Competitor Analysis

Competitive Analysis is thoroughly researching the competitors to your product to understand the market landscape and positioning strategy

Jordan Duff avatar
Written by Jordan Duff
Updated over a week ago

Overview

Method category: Generative product research

How to Use This in GLIDR

Competitive Analysis is thoroughly researching the competitors to your product and market to understand the landscape of related solutions and figure out where yours fits in.

In GLIDR, Competitive Analysis is a valuable type of Research that will help you understand where your product fits into the competitive landscape. Connect relevant ideas about your product and its features, run your Research, then seek out primary and secondary research sources to learn more about competitors' features and positioning. Figure out how their positioning compares to yours and record this information in the Key Insights section of each piece of Evidence, then finally move the Research to the Analyze phase and reflect on what you've learned about competitors.

Learn more about each of those aspects of GLIDR:

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Competitor Analysis

Article excerpted from The Real Startup Book

In Brief

Competitive analysis is very much a secondary research method that you can perform online relatively quickly and comprehensively. It can be used for generative market analysis as well as generative product analysis. The analysis is absolutely crucial for any new business idea.

As you are defining your idea, you need to conduct research in order to paint a picture of the competitor landscape. You will likely start out with quite a wide capture of different players and will then be able to zoom in over time as your other experiments guide you towards the exact customer segment and solution you will build. A detailed competitor analysis can help you communicate your idea to others as well as differentiate it. The analysis is a form of due diligence repeated over time and is expected by investors or sponsors.

Helps Answer

  • Who is our competitor?

  • How are they solving their customer problems?

  • What form should the product take?

  • How can we differentiate our offering and positioning?

  • What type of revenues are being generated?

Tags

  • B2C

  • B2B

  • Qualitative

  • Channels

  • Value proposition

Description

Time Commitment & Resources

Initially 1-2 days and then keep adding on and perform regular scans of the market.

How To

The typical way to display a competitive analysis has been to plot performance on an X/Y graph with all the competitors located at the bottom left and your company at the top right. This method is typical when existing companies launch a new product into an existing crowded market place and is therefore not as relevant for startups or existing companies looking to create new markets (true innovation). Steve Blank suggests using a “petal diagram” where you plot your idea at the center of the slide. Highlight where your new customers are likely to come from (adjacent markets segments) using a cloud around your company (as many as needed) and fill in each section with names of companies that are representative players in each segment. You can then try to identify which companies are private and note how much investment they received to identify which spaces are being perceived as “attractive” to investors. On top of this, you can note the current and projected market size of each segment to understand how big your new market could be.

After initial analysis, you should know three things: who your biggest competitors are, the basics of their company strategy, and how you are (or will be) different from what they’re doing. By understanding the market landscape, you are able to gather more clues about how you might approach distribution, positioning and pricing.

Some tools you can use to extract competitor information are:

  • Crunchbase

  • AngelList

  • Quora

  • Google Finance (listed companies and their “related companies”)

  • Google Search (industry key words)

  • Google News Alerts (industry key words)

  • Forrester Research/IDC/Gartner etc. (market reports)

When doing competitive research on other web-based companies here are a few other tools you can use:

  • Compete to see their traffic data and which way it’s trending

  • Quantcast to get a rough feel for the demographics of their average customer

  • AppData (if they have a Facebook or mobile app) to see how engaged their users are

Interpreting Results

By understanding the key players in your space and adjacent segments, you will increase your domain knowledge around your business. If you can’t find any similar organization or research being conducted, it means you have not looked hard enough as it is highly unlikely that no one in the entire world is working on the same or very similar business idea. On the flip side, uncovering many competitors does not mean you should not continue. The discovery will help you to refine your offering and business model for a market that is growing overall.

“A rising tide can lift all boats.” So focus on being one of the boats, and don't worry about how to dominate the entire segment from day one. “Competitors” can become key partners to help each other get off the ground in a new market. They can also give you clues as to where you can gain initial traction in the market.

Potential Biases

  • Confirmation Bias: Entrepreneurs naturally don’t want to find competitors so they can put their blinders on. They prefer to simply focus on their own vision of how the world is. Make sure your methods are exhaustive, compelling, and repeated to keep up to date with new entrants. Get external/neutral help to make the analysis to avoid this kind of bias.

  • The Numbers: Don’t worry about too few or too many players but learn how can you fit into the space that is being created. Know your strengths and weaknesses against each player.

  • Too Local: Don’t limit your search to your local area. For most new business ideas today we need to be taking a global perspective and that also means doing global research.

Field Tips

  • Competitor Analysis should color your thinking, create the appropriate context and help educate you on what’s going on @byosko

  • Got a tip? Add a tweetable quote by emailing us: realbook@kromatic.com

Case Studies

References

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