Smithery Logo
MCPsSkillsDocsPricing
Login
Smithery Logo

Give agents more agency

Resources

DocumentationPrivacy PolicySystem Status

Company

PricingAboutBlog

Connect

© 2026 Smithery. All rights reserved.

    wshobson

    competitive-landscape

    wshobson/competitive-landscape
    Business
    28,185
    7 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    Install via Skills CLI

    or add to your agent
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
    • Codex
      Codex
    • OpenClaw
      OpenClaw
    • Cursor
      Cursor
    • Amp
      Amp
    • GitHub Copilot
      GitHub Copilot
    • Gemini CLI
      Gemini CLI
    • Kilo Code
      Kilo Code
    • Junie
      Junie
    • Replit
      Replit
    • Windsurf
      Windsurf
    • Cline
      Cline
    • Continue
      Continue
    • OpenCode
      OpenCode
    • OpenHands
      OpenHands
    • Roo Code
      Roo Code
    • Augment
      Augment
    • Goose
      Goose
    • Trae
      Trae
    • Zencoder
      Zencoder
    • Antigravity
      Antigravity
    ├─
    ├─
    └─

    About

    This skill should be used when the user asks to "analyze competitors", "assess competitive landscape", "identify differentiation", "evaluate market positioning", "apply Porter's Five Forces", or...

    SKILL.md

    Competitive Landscape Analysis

    Comprehensive frameworks for analyzing competition, identifying differentiation opportunities, and developing winning market positioning strategies.

    Overview

    Understand competitive dynamics using proven frameworks (Porter's Five Forces, Blue Ocean Strategy, positioning maps) to identify opportunities and craft defensible competitive advantages.

    Porter's Five Forces

    Analyze industry attractiveness and competitive intensity.

    Force 1: Threat of New Entrants

    Barriers to Entry:

    • Capital requirements
    • Economies of scale
    • Switching costs
    • Brand loyalty
    • Regulatory barriers
    • Access to distribution
    • Network effects

    High Threat: Low barriers, easy to enter (e.g., simple SaaS tools) Low Threat: High barriers (e.g., regulated industries, hardware)

    Analysis Questions:

    • How easy is it for new competitors to enter?
    • What would it cost to launch a competing product?
    • Are there network effects or switching costs protecting incumbents?

    Force 2: Bargaining Power of Suppliers

    Supplier Power Factors:

    • Supplier concentration
    • Availability of substitutes
    • Importance to supplier
    • Switching costs
    • Forward integration threat

    High Power: Few suppliers, critical inputs (e.g., cloud infrastructure providers) Low Power: Many alternatives, commoditized (e.g., generic services)

    Analysis Questions:

    • Who are our critical suppliers?
    • Could they raise prices or reduce quality?
    • Can we switch suppliers easily?

    Force 3: Bargaining Power of Buyers

    Buyer Power Factors:

    • Buyer concentration
    • Volume purchased
    • Product differentiation
    • Price sensitivity
    • Backward integration threat

    High Power: Few large customers, standardized products (e.g., enterprise deals) Low Power: Many small customers, differentiated product (e.g., consumer subscriptions)

    Analysis Questions:

    • Can customers easily switch to competitors?
    • Do few customers generate most revenue?
    • How price-sensitive are buyers?

    Force 4: Threat of Substitutes

    Substitute Considerations:

    • Alternative solutions
    • Price-performance tradeoff
    • Switching costs
    • Buyer propensity to substitute

    High Threat: Many alternatives, low switching cost (e.g., productivity software) Low Threat: Unique solution, high switching cost (e.g., ERP systems)

    Analysis Questions:

    • What alternative ways can customers solve this problem?
    • How do substitutes compare on price and performance?
    • What's the cost to switch to a substitute?

    Force 5: Competitive Rivalry

    Rivalry Intensity Factors:

    • Number of competitors
    • Industry growth rate
    • Product differentiation
    • Exit barriers
    • Strategic stakes

    High Rivalry: Many competitors, slow growth, commoditized (e.g., email marketing) Low Rivalry: Few competitors, fast growth, differentiated (e.g., emerging AI tools)

    Analysis Questions:

    • How many direct competitors exist?
    • Is the market growing or stagnant?
    • How differentiated are offerings?
    • Are competitors competing on price or value?

    Forces Analysis Summary

    Create a scorecard:

    Force Intensity (1-5) Impact Key Factors
    New Entrants 3 Medium Low barriers but network effects
    Supplier Power 2 Low Many cloud providers
    Buyer Power 4 High Enterprise customers concentrated
    Substitutes 3 Medium Manual processes alternative
    Rivalry 4 High 10+ direct competitors

    Overall Assessment: Moderate industry attractiveness with high rivalry and buyer power

    Blue Ocean Strategy

    Identify uncontested market space through value innovation.

    Four Actions Framework

    Eliminate: What factors can be eliminated that the industry takes for granted?

    Reduce: What factors can be reduced well below industry standard?

    Raise: What factors can be raised well above industry standard?

    Create: What factors can be created that the industry never offered?

    Strategy Canvas

    Map your offering vs. competitors on key factors.

    Example: Budget Hotels

    High |                    ★ Traditional Hotels
         |          ★ Budget Hotels (new)
         |
    Low  |___________________________________
         Price  Luxury  Convenience  Cleanliness
    
    Budget Hotel Strategy:
    - Eliminate: Luxury amenities, room service
    - Reduce: Lobby size, staff
    - Raise: Cleanliness, online booking
    - Create: Self-service kiosks, mobile app
    

    Value Innovation

    Find the sweet spot: Lower cost + higher value

    Steps:

    1. Map industry competing factors
    2. Identify factors to eliminate/reduce (cost savings)
    3. Identify factors to raise/create (differentiation)
    4. Validate that combination creates new market space

    Competitive Positioning

    Positioning Map

    Plot competitors on 2-3 key dimensions.

    Example Dimensions:

    • Price vs. Features
    • Complexity vs. Ease of Use
    • Enterprise vs. SMB Focus
    • Self-Service vs. High-Touch
    • Generalist vs. Specialist

    How to Create:

    1. Choose 2 dimensions most important to customers
    2. Plot all competitors
    3. Identify gaps (white space)
    4. Validate gap represents real customer need

    Example:

    High Price
        |
        |  ★ Enterprise A      ★ Enterprise B
        |
        |          ● Our Position (gap)
        |
        |  ★ Competitor C      ★ Competitor D
        |
    Low Price |____________________________________________
            Simple                           Complex
    

    Differentiation Strategy

    How to Differentiate:

    1. Product Differentiation

      • Unique features
      • Superior performance
      • Better design/UX
      • Integration ecosystem
    2. Service Differentiation

      • Customer support quality
      • Onboarding experience
      • Response time
      • Success programs
    3. Brand Differentiation

      • Trust and reputation
      • Thought leadership
      • Community
      • Values alignment
    4. Price Differentiation

      • Premium positioning
      • Value positioning
      • Transparent pricing
      • Flexible packaging

    Positioning Statement Framework

    For [target customer]
    Who [statement of need or opportunity]
    Our product is [product category]
    That [statement of key benefit]
    Unlike [primary competitive alternative]
    Our product [statement of primary differentiation]
    

    Example:

    For e-commerce companies
    Who struggle with email marketing automation
    Our product is an AI-powered email platform
    That increases conversion rates by 40%
    Unlike Klaviyo and Mailchimp
    Our product uses AI to personalize at scale
    

    Competitive Intelligence

    Information Gathering

    Public Sources:

    • Company websites and blogs
    • Press releases and news
    • Job postings (hint at strategy)
    • Customer reviews (G2, Capterra)
    • Social media and forums
    • Glassdoor (employee insights)
    • SEC filings (public companies)
    • Patent filings

    Direct Research:

    • Customer interviews
    • Win/loss analysis
    • Sales team feedback
    • Product demos and trials
    • Conference attendance

    Competitor Profile Template

    For each key competitor, document:

    Company Overview:

    • Founded, HQ, funding, size
    • Leadership team
    • Company stage and trajectory

    Product:

    • Core features
    • Target customers
    • Pricing and packaging
    • Technology stack
    • Recent launches

    Go-to-Market:

    • Sales model (self-serve, sales-led)
    • Marketing strategy
    • Distribution channels
    • Partnerships

    Strengths:

    • What they do better than anyone
    • Key competitive advantages
    • Market position

    Weaknesses:

    • Gaps in product
    • Customer complaints
    • Operational challenges

    Strategy:

    • Stated direction
    • Inferred priorities
    • Likely next moves

    Competitive Pricing Analysis

    Price Positioning

    Premium (Top 25%):

    • Superior product/service
    • Strong brand
    • High-touch sales
    • Enterprise focus

    Mid-Market (Middle 50%):

    • Balanced value
    • Standard features
    • Mixed sales model
    • Broad market

    Value (Bottom 25%):

    • Basic functionality
    • Self-service
    • Cost leadership
    • High volume, low margin

    Pricing Comparison Matrix

    Competitor Entry Price Mid Tier Enterprise Model
    Competitor A $29/mo $99/mo Custom Subscription
    Competitor B $49/mo $199/mo $499/mo Subscription
    Us $39/mo $129/mo Custom Subscription

    Analysis:

    • Are we priced competitively?
    • What does our pricing signal?
    • Are there gaps in our packaging?

    Go-to-Market Strategy

    Market Entry Strategies

    Direct Competition:

    • Head-to-head against established players
    • Requires differentiation and resources
    • Example: Better features at lower price

    Niche Focus:

    • Target underserved segment
    • Become specialist vs. generalist
    • Example: "Salesforce for real estate"

    Disruptive Innovation:

    • Target non-consumers or low end
    • Improve over time to move upmarket
    • Example: Freemium model disrupting enterprise

    Platform Play:

    • Build ecosystem and network effects
    • Aggregate complementary services
    • Example: Marketplace or API platform

    Beachhead Market

    Characteristics of Good Beachhead:

    • Specific, reachable segment
    • Acute pain you solve well
    • Limited competition
    • Willing to pay
    • Can lead to expansion

    Example: Instead of "project management software", target "project management for construction teams"

    Competitive Advantage

    Sustainable Advantages

    Network Effects:

    • Value increases with users
    • Example: Slack, marketplaces

    Switching Costs:

    • High cost to change
    • Example: CRM systems with data

    Economies of Scale:

    • Unit costs decrease with volume
    • Example: Cloud infrastructure

    Brand:

    • Trust and reputation
    • Example: Security software

    Proprietary Technology:

    • Patents or trade secrets
    • Example: Algorithms, data

    Regulatory:

    • Licenses or approvals
    • Example: Fintech, healthcare

    Testing Your Advantage

    Ask:

    • Can competitors copy this in < 2 years?
    • Does this matter to customers?
    • Do we execute this better than anyone?
    • Is this advantage durable?

    If "no" to any, it's not a sustainable advantage.

    Competitive Monitoring

    What to Track

    Product Changes:

    • New features
    • Pricing changes
    • Packaging adjustments

    Market Signals:

    • Funding announcements
    • Key hires (especially leadership)
    • Customer wins/losses
    • Partnerships

    Performance Metrics:

    • Revenue (if public or disclosed)
    • Customer count
    • Growth rate
    • Market share estimates

    Monitoring Cadence

    Weekly:

    • Product release notes
    • News mentions

    Monthly:

    • Win/loss analysis review
    • Positioning map updates

    Quarterly:

    • Deep competitive review
    • Strategy adjustment

    Annually:

    • Major strategy reassessment
    • Market trends analysis

    Quick Start

    To analyze competitive landscape:

    1. Identify competitors - Direct, indirect, and future threats
    2. Apply Porter's Five Forces - Assess industry attractiveness
    3. Create positioning map - Visualize competitive space
    4. Profile top 3-5 competitors - Deep dive on key rivals
    5. Identify differentiation - What makes you unique
    6. Analyze pricing - Where do you fit?
    7. Assess advantages - What's defensible?
    8. Develop strategy - How to win
    Recommended Servers
    Tender MCP
    Tender MCP
    InfraNodus Knowledge Graphs & Text Analysis
    InfraNodus Knowledge Graphs & Text Analysis
    Local Model Suitability MCP
    Local Model Suitability MCP
    Repository
    wshobson/agents
    Files