Business
Competitive Analysis Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A competitive analysis generator gives you a structured framework for sizing up a rival, so your research is thorough and comparable instead of a scattered list of notes. Enter a competitor and it returns a six-part template covering positioning, product, pricing, marketing, customer reviews, and the resulting opportunity, plus a prompt to summarise the single biggest threat and opportunity in one line each. Founders, product managers, and marketers use it to prepare for strategy sessions, brief a team, or build a comparison slide for a pitch. Working through the same lenses for every competitor makes it easy to spot patterns and gaps across a market. Everything generates instantly in your browser. Use the framework to guide your research, fill each section with real evidence rather than assumptions, and end with the conclusion that matters: where you can realistically win. A consistent structure turns competitor-watching into actual strategy.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter the competitor you want to analyse.
- Click Generate to produce the analysis framework.
- Fill each section with real evidence from research.
- Conclude with the biggest threat and opportunity.
Use Cases
- •Preparing a competitor breakdown for a strategy session
- •Building a comparison slide for a pitch or board deck
- •Briefing a team on a key rival consistently
- •Spotting gaps and opportunities across a market
- •Structuring ongoing competitor research
Tips
- →Use the same framework for every rival to compare them fairly.
- →Back each section with evidence, not assumptions.
- →Mine customer reviews for unmet needs you could serve.
- →End with a decision: where can you realistically win?
FAQ
why use the same framework for every competitor
Analysing each rival through identical lenses — positioning, product, pricing, marketing, reviews — makes their strengths and gaps directly comparable. That comparability is what lets you spot market-wide patterns and decide where you can realistically differentiate.
where do i find the information
Use the competitor's website and pricing page, customer reviews on third-party sites, their social and content channels, and any public case studies or press. Fill each section with evidence rather than assumptions, and note where you are guessing.
what is the most important part
The summary. Research only matters if it leads to a decision, so the framework ends by forcing you to name the single biggest threat and the single biggest opportunity — the inputs your strategy should actually act on.