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Competitor Analysis Prompt Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A competitor analysis prompt generator gives you guiding questions to work through a thorough, honest competitor analysis. It is easy to either ignore competitors or obsess over them; a structured analysis does neither, helping you understand where you genuinely win, where you fall short, and which gaps you could own. This tool produces pointed prompts that push past surface comparisons to the things that actually move customers. Choose how many you want and work through them with your team. It is ideal for strategy sessions, positioning work, and market research. Answer each prompt with evidence rather than assumptions — talk to customers who chose a competitor, read their reviews, and try their product — and be honest about where rivals are stronger, because that is where the useful insight lives. The goal is not to copy competitors but to find the position only you can credibly own.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose how many prompts you want.
  2. Click Generate to produce analysis prompts.
  3. Work through each with real evidence.
  4. Turn findings into a clear position.

Use Cases

  • Running a competitor analysis
  • Sharpening your market positioning
  • Preparing for a strategy session
  • Researching a new market
  • Finding an underserved audience

Tips

  • Answer with evidence, not assumptions.
  • Be honest about rivals' strengths.
  • Look for the audience they ignore.
  • Aim to own a position, not copy one.

FAQ

what is a competitor analysis

A competitor analysis is a structured look at your rivals — their strengths, weaknesses, pricing, and positioning — to understand the market and find your edge. Done well, it reveals where you genuinely win and which gaps you could credibly own.

how do i analyse competitors objectively

Use evidence rather than assumptions: talk to customers who chose a rival, read their reviews, and try their product yourself. Being honest about where competitors are stronger is uncomfortable but is exactly where the useful insight tends to hide.

what should i do with the findings

Use them to find a position only you can credibly own, not to copy competitors. Double down on your genuine strengths, address the gaps that matter to customers, and target the audiences your rivals are neglecting.