Competitive Brief

If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see 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:

2. Research

Via web search:

If ~~knowledge base is connected:

If ~~chat is connected:

3. Generate the Brief

Competitor Overview

For each competitor:

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:

Opportunities

Based on the analysis:

Threats

Strategic Implications

Tie the analysis back to product strategy:

4. Follow Up

After generating the brief:

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.

Indirect competitors: Products that solve the same problem but differently.

Adjacent competitors: Products that do not compete today but could.

Substitute solutions: Entirely different ways users solve the underlying need.

Landscape Map

Position competitors on meaningful dimensions:

Common axes:

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:

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):

Detailed (for deep-dive comparisons):

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

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:

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:

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:

Win/Loss Interview Questions

For wins:

For losses:

Analyzing Win/Loss Data

Common Win/Loss Patterns

Market Trend Identification

Sources for Trend Identification

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

Strategic Response Options

For each significant trend:

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