Competitive Teardown
Production-grade competitor analysis framework covering systematic data collection across 6 intelligence sources, a 12-dimension scoring rubric, feature comparison matrices, SWOT analysis, pricing model deconstruction, UX audit methodology, and strategic action plans. Produces battle-card-ready output and stakeholder presentation templates.
Table of Contents
- When to Use
- Teardown Workflow
- Data Collection Framework
- 12-Dimension Scoring Rubric
- Feature Comparison Matrix
- Pricing Analysis Framework
- SWOT Analysis Template
- UX Audit Methodology
- Positioning Map
- Action Plan Framework
- Battle Card Template
- Stakeholder Presentation
- Output Artifacts
- Related Skills
When to Use
| Trigger | Teardown Scope | |---------|---------------| | Before product strategy or roadmap session | Full teardown (2-4 competitors) | | Competitor launches major feature or pricing change | Focused teardown (1 competitor, updated dimensions only) | | Quarterly competitive review | Update existing teardowns + trend analysis | | Before a sales pitch (battle card needed) | Single-competitor battle card | | Entering a new market segment | Full teardown of segment incumbents |
Clarify First
Before running the teardown, confirm these inputs. If any is unknown or vague, ASK — do not assume:
- [ ] Competitors + primary focus — the 2-4 names and which is the main threat (sets scorecard columns and depth)
- [ ] Your own product baseline — so the 12-dimension scorecard and feature matrix have a "you" column to compare against
- [ ] Decision this feeds — roadmap session, sales battle card, or new-market entry (determines full teardown vs single battle card vs segment incumbents)
- [ ] Available data sources — pricing pages, 50+ reviews, product access (the rubric needs evidence; thin data caps which dimensions are scorable)
Stop rule: ask only the 2-3 that most change the output. If the user says "just draft it," proceed and list your assumptions at the top of the teardown.
Teardown Workflow
Step-by-Step Process
- Define competitors -- List 2-4 competitors. Confirm which is the primary focus.
- Collect data -- Gather intelligence from at least 3 of the 6 sources per competitor.
- Score using rubric -- Apply the 12-dimension rubric to produce a numeric scorecard.
- Generate comparison outputs -- Feature matrix, pricing analysis, SWOT, positioning map.
- Build action plan -- Translate findings into quick wins, medium-term, and strategic priorities.
- Package for stakeholders -- Assemble the presentation or battle card.
Validation Checkpoints
- Before scoring: Confirm you have pricing data, 20+ user reviews, and recent product data
- Before action plan: Every dimension should have a score and supporting evidence
- Before presentation: Every recommendation should tie back to a data point
Data Collection Framework
Source 1: Website and Product Analysis
| Data Point | Where to Find | What It Signals | |-----------|--------------|-----------------| | Pricing tiers and price points | Pricing page | Market positioning, target segment | | Feature lists per tier | Pricing + feature pages | Packaging strategy | | Primary CTA and messaging | Homepage hero | Positioning and ICP | | Case studies and customer logos | Case study page, homepage | Target segments, social proof | | Integration partnerships | Integrations page | Ecosystem strategy | | Trust signals | Footer, security page | Enterprise readiness | | Job postings | Careers page, LinkedIn | Growth direction, tech stack |
Source 2: User Reviews
Platforms: G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, App Store, Product Hunt
| Category | What to Track | Strategic Value | |----------|-------------|-----------------| | Praise themes | What users love (top 5 themes) | Their defensible strengths | | Complaint themes | What users hate (top 5 themes) | Your opportunities | | Feature requests | What users want but do not have | Product roadmap gaps | | Switching mentions | Why users left competitors | Competitive migration paths | | Rating trends | Quarter-over-quarter rating change | Improving or declining |
Sample size target: 50+ reviews per competitor for reliable themes.
Source 3: Job Postings
| Signal | What It Means | |--------|--------------| | High engineering hiring | Product investment, scaling | | AI/ML roles | AI features coming | | Sales team expansion | Moving upmarket or expanding geographically | | Customer success roles | Retention focus, enterprise motion | | Compliance/legal roles | Regulatory expansion | | Reduced postings | Cost cutting, potential contraction |
Source 4: SEO and Content Analysis
| Metric | Tool | Strategic Value | |--------|------|-----------------| | Top 20 organic keywords | Ahrefs, SEMrush, GSC | Content strategy and targeting | | Domain authority | Ahrefs, Moz | Brand strength | | Blog publishing cadence | Manual check | Content investment level | | Ranking pages (product vs blog vs docs) | Ahrefs | Traffic composition |
Source 5: Social Media and Community
| Platform | What to Track | |----------|-------------| | Twitter/X | Product announcements, customer praise, complaints | | Reddit | Honest reviews, comparison threads | | LinkedIn | Thought leadership, hiring signals, employee count | | Community forums | Feature requests, workarounds, power user patterns | | Discord/Slack | Community size, engagement level |
Source 6: Financial and Market Data
| Source | Data Available | |-------|---------------| | Crunchbase | Funding, valuation, investors, employee count | | LinkedIn | Employee count trend (growth proxy) | | Public filings (if public) | Revenue, growth rate, churn | | Industry reports | Market share estimates |
12-Dimension Scoring Rubric
Score each competitor (and your own product) on a 1-5 scale with evidence notes.
| # | Dimension | 1 (Weak) | 3 (Average) | 5 (Best-in-class) | |---|-----------|----------|-------------|-------------------| | 1 | Features | Core only, many gaps | Solid coverage | Comprehensive + unique capabilities | | 2 | Pricing | Confusing or overpriced | Market-rate, clear | Transparent, flexible, fair | | 3 | UX / Design | Confusing, high friction | Functional, adequate | Delightful, minimal friction | | 4 | Performance | Slow, unreliable | Acceptable | Fast, high uptime, responsive | | 5 | Documentation | Sparse, outdated | Decent coverage | Comprehensive, searchable, with examples | | 6 | Support | Email only, slow response | Chat + email, reasonable SLA | 24/7, multiple channels, fast | | 7 | Integrations | 0-5 native integrations | 6-25 integrations | 26+ or deep ecosystem (API + marketplace) | | 8 | Security | No mentions | SOC2 claimed | SOC2 Type II + ISO 27001 + GDPR | | 9 | Scalability | No enterprise tier | Mid-market ready | Enterprise-grade (SSO, SCIM, SLA) | | 10 | Brand | Generic, unmemorable | Decent positioning | Strong, differentiated, recognized | | 11 | Community | None | Forum or Slack exists | Active, vibrant, user-generated content | | 12 | Innovation | No releases in 6+ months | Quarterly releases | Frequent, meaningful, well-communicated |
Scoring Output Format
| Dimension | Your Product | Competitor A | Competitor B | Competitor C | |-----------|-------------|-------------|-------------|-------------| | Features | 4 | 3 | 5 | 3 | | Pricing | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 | | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | | Total (/60) | 38 | 35 | 42 | 33 |
Feature Comparison Matrix
Matrix Structure
| Feature Category | Your Product | Competitor A | Competitor B | Notes | |-----------------|-------------|-------------|-------------|-------| | Core Features | | | | | | Feature 1 | Full | Full | Partial | Comp B lacks [specific capability] | | Feature 2 | Full | Missing | Full | Our differentiator | | Feature 3 | Partial | Full | Full | Gap to close | | Platform | | | | | | Web app | Yes | Yes | Yes | | | iOS app | Yes | No | Yes | Comp A gap | | API access | Full | Limited | Full | | | Enterprise | | | | | | SSO | Yes | No | Yes | | | Audit logs | Yes | Yes | No | | | Custom SLA | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Score per cell: Full = 5, Partial = 3, Basic = 2, Missing = 0
Pricing Analysis Framework
Pricing Model Comparison
| Attribute | Your Product | Competitor A | Competitor B | |-----------|-------------|-------------|-------------| | Model type | Per seat | Usage-based | Flat rate | | Free tier | Yes (3 users) | Yes (limited) | No | | Entry price | $15/user/mo | $29/mo (up to 1K events) | $49/mo | | Mid-tier price | $35/user/mo | $99/mo | $99/mo | | Enterprise | Custom | Custom | $249/mo | | Annual discount | 20% | 15% | 2 months free | | Trial | 14-day free | 7-day free | 30-day money-back |
Pricing Position Map
| Position | Characteristic | Your Strategy | |----------|---------------|---------------| | Price leader | Lowest price, may signal lower quality | Win on value, not features | | Value leader | Best features-per-dollar ratio | Win on differentiation | | Premium | Highest price, justified by brand/features | Win on exclusivity and support | | Disruptor | Radically different model (free, usage-based) | Win on accessibility |
SWOT Analysis Template
For each competitor, produce:
Competitor SWOT
| Quadrant | Points | |----------|--------| | Strengths (Their advantages) | 3-5 bullets, each anchored to a data signal | | Weaknesses (Their vulnerabilities) | 3-5 bullets, each tied to reviews, missing features, or complaints | | Opportunities for Us | What their weaknesses create for us | | Threats to Us | What their strengths mean for our position |
Evidence rule: Every bullet must cite the data source (review quote, pricing page, job posting count, feature comparison, etc.).
UX Audit Methodology
First-Run Experience Audit
| Dimension | What to Measure | How to Score | |-----------|----------------|--------------| | Time to first value (TTFV) | Minutes from signup to first meaningful output | < 5 min = 5, 5-15 min = 3, > 15 min = 1 | | Steps to activation | Number of screens/actions before core value | < 3 = 5, 3-7 = 3, > 7 = 1 | | Credit card required | Required at signup? | No = 5, Optional = 3, Required = 1 | | Onboarding quality | Wizard, tooltips, empty states | Comprehensive = 5, Basic = 3, None = 1 | | SSO available | Google, Microsoft, etc. | Yes = 5, No = 1 |
Core Workflow Audit
For the 3 most common workflows, compare:
| Workflow | Steps (Yours) | Steps (Competitor) | Friction Points | |----------|-------------|-------------------|-----------------| | [Primary workflow] | N | N | Specific UX issues | | [Secondary workflow] | N | N | Specific UX issues | | [Tertiary workflow] | N | N | Specific UX issues |
Positioning Map
2x2 Positioning Map
Choose the two axes most relevant to your market:
| Common Axis Pairs | When to Use | |-------------------|-------------| | Simple / Complex x Low Price / High Price | General product comparison | | SMB / Enterprise x Narrow / Broad Features | Market segment analysis | | Self-Serve / Sales-Led x Point Solution / Platform | Go-to-market comparison | | Technical / Non-Technical x Niche / Horizontal | Audience analysis |
Map Template
High Price / Enterprise
│
│
[Competitor B] │ [Competitor C]
│
Simple ─────────────────┼─────────────────── Complex
│
[YOUR PRODUCT] │ [Competitor A]
│
│
Low Price / SMB
Action Plan Framework
Three Horizons
| Horizon | Timeframe | Effort | Examples | |---------|-----------|--------|---------| | Quick wins | 0-4 weeks | Low | Publish comparison pages, update pricing page, add missing trust badges | | Medium-term | 1-3 months | Moderate | Build top-requested integration, improve onboarding TTFV, launch free tier | | Strategic | 3-12 months | High | Enter new market segment, build API v2, achieve SOC2 Type II |
Priority Scoring
For each action item, score:
| Factor | Weight | Scale | |--------|--------|-------| | Competitive impact | 40% | How much does this close or widen a gap? | | Customer demand | 30% | How many customers/prospects request this? | | Implementation effort | 20% | How hard is this to build/execute? | | Revenue impact | 10% | Direct revenue contribution? |
Battle Card Template
One-Page Battle Card
COMPETITOR: [Name]
LAST UPDATED: [Date]
THREAT LEVEL: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH / CRITICAL]
THEIR POSITIONING: [1 sentence]
OUR POSITIONING AGAINST THEM: [1 sentence]
WHERE THEY WIN:
- [Strength 1 with evidence]
- [Strength 2 with evidence]
- [Strength 3 with evidence]
WHERE WE WIN:
- [Advantage 1 with evidence]
- [Advantage 2 with evidence]
- [Advantage 3 with evidence]
LANDMINES (questions that expose their weaknesses):
- "How does [competitor] handle [weakness area]?"
- "Can you show me [feature they lack]?"
- "What do their customers say about [common complaint]?"
OBJECTION HANDLING:
- "They're cheaper" → [Response with value framing]
- "They have [feature]" → [Response with alternative/roadmap]
- "Everyone uses them" → [Response with differentiation]
PRICING COMPARISON:
[Quick comparison table]
CUSTOMER QUOTE:
"[Quote from a customer who switched from this competitor to you]"
Stakeholder Presentation
7-Slide Structure
| Slide | Content | |-------|---------| | 1. Executive Summary | Threat level, top strength, top opportunity, recommended action | | 2. Market Position | 2x2 positioning map with all players | | 3. Feature Scorecard | 12-dimension scores, total comparison | | 4. Pricing Analysis | Pricing comparison table + key pricing insight | | 5. UX Comparison | Where they win (3 bullets) vs where we win (3 bullets) | | 6. Voice of Customer | Top 3 competitor complaints from reviews (quoted) | | 7. Action Plan | Quick wins, medium-term, strategic priorities |
Output Artifacts
| Artifact | Format | Description | |----------|--------|-------------| | Data Collection Report | Structured notes per source | Raw intelligence organized by source type | | 12-Dimension Scorecard | Scored table with evidence | Numeric comparison across all dimensions | | Feature Comparison Matrix | Grid table | Feature-by-feature comparison with scoring | | Pricing Analysis | Comparison table + position map | Model comparison, tier mapping, positioning | | SWOT Analysis | Per-competitor 4-quadrant | Anchored to data signals | | UX Audit | Scored checklist | TTFV, steps, friction analysis | | Positioning Map | 2x2 diagram | Visual market position | | Action Plan | Three-horizon table | Prioritized competitive responses | | Battle Card | One-page template | Sales-ready competitive reference | | Stakeholder Presentation | 7-slide outline | Executive-ready competitive briefing |
Related Skills
- competitor-alternatives -- Use for creating comparison and alternative pages for SEO/marketing. Competitive-teardown provides the intelligence; competitor-alternatives produces the marketing content.
- pricing-strategy -- Use when competitive analysis reveals pricing misalignment. Feed teardown pricing data into pricing-strategy.
- page-cro -- Use for optimizing your comparison or competitor landing pages for conversion.
- content-creator -- Use for writing competitive content (blog posts, comparison guides) based on teardown findings.
Tool Reference
1. competitor_scorer.py
Purpose: Score competitors across the 12-dimension rubric and generate a numeric comparison scorecard.
python scripts/competitor_scorer.py competitor_data.json
python scripts/competitor_scorer.py competitor_data.json --json
| Flag | Required | Description |
|------|----------|-------------|
| competitor_data.json | Yes | JSON file with competitor dimension scores and evidence |
| --json | No | Output results as JSON |
| --weights | No | Custom dimension weights as JSON string (default: equal weights) |
2. feature_matrix_builder.py
Purpose: Build a feature comparison matrix from structured feature data and calculate coverage scores.
python scripts/feature_matrix_builder.py features.json
python scripts/feature_matrix_builder.py features.json --json
| Flag | Required | Description |
|------|----------|-------------|
| features.json | Yes | JSON file with feature comparison data |
| --json | No | Output results as JSON |
3. battle_card_generator.py
Purpose: Generate a one-page battle card from competitor data for sales team use.
python scripts/battle_card_generator.py competitor_profile.json
python scripts/battle_card_generator.py competitor_profile.json --json
| Flag | Required | Description |
|------|----------|-------------|
| competitor_profile.json | Yes | JSON file with competitor profile data |
| --json | No | Output results as JSON |
| --format | No | Output format: text (default) or markdown |
Troubleshooting
| Problem | Likely Cause | Solution | |---------|-------------|----------| | Scoring feels subjective across analysts | No shared rubric calibration | Use the 12-dimension rubric with explicit 1/3/5 definitions; have two analysts score independently and reconcile | | Data is stale within weeks of teardown | Fast-moving competitors | Set calendar reminders for monthly pricing checks and quarterly full refreshes; use competitor_scorer.py to track score changes over time | | Feature matrix has too many rows to be useful | Trying to capture every micro-feature | Group features into 8-12 categories; detail only the top differentiators | | Battle cards are not used by sales | Too long, too academic, or not actionable | Keep to one page; lead with "Where We Win" and "Landmines"; validate with 3 sales reps before distributing | | Review data is contradictory | Small sample size or selection bias | Target 50+ reviews per competitor across G2, Capterra, and TrustRadius; weight recent reviews more heavily | | Cannot get pricing data for enterprise tiers | Custom pricing not published | Use sales intel (request a demo), G2 pricing data, or customer interviews for directional estimates | | SWOT analysis has no actionable output | Analysis lacks connection to action plan | Every SWOT bullet must map to a specific quick-win, medium-term, or strategic action |
Success Criteria
- 12-dimension scorecard completed with evidence notes for every score
- Feature matrix covers at least 80% of features that prospects evaluate
- Battle cards reviewed and approved by 3+ sales representatives
- Pricing data verified within the last 30 days
- Teardown produces at least 3 actionable quick wins and 2 strategic priorities
- Stakeholder presentation reviewed and feedback incorporated within 1 week
- Teardown data refreshed quarterly with score trend tracking
Scope & Limitations
- In scope: Product analysis, feature comparison, pricing deconstruction, UX audit, SWOT analysis, battle card creation, action plan generation
- Out of scope: Primary market research (customer interviews, surveys), financial modeling, legal competitive analysis, intellectual property assessment
- Data dependency: Quality depends on publicly available data, user reviews, and product access; some competitors may have limited public information
- Bias risk: Teardowns conducted by internal teams may have confirmation bias; consider external validation for high-stakes decisions
- Point-in-time: Teardowns are snapshots; competitors evolve continuously -- schedule regular refreshes
Integration Points
- competitor-alternatives -- Teardown provides the data; competitor-alternatives produces the marketing content (comparison and alternative pages)
- pricing-strategy -- When teardown reveals pricing misalignment, feed pricing data into pricing-strategy for repositioning analysis
- page-cro -- Use for optimizing your comparison or competitor landing pages for conversion after teardown produces the content
- sales-engineer -- Battle cards feed directly into sales engineering competitive positioning and RFP responses
- customer-success-manager -- When exit surveys reveal COMPETITOR as a top churn reason, use teardown data to understand what competitors offer that you do not