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Competitive Analysis Skill

byanthropics22KGitHub starsGitHub

Generate a structured competitive analysis comparing positioning, messaging, and content strategy to uncover gaps, opportunities, and threats. Start free in seconds.

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Result preview

Full Demo

See a detailed competitive analysis report comparing Notion, ClickUp, and Asana generated by this Agent Skill.

Get started

Run Your First Task

  1. a simple demonstration of the first step in using Competitive Analysis agent skill
    01

    Install

    Add the skill to your agent.

  2. a simple demonstration of the second step in using Competitive Analysis agent skill
    02

    Analyze Competitors

    Provide the company or product you want to compare.

  3. a simple demonstration of the third step in using Competitive Analysis agent skill
    03

    Review Result

    Get a detailed competitive analysis with actionable insights.

Install command

$ npx skills add https://github.com/anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins/tree/main/marketing/skills/competitive-brief

About

Competitive analysis is a critical advantage for marketing and sales teams, yet manual research is slow and inconsistent. The Competitive Analysis Skill instantly generates detailed competitive briefs that expose positioning gaps, content blind spots, and strategic threats—turning raw research into clear, actionable next steps.

Unlike basic tools that only scrape surface-level data, this skill performs a multi-source intelligence sweep across competitor websites, review platforms, SEO tools, social media, and job postings. It then structures the findings into an executive summary, competitor profiles, a messaging comparison matrix, and a content gap audit. Each brief also includes specific recommendations, from quick wins to long-term strategic moves.

Whether you are arming your sales team with battlecards, hunting for unclaimed messaging angles, or reacting to a rival's latest launch, the skill adapts to your focus area. Simply name your competitors, provide any context about your own positioning, and let the skill produce a polished, presentation-ready analysis in minutes.

Key features

What makes it powerful

  • Comprehensive competitive briefs

    Receive a structured report with executive summary, competitor profiles, messaging comparison matrix, and content gap analysis.

  • Sales battlecard generation

    Create one-page battlecards for your sales team including objection handling, landmines, and win/loss themes.

  • Actionable recommendations

    Get 3–5 specific recommended actions—from quick wins to long-term strategic moves—based on competitive intelligence.

  • Multi-source research

    Leverages competitor websites, review sites, news coverage, job postings, SEO tools, and social listening to build a complete picture.

  • Customizable focus areas

    Narrow the analysis to messaging, product features, content strategy, pricing, or market presence as needed.

Use cases

When to reach for it

  • Build sales battlecards

    Equip your sales team with up-to-date one-pagers that highlight competitor weaknesses and your differentiators, improving win rates.

  • Find positioning gaps

    Identify unclaimed messaging angles and audience segments that competitors are underserving, then craft unique value propositions.

  • React to competitor moves

    When a competitor launches a new product or campaign, quickly assess the impact on your market position and adjust your strategy.

  • Audit content strategy

    Map out the topics, formats, and keywords your competitors use, then fill content gaps to capture organic traffic and thought leadership.

SKILL.md

Competitive Brief

If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see CONNECTORS.md.

Research competitors and generate a structured competitive analysis comparing positioning, messaging, content strategy, and market presence.

Trigger

User runs /competitive-brief or asks for a competitive analysis, competitor research, or market comparison.

Inputs

Gather the following from the user:

  1. Competitor name(s) — one or more competitors to analyze (required)

  2. Your company/product context (optional but recommended):

    • What you sell and to whom
    • Your positioning or value proposition
    • Key differentiators you want to highlight
  3. Focus areas (optional — if not specified, cover all):

    • Messaging and positioning
    • Product and feature comparison
    • Content and thought leadership strategy
    • Recent announcements and news
    • Pricing and packaging (if publicly available)
    • Market presence and audience

Research Process

For each competitor, research using web search:

  1. Company website — homepage messaging, product pages, about page, pricing page
  2. Recent news — press releases, funding announcements, product launches, partnerships (last 6 months)
  3. Content strategy — blog topics, resource types, social media presence, webinars, podcasts
  4. Review sites and comparisons — third-party comparisons, analyst mentions, customer review themes
  5. Job postings — hiring signals that indicate strategic direction (optional)

Research Sources

Gather intelligence from these categories of sources:

Primary Sources (Direct from Competitor)
  • Website: homepage, product pages, pricing, about page, careers
  • Blog and resource center: content themes, publishing frequency, depth
  • Social media profiles: messaging, engagement, content strategy
  • Product demos and free trials: UX, features, onboarding experience
  • Webinars and events: topics, speakers, audience engagement
  • Press releases and newsroom: announcements, partnerships, milestones
  • Job postings: hiring signals that reveal strategic priorities (e.g., hiring for a new product line or market)
Secondary Sources (Third-Party)
  • Review sites: G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, Product Hunt — customer sentiment themes
  • Analyst reports: Gartner, Forrester, IDC — market positioning and category placement
  • News coverage: TechCrunch, industry publications — funding, partnerships, narrative
  • Social listening: mentions, sentiment, share of voice across social platforms
  • SEO tools: keyword rankings, organic traffic estimates, content gaps
  • Financial filings: revenue, growth rate, investment areas (for public companies)
  • Community forums: community forums (e.g. Reddit, Discourse), industry chat groups (e.g. Slack communities) — user sentiment

Research Cadence

  • Deep competitive analysis: quarterly (full research across all sources)
  • Competitive monitoring: monthly (scan for new announcements, content, messaging changes)
  • Real-time alerts: ongoing (set up alerts for competitor brand mentions, press, job postings)

Competitive Brief Structure

1. Executive Summary

  • 2-3 sentence overview of the competitive landscape
  • Key takeaway: your biggest opportunity and biggest threat

2. Competitor Profiles

For each competitor:

Company Overview
  • What they do (one-sentence positioning)
  • Target audience
  • Company size/stage indicators (funding, employee count if available)
  • Key recent developments
Messaging Analysis
  • Primary tagline or headline
  • Core value proposition
  • Key messaging themes (3-5)
  • Tone and voice characterization
  • How they describe the problem they solve
Product/Solution Positioning
  • How they categorize their product
  • Key features they emphasize
  • Claimed differentiators
  • Pricing approach (if publicly available)
Content Strategy
  • Blog frequency and topics
  • Content types produced (ebooks, webinars, case studies, tools)
  • Social media presence and engagement approach
  • Thought leadership themes
  • SEO strategy observations (what terms they appear to target)
Strengths
  • What they do well
  • Where their messaging resonates
  • Competitive advantages
Weaknesses
  • Gaps in their messaging or positioning
  • Areas where they are vulnerable
  • Customer complaints or criticism themes (from reviews)

3. Messaging Comparison Matrix

DimensionYour CompanyCompetitor ACompetitor B
Primary tagline.........
Target buyer.........
Key differentiator.........
Tone/voice.........
Core value prop.........

(Include user's company only if they provided their positioning context)

4. Content Gap Analysis

  • Topics your competitors cover that you do not (or vice versa)
  • Content formats they use that you could adopt
  • Keywords or themes they own vs. opportunities they have missed

5. Opportunities

  • Positioning gaps you can exploit
  • Messaging angles your competitors have not claimed
  • Audience segments they are underserving
  • Content or channel opportunities

6. Threats

  • Areas where competitors are strong and you are vulnerable
  • Trends that favor their positioning
  • Recent moves that could shift the market

7. Recommended Actions

  • 3-5 specific, actionable recommendations based on the analysis
  • Quick wins (things you can act on this week)
  • Strategic moves (longer-term positioning or content investments)

Analysis Frameworks

Messaging Comparison Frameworks

Value Proposition Comparison

For each competitor, document:

  • Promise: what they promise the customer will achieve
  • Evidence: how they prove the promise (data, testimonials, demos)
  • Mechanism: how their product delivers on the promise (the "how it works")
  • Uniqueness: what they claim only they can do
Narrative Analysis

Identify each competitor's story arc:

  • Villain: what problem or enemy they position against (status quo, legacy tools, complexity)
  • Hero: who is the hero in their story (the customer? the product? the team?)
  • Transformation: what before/after do they promise?
  • Stakes: what happens if you do not act?

This reveals positioning strategy and emotional appeals.

Messaging Strengths and Vulnerabilities

For each competitor's messaging, assess:

  • Clarity: can a first-time visitor understand what they do in 5 seconds?
  • Differentiation: is their positioning distinct or generic?
  • Proof: do they back up claims with evidence?
  • Consistency: is messaging consistent across channels?
  • Resonance: does their messaging address real customer pain points?

Content Gap Analysis Methodology

Content Audit Comparison

Map content across competitors by:

Topic/ThemeYour ContentCompetitor ACompetitor BGap?
[Topic 1]Blog post, ebookBlog series, webinarNothingOpportunity for B
[Topic 2]NothingWhitepaperBlog post, videoGap for you
[Topic 3]Case studyNothingCase studyParity
Content Type Coverage
Content FormatYouComp AComp BComp C
Blog postsYYYY
Case studiesYYNY
Ebooks/WhitepapersNYYN
WebinarsYYYN
PodcastNNYN
Video contentNYYY
Interactive toolsNNNY
Templates/ResourcesYNYN
Identifying Content Opportunities
  1. Topics they cover that you do not: potential gaps in your content strategy
  2. Topics you cover that they do not: potential differentiators to amplify
  3. Formats they use that you do not: format gaps that could reach new audiences
  4. Audience segments they address that you do not: underserved audiences
  5. Search terms they rank for that you do not: SEO content gaps
Content Quality Assessment
  • Depth: surface-level or comprehensive?
  • Freshness: regularly updated or stale?
  • Engagement: do posts get comments, shares, links?
  • Production value: text-only or multimedia?
  • Thought leadership: original insights or rehashed content?

Positioning Strategy

Positioning Statement Framework

For your company and each competitor, define (or reverse-engineer) their positioning statement:

For [target audience], [product/company] is the [category] that [key benefit/differentiator] because [reason to believe].

Example:

For mid-market SaaS marketing teams, Acme is the campaign management platform that unifies planning and execution in one workspace because it is built on a single data model that eliminates tool fragmentation.

Positioning Map

Plot competitors on a 2x2 matrix using the two most important dimensions for your market:

Common axis pairs:

  • Price vs. Capability (low cost / basic vs. premium / full-featured)
  • Ease of Use vs. Power (simple / limited vs. complex / flexible)
  • SMB Focus vs. Enterprise Focus (self-serve / individual vs. sales-led / team)
  • Point Solution vs. Platform (does one thing well vs. does many things)
  • Innovative vs. Established (new approach vs. proven track record)

Identify which quadrant is underserved or where your differentiation is strongest.

Category Strategy
  • Create a new category: if you do something genuinely different, define and own the category (high risk, high reward)
  • Reframe the existing category: change how buyers evaluate the category to favor your strengths
  • Win the existing category: compete directly on recognized criteria and out-execute
  • Niche within the category: own a specific segment, use case, or audience
Positioning Pitfalls to Avoid
  • Positioning against a competitor rather than for a customer need
  • Claiming too many differentiators (pick 1-2 that matter most)
  • Using category jargon the customer does not use
  • Positioning on features rather than outcomes
  • Changing positioning too frequently (confuses the market)

Battlecard Creation

A competitive battlecard is a one-page reference for sales and marketing teams. Include:

Header
  • Competitor name and logo
  • Last updated date
  • Competitive win rate (if tracked)
Quick Overview
  • What they do (one sentence)
  • Their target customer
  • Pricing model summary
  • Key recent developments
Their Pitch
  • How they describe themselves
  • Their primary tagline
  • Their top 3 claimed differentiators
Strengths (Be Honest)
  • Where they genuinely compete well
  • What customers like about them (from reviews)
  • Features or capabilities where they lead
Weaknesses
  • Consistent customer complaints (from reviews)
  • Technical limitations
  • Gaps in their offering
  • Areas where customers report dissatisfaction
Our Differentiators
  • 3-5 specific ways your product or approach is different
  • For each: the differentiator, why it matters to the customer, and proof
Objection Handling
If the prospect says...Respond with...
"[Competitor] does X too""Here is how our approach differs..."
"[Competitor] is cheaper""Here is what that price difference gets you..."
"I've heard good things about [Competitor]""They are strong at X. Where we differ is..."
Landmines to Set

Questions to ask prospects early that highlight your advantages:

  • "How do you currently handle [area where competitor is weak]?"
  • "How important is [capability you have that they lack]?"
  • "Have you considered [risk that your product mitigates]?"
Landmines to Defuse

Questions competitors might encourage prospects to ask you, with prepared responses.

Win/Loss Themes
  • Common reasons deals are won against this competitor
  • Common reasons deals are lost to this competitor
  • What types of prospects favor them vs. you
Battlecard Maintenance
  • Review and update quarterly at minimum
  • Update immediately after major competitor announcements
  • Incorporate win/loss feedback from sales team
  • Track which objection-handling responses are most effective

Output

Present the full competitive brief with clear formatting. Note the date of the research so the user knows the freshness of the data.

After the brief, ask:

"Would you like me to:

  • Create a battlecard for your sales team based on this analysis?
  • Draft messaging that exploits the positioning gaps identified?
  • Dive deeper into any specific competitor?
  • Set up a competitive monitoring plan?"

FAQ