Competitive X-Ray
Know what you're up against. Understand where you win, where you lose, and where the gaps are. This isn't just a technical comparison — it's a strategic assessment.
Process
Phase 1: Gather URLs
Ask the user for:
- Your site URL (production URL)
- Competitor URL (the site to compare against)
If the user provided both URLs already, skip asking.
Phase 2: Run Analysis
node ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/tools/compete-analyzer.mjs <your-url> <competitor-url>
Parse the JSON output.
Phase 3: Present Comparison
Present results in a clear head-to-head format:
Performance:
- Response time comparison (who's faster, by how much)
- Content size comparison
- What the speed difference means for user experience and SEO
Tech Stack:
- What each site is built with (framework, hosting, analytics, payments)
- What their tech choices reveal about their stage and priorities
- Overlap and differences
SEO:
- Score comparison (out of 10)
- Specific wins/losses (who has better meta tags, OG tags, sitemap, etc.)
- GEO readiness comparison (llms.txt, AI-friendly robots.txt, structured data)
- AEO readiness comparison (FAQPage schema, answer formatting)
Security:
- Header comparison
- HTTPS status
- What missing headers reveal about their security posture
Phase 4: Strategic Analysis
Go beyond raw data. A principal-level competitive analysis answers:
1. Moat Assessment
- What is their defensible advantage? (network effects, data, integrations, brand, switching costs)
- What is YOUR defensible advantage?
- Which moat is stronger, and what would it take to erode theirs?
2. Positioning Gap Analysis
- What market segment are they targeting? (enterprise, SMB, developer, consumer)
- Is there an underserved segment between you? (e.g., they target enterprise, you target solo founders — is there an SMB gap?)
- Where do they over-serve (features their users don't need) or under-serve (features their users wish they had)?
3. Pricing & Value Perception
- If pricing is visible, compare positioning: are they premium or budget? Is there room above, below, or between?
- What does their pricing structure tell you? (per-seat = team play, usage-based = API/developer, flat = SMB simplicity)
4. Technical Debt Signals
- Slow response time = legacy stack or unoptimized infrastructure
- Missing security headers = early stage or no security focus
- No structured data = SEO is an afterthought
- Heavy bundle = frontend debt accumulating
- These are exploitable advantages if you're faster, more secure, or more SEO-optimized
5. Your Advantages — where you're ahead, how to maintain and widen the lead 6. Their Advantages — where they beat you, how to close the gap 7. Quick Wins — low-effort improvements that would flip a loss into a win
Phase 5: Comparison Card
Display the ASCII comparison card from the tool output. This is designed to be screenshot-shareable on Twitter/X.
Suggest the user share it with context like: "Ran a competitive analysis of [my product] vs [competitor]. Here's what the data shows:" — factual, not adversarial.
Phase 6: Action Items
Create a prioritized action plan:
This week (quick wins):
- Technical gaps you can close in hours (add missing headers, optimize images, fix meta tags)
- Low-effort improvements that flip a score
This month (strategic):
- Feature or content gaps that require development work
- SEO + AI visibility improvements that compound over time
This quarter (moat building):
- Structural advantages to invest in (integrations, community, content library)
- Things that get harder to replicate the earlier you start
Key Principles
- Know thy enemy. This isn't about scores — it's about understanding what a competitor prioritizes and finding your unfair advantage.
- Compete on strengths, not weaknesses. Don't try to match every feature — find where you win and amplify it.
- Data over opinion. Every recommendation should be backed by the comparison data. No "I feel like you should" — only "the data shows X, so do Y."
- Share the card. The comparison card is designed for virality. Factual competitive analysis gets engagement on Twitter.