
✓ Differentiates the field (not all competitors in one quadrant)
✓ Aligns with your positioning strategy
Bad axis selection:
✗ Arbitrary dimensions no one evaluates on
✗ Dimensions where you obviously lose
✗ Dimensions that put all competitors in same spot
✗ Technical dimensions buyers don't understand
Competitor Tier Classification
| Tier | Criteria | Analysis Depth | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Same ICP, direct replacement | Deep battlecard, weekly monitoring | Direct competitor |
| Secondary | Overlapping ICP, partial solution | Light battlecard, monthly monitoring | Adjacent player |
| Emerging | New entrant, potential threat | Watch list, quarterly review | Funded startup |
| Substitute | Different approach, same job | Pain point comparison | DIY/spreadsheets |
| Legacy | Incumbent being displaced | Modernization angle | Old-school vendor |
Good Market Map
## [Category] Market Landscape
### Map (2x2)
[Visual grid with clear axes and all relevant players positioned]
### Our Position
We've positioned in the [quadrant] because:
1. [Strategic reason 1]
2. [Strategic reason 2]
### Competitor Breakdown
| Competitor | Tier | Position | Key Differentiator |
|------------|------|----------|-------------------|
| [Comp A] | Primary | Upper left | [What they're known for] |
| [Comp B] | Secondary | Lower right | [What they're known for] |
### White Space Opportunities
Based on this analysis:
1. [Underserved segment or need]
2. [Gap no one is addressing]
### Map Caveats
- [Competitor X] is moving toward [direction]
- [New category definition] may emerge
Bad Market Map
✗ Puts you in the "best" quadrant with no justification
→ Looks like propaganda, loses credibility
✗ Positions competitors unfairly
→ "They're legacy" when they've modernized
✗ Includes every company ever
→ Cluttered, no useful signal
✗ Uses internal jargon for axes
→ "API-first vs Config-driven" means nothing to most buyers
✗ Static document never updated
→ Markets shift, maps should too
Alternative Landscape Template
## What Buyers Actually Consider
When evaluating [our category], buyers typically consider:
### 1. Do Nothing / Status Quo
- **What it means:** Continue with current process
- **Why they choose it:** No budget, no urgency, low pain
- **How to compete:** Quantify cost of inaction
### 2. DIY / Build It Internally
- **What it means:** Build custom solution
- **Why they choose it:** Control, budget constraints
- **How to compete:** Show TCO, maintenance burden, opportunity cost
### 3. Adjacent Tools (Spreadsheets, etc.)
- **What it means:** Misuse existing tools
- **Why they choose it:** Already have it, feels free
- **How to compete:** Show limitations, security risks
### 4. Point Solutions
- **What it means:** Single-purpose competitor tools
- **Why they choose it:** Lower cost, simpler
- **How to compete:** Show value of integration, completeness
### 5. Platform Solutions
- **What it means:** Part of larger vendor suite
- **Why they choose it:** Existing relationship, bundle pricing
- **How to compete:** Show best-of-breed advantages
Ecosystem Map Components
| Component | What to Include |
|---|---|
| Core product | Your solution (center) |
| Integrations | Tools you connect with |
| Partners | Implementation, reseller, tech partners |
| Competitors | Positioned relative to you |
| Data sources | Where data flows from |
| Data destinations | Where data flows to |
Market Map Maintenance
| Task | Frequency | Trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Full redraw | Annually | Category shift, rebrand |
| Competitor position update | Quarterly | Funding, acquisition, pivot |
| New player addition | As needed | Notable new entrant |
| Axis reconsideration | Annually | Market evolution |
Anti-Patterns
- Self-serving positioning — Designing axes where only you win
- Analysis paralysis — Perfecting the map instead of using it
- Ignoring alternatives — Competitors aren't just other vendors
- One map for all audiences — Analysts need different view than sales
- Static thinking — Markets move, maps should reflect direction
- Crowded visuals — Too many logos, no clear story
title: Competitive Claims and Response Strategies impact: HIGH tags: messaging, claims, competitive-response, marketing
Competitive Claims and Response Strategies
Impact: HIGH
What you claim about competitors — and how you respond to their claims about you — shapes credibility. The wrong approach destroys trust faster than any competitor could.
Competitive Claims Spectrum
NEVER SOMETIMES ALWAYS
│ │ │
▼ ▼ ▼
┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐
│ ATTACK │ │ COMPARE │ │ ELEVATE │
│ • FUD │ │ • Fair │ │ • Own value │
│ • Lies │ │ comparison │ │ • Customer │
│ • Personal │ │ • Specific │ │ outcomes │
│ • Unverified │ │ claims │ │ • Proof │
└──────────────┘ └──────────────┘ └──────────────┘
Claim Types and Guidelines
| Claim Type | Example | Risk Level | Guideline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Capability claim | "We integrate with X, they don't" | Medium | Verify, date-stamp |
| Performance claim | "50% faster than [Competitor]" | High | Third-party validation |
| Market claim | "Fastest growing in category" | High | Cite source |
| Customer claim | "[Company] switched from [Competitor]" | Low | Get permission |
| Review-based claim | "Rated higher on G2" | Low-Medium | Link to source |
| Negative claim | "[Competitor] has problems with X" | Very High | Usually avoid |
Good Competitive Claims
✓ Specific and verifiable
"Rated 4.8/5 on G2 with 500+ reviews (as of June 2024), vs [Competitor's] 4.2/5"
→ Cited source, dated, specific numbers
✓ Third-party validated
"Named a Leader in Gartner Magic Quadrant 2024"
→ Independent authority
✓ Customer-voiced
"'We switched from [Competitor] because of [specific reason]' — [Customer, Title]"
→ Testimonial format, permission obtained
✓ Outcome-focused
"Customers who switched from [Competitor] report 40% faster implementation"
→ About customer results, not competitor problems
Bad Competitive Claims
✗ Unverified attacks
"[Competitor] has terrible customer support"
→ Subjective, unprovable, risky
✗ Outdated claims
"[Competitor] doesn't support X" (when they launched it 6 months ago)
→ Destroys credibility instantly
✗ Vague superlatives
"We're the best solution in the market"
→ Meaningless, every competitor says this
✗ Fear-based claims
"[Competitor] had a security breach and can't be trusted"
→ FUD tactics backfire
✗ Personal attacks
"Their CEO doesn't know what he's doing"
→ Unprofessional, potentially defamatory
Response to Competitor Claims About You
| Their Claim | Response Level | Action |
|---|---|---|
| False claim, widespread | High | Public correction with facts |
| False claim, limited | Medium | Sales enablement, selective correction |
| Exaggerated claim | Low-Medium | Prepare balanced response |
| True but spun negatively | Medium | Acknowledge and reframe |
| Old news being resurfaced | Low | Ignore unless it gains traction |
Response Framework
Step 1: Verify
- Is the claim actually false?
- Do we have evidence to counter?
Step 2: Assess Impact
- Where is it being said?
- Who is seeing it?
- Is it affecting deals?
Step 3: Decide Response
- Ignore (if low impact, limited reach)
- Enable (if sales needs it, but not public)
- Correct (if widespread and damaging)
Step 4: Execute
- Stick to facts
- Don't escalate
- Document everything
Public Response Template
## Addressing Claims About [Topic]
We've seen some claims about [Your Company] from [competitor/market].
Here are the facts:
**Claim:** "[The claim being made]"
**Reality:** [Factual correction with evidence]
**Evidence:**
- [Specific proof point 1]
- [Specific proof point 2]
- [Third-party validation if available]
We're happy to discuss this with any customer or prospect who has
questions. You can reach us at [contact].
*Last updated: [Date]*
Sales Response Template
When prospects mention competitor claims:
"I've heard that come up before. Here's the accurate picture:
[Factual correction]
And here's how you can verify:
- [Customer reference who can speak to it]
- [Third-party source]
- [Product demo/proof]
What specifically concerns you about this? I want to make sure we
address your actual question."
Claim Documentation Best Practices
For every competitive claim you make, document:
1. The claim itself (exact wording)
2. Evidence supporting it
3. Source of evidence
4. Date verified
5. Expiration (when to re-verify)
6. Legal review status
Template:
Claim: "We implement 50% faster than [Competitor]"
Evidence: Customer survey (n=47), avg implementation time
Source: Internal customer success data + 5 customer interviews
Date Verified: March 2024
Re-verify By: September 2024
Legal Reviewed: Yes, approved
When Competitors Attack
| Attack Type | Do | Don't |
|---|---|---|
| False claim in sales call | Arm sales with facts | Retaliate publicly |
| False claim on their website | Consider legal review | Ignore if it's damaging |
| False claim on review sites | Respond factually | Get emotional |
| False claim in press | Consider PR response | Escalate unnecessarily |
| Customer badmouthing | Understand root cause | Dismiss their experience |
Claim Verification Checklist
Before making any competitive claim:
- Is it factually accurate?
- Can we prove it?
- Is the proof current (< 6 months old)?
- Have we cited the source?
- Has legal reviewed (if public)?
- Would we be comfortable if competitor showed this to their customers?
- Does it pass the "front page test"?
The Ethics of Competitive Claims
Golden Rule:
Make claims you'd be comfortable defending in a joint customer call
with the competitor present.
If you wouldn't say it to their face with a customer watching,
don't say it at all.
What to NEVER Do
| Action | Why It's Wrong | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Spread unverified negative info | It's FUD | Credibility loss, potential legal |
| Attack competitor employees | It's personal | Industry reputation damage |
| Use competitor's confidential info | It's unethical/illegal | Legal action, reputation damage |
| Make claims you can't prove | It's dishonest | Credibility loss if caught |
| Ignore legitimate competitor strengths | It's dishonest | Buyers lose trust |
Anti-Patterns
- Scorched earth — Attacking aggressively damages your brand too
- Ignoring all attacks — Some need response to protect deals
- Emotional responses — Calm, factual always wins
- Racing to the bottom — If they go low, you don't have to
- Claim inflation — Starting reasonable, getting more extreme over time
- One-sided comparisons — Showing only where you win destroys credibility
- Undocumented claims — Can't prove it when challenged
title: Competitive Messaging and Objection Handling impact: HIGH tags: messaging, objections, sales, competitive-response
Competitive Messaging and Objection Handling
Impact: HIGH
When competitors come up, how you respond determines whether you win. Great objection handling acknowledges, reframes, and provides proof — in that order.
The A.R.P. Framework
A — Acknowledge
→ "That's a fair point" / "I understand why you'd ask"
R — Reframe
→ Shift the conversation to your strength
P — Prove
→ Provide evidence, not claims
Common Competitive Objections
| Objection Type | Example | Response Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Feature gap | "They have X, you don't" | Reframe need or share roadmap |
| Price | "They're cheaper" | TCO comparison, value focus |
| Brand | "They're the market leader" | Agility, focus, customer success |
| Risk | "They're safer/bigger" | Stability proof, customer references |
| Switching | "We're already using them" | Switching cost vs opportunity cost |
Feature Gap Responses
Good Responses
Objection: "[Competitor] has [feature]. Do you?"
✓ "Not currently, but here's why: [strategic reason]. What we hear from
customers is [alternative approach] actually works better because
[evidence]. Would you be open to seeing how [Customer X] handles this?"
✓ "We're building that — it's on our Q3 roadmap. What's driving the
need? I want to make sure we're solving the right problem, not just
checking a box."
✓ "We do it differently. Rather than [their approach], we [your approach].
Here's why that matters: [benefit]. [Customer] specifically chose us
because of this."
Bad Responses
✗ "We don't need that feature"
→ Dismissive of their stated need
✗ "That feature doesn't actually work well"
→ Sounds like sour grapes
✗ "We'll have it soon" (with no specifics)
→ Vague, untrustworthy
✗ "Their version has problems"
→ FUD without evidence
Pricing Objections
Good Responses
Objection: "[Competitor] is cheaper"
✓ "They are on sticker price. But let's look at total cost of ownership
over 3 years. When you factor in [implementation, maintenance, hidden
costs], here's what customers actually spend:"
| Cost Factor | Us | Them |
|-------------|-----|------|
| License | $X | $Y |
| Implementation | $X | $Y |
| Year 1 maintenance | $X | $Y |
| Total | $X | $Y |
✓ "What's the cost of the problem you're solving? If this saves your team
10 hours/week at $100/hr loaded cost, the ROI math looks like this..."
✓ "Fair point. Here's why companies pay more for us: [specific value].
[Customer X] told us they evaluated [Competitor] and chose us because
[reason]. Can I connect you with them?"
Bad Responses
✗ "You get what you pay for"
→ Cliché, doesn't address the concern
✗ "We don't compete on price"
→ Arrogant, dismissive
✗ "They're cheaper because they're worse"
→ Needs evidence, sounds defensive
Brand/Market Leader Objections
Good Responses
Objection: "They're the market leader. Why would we choose you?"
✓ "They're the leader in [broad category]. We're the leader in [specific
segment you care about]. Here's why that matters: [Customer X] in your
exact situation chose us because [specific reason]."
✓ "Market leaders optimize for the average customer. You're not average —
you need [specific requirement]. That's exactly where we focus. Here's
proof: [evidence]."
✓ "They've been around longer, absolutely. Here's what that means
practically: [legacy architecture, slow innovation, etc.]. We've built
for [modern requirement] from day one."
Risk/Safety Objections
Good Responses
Objection: "You're smaller/newer. That feels risky."
✓ "That's a reasonable concern. Here's how we de-risk it:
- [X customers] have been with us for [Y years]
- We're [profitable / well-funded with X runway]
- Your data is [exportable in standard format]
- Here's a reference from [similar company]"
✓ "I understand. The flip side of our size is that you'll get [CEO access,
dedicated support, product influence]. [Customer X] told us that's why
they chose us over [bigger competitor]."
Switching Cost Objections
Good Responses
Objection: "We're already using [Competitor]. It's too hard to switch."
✓ "Switching has a cost, definitely. Let's quantify it against the
opportunity cost of staying:
| Factor | Switch Cost | Stay Cost |
|--------|-------------|-----------|
| Migration | $X / 2 weeks | $0 |
| Training | $X / 1 week | $0 |
| Ongoing efficiency loss | $0 | $X/year |
| Risk of [problem] | $0 | $X/year |
Most customers break even in [X months]."
✓ "What's your renewal date? Many customers start evaluating [X months]
before renewal so they have time to make a thoughtful decision without
pressure."
Response Scripts by Competitor Tier
Primary Competitor (Direct Threat)
When they come up, have a prepared response:
"Ah, [Competitor]. They're solid — we hear their name a lot. Here's where
we consistently win:
1. [Differentiator 1] — [Evidence]
2. [Differentiator 2] — [Evidence]
3. [Differentiator 3] — [Evidence]
[Customer X] evaluated both and chose us because [specific reason].
What matters most to you in your evaluation?"
Secondary Competitor (Partial Overlap)
"[Competitor] is a [category] solution. We overlap on [area] but diverge
on [area]. If your primary need is [their strength], they might be a fit.
If it's [your strength], we're likely better. Which is the priority?"
Emerging Competitor (New Entrant)
"I'm not as familiar with [Competitor] — they're newer. What specifically
caught your attention about them? ... That's interesting. Here's how we
approach that: [your solution]. And here's proof it works: [customer
evidence]."
What NOT to Say
| Don't Say | Why | Say Instead |
|---|---|---|
| "They're terrible" | Unprofessional, may not be true | "We approach it differently" |
| "Nobody uses them" | Factually questionable | "We win most head-to-heads" |
| "They had a security breach" | FUD, even if true | "Here's our security posture" |
| "They're going out of business" | Speculation, looks desperate | "Here's our stability story" |
| "I don't know them" | Looks uninformed | "Tell me what interested you" |
Proactive Competitive Messaging
Don't wait for objections — address them preemptively:
"You'll probably look at [Competitor] — most people do. Here's what we
hear from customers who've evaluated both:
- If [criteria X] is most important, [Competitor] might work
- If [criteria Y] matters, we consistently win
Where do you fall?"
Anti-Patterns
- Getting defensive — Calm confidence wins, defensiveness loses
- Trash-talking — Makes you look bad, not them
- Feature war — Listing features doesn't address underlying need
- Generic responses — "We're better" with no proof
- Lying or exaggerating — Getting caught destroys all credibility
- Ignoring the objection — They'll just bring it up again
- Over-responding — Short, confident beats long, defensive
title: Competitive Monitoring Systems impact: MEDIUM tags: monitoring, alerts, tracking, intelligence-systems
Competitive Monitoring Systems
Impact: MEDIUM
Systematic monitoring beats sporadic research. Set up systems that surface competitive changes automatically so you can respond quickly and consistently.
Monitoring Framework
Monitoring Layers
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ STRATEGIC CHANGES │
│ Funding, Acquisitions, Leadership, IPO │
│ [ Quarterly deep dive ] │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ POSITIONING CHANGES │
│ Messaging, Pricing, Target market │
│ [ Monthly review ] │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ PRODUCT CHANGES │
│ Features, Releases, Deprecations │
│ [ Weekly check ] │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ CONTENT SIGNALS │
│ Blog posts, Social, PR, Job postings │
│ [ Daily alerts ] │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Monitoring Tools by Category
| Category | Tools | Cost | Signal Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| News/PR | Google Alerts, Feedly, Owler | Free-Low | Medium |
| Social | LinkedIn notifications, Twitter lists | Free | Medium |
| Product | Release notes RSS, Product Hunt | Free | High |
| Jobs | LinkedIn Jobs, Indeed alerts | Free | Medium-High |
| Reviews | G2, Capterra, TrustRadius | Free-Low | High |
| SEO/Content | Semrush, Ahrefs | Medium | Medium |
| Pricing | Manual checks, Prisync | Free-Medium | High |
| Dedicated platforms | Klue, Crayon, Kompyte | High | High |
Alert Setup Guide
Google Alerts (Free, Essential)
Set up alerts for each primary competitor:
1. "[Competitor name]" — All mentions
2. "[Competitor name]" AND "raises" OR "funding" — Funding news
3. "[Competitor name]" AND "launches" OR "announces" — Product news
4. "[Competitor name]" AND CEO/Founder name — Leadership mentions
5. "[Your name]" AND "[Competitor name]" — Direct comparisons
Settings:
- Frequency: As-it-happens for primary, Daily for secondary
- Sources: All or News for focused results
- Language: English (or relevant markets)
- Region: All or specific markets
LinkedIn Monitoring
Follow and enable notifications for:
□ Competitor company page
□ Competitor executives (CEO, CPO, CMO)
□ Competitor job postings
□ Competitor employees posting publicly
What to watch:
- Messaging changes in company posts
- Hiring patterns (what roles = what priorities)
- Customer announcements
- Leadership changes
Review Site Monitoring
Set up monitoring for:
□ G2 - New reviews, rating changes
□ Capterra - New reviews, category ranking
□ TrustRadius - New reviews, buyer feedback
□ Product Hunt - New launches, updates
Track:
- Overall rating trend (up/down)
- Common themes in negative reviews
- Feature requests/complaints
- Comparison mentions
Good Monitoring Practices
✓ Tiered alert system
→ Critical alerts immediate, routine alerts digest
✓ Clear ownership
→ Someone responsible for reviewing each source
✓ Documented distribution
→ Who needs what information, how fast
✓ Regular pruning
→ Remove noise, refine alerts quarterly
✓ Action triggers defined
→ "If X happens, we do Y"
Bad Monitoring Practices
✗ Alert overload
→ 100 daily alerts = 0 alerts read
✗ No triage process
→ All intel treated equally
✗ Monitoring without action
→ Collecting data nobody uses
✗ Single point of failure
→ One person leaves, monitoring dies
✗ Set and forget
→ Competitors rebrand, alerts break
Intelligence Distribution Matrix
| Intel Type | Who Needs It | Speed | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pricing change | Sales, PMM | Same day | Slack + email |
| Major feature launch | Product, Sales, PMM | Same day | All-hands brief |
| Funding/acquisition | Exec, PMM | 24 hours | Email summary |
| Message change | Marketing, PMM | Weekly | Monthly roundup |
| Review trend | Product, Success | Monthly | Report |
| Job posting patterns | PMM, Strategy | Quarterly | Analysis |
Competitive Intelligence Database
## Intel Tracking Template
### Competitor: [Name]
**Last Major Update:** [Date]
#### Product Changes
| Date | Change | Impact | Response |
|------|--------|--------|----------|
| [Date] | [Description] | High/Med/Low | [What we did] |
#### Pricing Changes
| Date | Change | Source | Action |
|------|--------|--------|--------|
| [Date] | [Old → New] | [How we know] | [What we did] |
#### Messaging Changes
| Date | Change | Source |
|------|--------|--------|
| [Date] | [Old positioning → New] | [Website/PR] |
#### Leadership Changes
| Date | Change | Significance |
|------|--------|--------------|
| [Date] | [Who moved/joined] | [What it signals] |
#### Funding/Strategic
| Date | Event | Amount/Details |
|------|-------|----------------|
| [Date] | [Series X / Acquisition / etc.] | [Details] |
Response Playbooks
| Event | Response | Timeline | Owner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Competitor raises funding | Internal brief, assess implications | 48 hours | PMM |
| Major feature launch | Evaluate, update battlecard, brief sales | 1 week | PMM |
| Pricing change | Analyze, update comparison, arm sales | 48 hours | PMM + Sales |
| Message/positioning shift | Analyze intent, assess response | 2 weeks | PMM |
| Acquisition | Deep analysis, scenario planning | 2 weeks | PMM + Exec |
| Negative news (breach, outage) | Do NOT exploit, monitor customer questions | Ongoing | PMM |
Signal Interpretation Guide
| Signal | Possible Meaning | Investigation |
|---|---|---|
| Hiring surge in engineering | Product acceleration | Check job descriptions |
| Hiring surge in sales | GTM push | Check which segments |
| New executive hire | Strategic shift | Check their background |
| Layoffs | Trouble or refocus | Monitor closely |
| Office expansion/contraction | Growth or struggle | Correlate with other signals |
| Website redesign | Positioning shift | Archive and compare |
| Pricing page change | Strategy shift | Document and analyze |
Monitoring Cadence Checklist
| Frequency | Task | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| Daily | Review Google Alerts | PMM |
| Weekly | Check competitor product updates | PMM |
| Weekly | Review new reviews on G2/Capterra | PMM |
| Monthly | LinkedIn activity analysis | PMM |
| Monthly | Pricing page check | PMM |
| Quarterly | Deep competitor review | PMM + Product |
| Quarterly | Alert refinement | PMM |
Competitive Intel Sharing
Intel Distribution Channels:
1. Slack channel (#competitive-intel)
- Real-time alerts and quick discussions
- @ mention relevant teams
2. Weekly digest email
- Summarized key developments
- Links to details
3. Monthly competitive brief
- Trends and patterns
- Action items
4. Quarterly deep-dive presentation
- Strategic implications
- Win/loss data
- Market shifts
Anti-Patterns
- Information hoarding — Intel trapped in one person's inbox
- Alert fatigue — Too many alerts, all ignored
- No synthesis — Raw data without insight
- Reactive only — Never proactive strategic analysis
- Stalking, not monitoring — Ethics matter; stay above board
- Monitoring without action — Data collected, nothing changes
- Overreacting — Not every move requires a response
title: Positioning Against Alternatives impact: HIGH tags: positioning, differentiation, messaging, strategy
Positioning Against Alternatives
Impact: HIGH
Positioning is about owning a space in the buyer's mind. You don't control what competitors say, but you control how you're perceived relative to them.
Positioning Strategy Types
| Strategy | When to Use | Approach | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Head-to-head | You're demonstrably better | Direct comparison | Need to prove claims |
| Niche down | Can't beat market leader broadly | Own specific segment | Limits TAM |
| Reframe | Losing on current criteria | Change evaluation criteria | Requires education |
| Leapfrog | Have unique capability | Focus on future | Can seem vaporware |
| Coexist | Different jobs to be done | Complement, don't compete | May confuse buyers |
Head-to-Head Positioning
Use when:
- You objectively outperform on key dimensions
- Buyer already knows competitor
- You have proof points
Example:
"Faster than [Competitor]" → Back it up with benchmarks
Good Head-to-Head
✓ "50% faster deploys than [Competitor]"
→ Specific, measurable, verifiable
✓ "Rated higher on G2 for ease of use"
→ Third-party validation
✓ "Chosen by [Customer] after evaluating [Competitor]"
→ Social proof from credible source
Bad Head-to-Head
✗ "Better than [Competitor]"
→ Vague, subjective, no proof
✗ "The only real solution"
→ Arrogant, dismissive
✗ "They're outdated"
→ Negative, may not be true
Niche-Down Positioning
Use when:
- Can't win across all dimensions
- Have specific segment strength
- Segment is underserved
Formula:
"The [category] for [specific segment]"
Niche Positioning Examples
| Broad Competitor | Your Niche Position |
|---|---|
| "The CRM" | "The CRM for startups under 50 employees" |
| "Enterprise secrets management" | "Secrets management for developer teams" |
| "The analytics platform" | "Analytics built for product teams" |
Reframe Positioning
Use when:
- Losing on current evaluation criteria
- Criteria aren't actually what matters
- Can educate on what should matter
Approach:
"You're evaluating on X, but what actually matters is Y"
Good Reframe
Competitor wins on: Number of features
Your reframe: "More features = more complexity. Here's what happens when tools are too complex: [evidence of failure]"
Competitor wins on: Brand recognition
Your reframe: "Established vendors optimize for enterprise. Here's what gets deprioritized: [SMB needs they ignore]"
Competitor wins on: Price (they're cheaper)
Your reframe: "Initial cost is 20% of total cost. Here's the full picture: [TCO comparison]"
Leapfrog Positioning
Use when:
- You have unique technology/capability
- Market is evolving in your direction
- Competitor can't easily copy
Formula:
"The first/only [capability] for [outcome]"
Positioning Framework: The 3 Cs
| Component | Question | Output |
|---|---|---|
| Company | What are we uniquely good at? | Capabilities, proof |
| Customer | What do buyers actually need? | Jobs to be done |
| Competition | What do alternatives offer? | Gap analysis |
Strong positioning sits at the intersection:
Something you do well + customers care about + competitors don't offer
Positioning Statement Template
For [target customer]
Who [has this need/pain]
[Our product] is a [category]
That [key benefit]
Unlike [primary alternative]
We [key differentiator]
Example:
For engineering teams at growth-stage startups
Who need to manage secrets without security overhead
SecretStash is a secrets management platform
That provides developer-first security with zero configuration
Unlike enterprise solutions that require dedicated security teams
We integrate in 5 minutes and grow with you
Differentiation Proof Matrix
| Differentiator | Evidence Type | Strength |
|---|---|---|
| Claim | Your marketing says it | Weak |
| Feature | Product demonstrates it | Medium |
| Third-party | Analysts/reviewers confirm | Strong |
| Customer proof | Buyers validate it | Strongest |
Good Differentiation
✓ Meaningful: Matters to buyers
✓ Verifiable: Can be demonstrated
✓ Defensible: Hard to copy quickly
✓ Consistent: True across product/company
Bad Differentiation
✗ "Best customer support"
→ Everyone says this, hard to prove
✗ "Most innovative"
→ Subjective, meaningless
✗ "Enterprise-grade"
→ Overused, means nothing specific
✗ Features that are table stakes
→ "We have an API" isn't differentiation in 2024
Competitive Positioning Do's and Don'ts
| Do | Don't |
|---|---|
| Lead with your strengths | Lead with their weaknesses |
| Be specific and provable | Make vague claims |
| Acknowledge their strengths honestly | Pretend they have no strengths |
| Focus on buyer outcomes | Focus on feature lists |
| Update as market shifts | Set and forget positioning |
Anti-Patterns
- Positioning by negation — "We're not [competitor]" isn't a position
- Feature parity obsession — Matching features doesn't differentiate
- Ignoring the real alternative — Often it's "do nothing"
- One position fits all — Different segments need different emphasis
- Positioning wish — Claiming position you can't prove
- Competitor reaction — Changing position every time they move
title: Competitive Research Methodologies impact: CRITICAL tags: research, intelligence, competitive-analysis, data-gathering
Competitive Research Methodologies
Impact: CRITICAL
Good competitive intelligence is systematic, ethical, and actionable. Random Google searches aren't research — they're procrastination.
Research Source Hierarchy
| Source Type | Signal Quality | Effort | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Win/loss interviews | Very High | High | Understanding buyer decisions |
| Customer conversations | Very High | Medium | Real-world comparisons |
| Sales call recordings | High | Medium | Live objections, competitor mentions |
| G2/Capterra reviews | High | Low | Volume sentiment analysis |
| Product trials | High | High | Feature verification |
| LinkedIn monitoring | Medium-High | Low | Hiring, messaging shifts |
| Job postings | Medium | Low | Strategic direction signals |
| Press releases | Medium | Low | Major announcements |
| Conference talks | Medium | Medium | Positioning, roadmap hints |
| SEC filings | Medium | High | Public company financials |
Primary Research Methods
Win/Loss Interviews
The gold standard. Talk to people who evaluated both solutions.
Interview Framework:
1. Context (2 min)
- What triggered the evaluation?
- Who was involved in the decision?
2. Evaluation Process (5 min)
- What alternatives did you consider?
- What were your key criteria?
- How did you weight those criteria?
3. Comparison (10 min)
- How did [Competitor] compare on your top criteria?
- What did they do well?
- Where did they fall short?
- What surprised you?
4. Decision (5 min)
- What was the deciding factor?
- Was there anything that almost changed your mind?
- What would you tell someone else evaluating?
5. Retrospective (3 min)
- Has your perception changed since deciding?
- Anything you wish you'd known earlier?
Sales Team Debriefs
Your sales team is a goldmine. Extract intel systematically.
Weekly Debrief Questions:
- Which competitors came up this week?
- What objections did prospects raise about us?
- What claims did competitors make against us?
- What features did prospects ask about that competitors have?
- Any pricing intel surface?
Secondary Research Checklist
| Research Task | Frequency | Tools/Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Review site monitoring | Weekly | G2, Capterra, TrustRadius |
| Social listening | Daily | LinkedIn, Twitter/X |
| Job posting analysis | Monthly | LinkedIn, Indeed, their careers page |
| Content audit | Monthly | Their blog, resources, webinars |
| Product updates | Weekly | Release notes, changelog |
| Pricing changes | Monthly | Their pricing page, proposals |
| News/PR monitoring | Daily | Google Alerts, Feedly |
| SEO/positioning | Monthly | Semrush, Ahrefs |
Good Research Practices
✓ Primary source verification
→ Don't trust claims without evidence
✓ Multiple source triangulation
→ One review is an anecdote; patterns are insight
✓ Date and source all intel
→ "Competitor X has Y" means nothing without when/where
✓ Distinguish fact from inference
→ "They're struggling with enterprise" vs "Their reviews mention implementation issues"
✓ Regular refresh cadence
→ Set calendar reminders for research sprints
Bad Research Practices
✗ Relying solely on competitor's marketing
→ They lie just like we do
✗ One-time research "projects"
→ Competition is continuous, not a project
✗ Hoarding intel in personal notes
→ Unshared intelligence is worthless
✗ Confirmation bias searching
→ Looking for evidence they suck misses where they excel
✗ Violating ToS or ethics
→ Fake accounts, deceptive practices destroy credibility
Research Output Templates
Competitor Quick Profile
## [Competitor Name]
**Last Updated:** [Date]
**Tier:** Primary / Secondary / Emerging
### What They Do
[2-3 sentence description]
### Target Customer
- Company size: [Range]
- Industries: [List]
- Buyer persona: [Titles]
### Positioning
[Their main value proposition in their words]
### Key Differentiators
1. [Differentiator 1]
2. [Differentiator 2]
3. [Differentiator 3]
### Known Weaknesses
1. [Weakness 1 + evidence source]
2. [Weakness 2 + evidence source]
### Pricing
[What we know about pricing]
### Recent Moves
- [Date]: [Development]
Intelligence Quality Scoring
| Quality Level | Characteristics | Usage |
|---|---|---|
| Verified | Multiple sources, first-hand | Use confidently in sales |
| Probable | Single reliable source | Use with caveat |
| Possible | Inference from patterns | Internal strategy only |
| Unverified | Single unreliable source | Investigate further |
Anti-Patterns
- Analysis paralysis — Research is for action, not perfection
- Recency bias — Old patterns matter as much as new news
- Competitor obsession — Hours researching, minutes with customers
- Single-source dependency — One angry review isn't a pattern
- Ethical shortcuts — Fake accounts, ToS violations, insider info
- Research hoarding — Intel in your head helps no one