Competitive Analysis
Analyze your competitive landscape using Porter's Five Forces and modern frameworks—understand industry dynamics, identify strategic opportunities, and position your business for sustainable advantage.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when you need to:
- Evaluate an industry before entering or investing
- Understand competitive dynamics in your market
- Identify strategic opportunities based on industry structure
- Assess threats from competitors, new entrants, or substitutes
- Develop positioning strategy relative to competition
- Prepare investor pitches with market analysis
- Plan product launches in competitive markets
- Make pricing decisions based on competitive forces
This skill is particularly valuable for:
- Founders evaluating market opportunities
- Strategy teams assessing competitive position
- Investors analyzing industry attractiveness
- Product managers planning market entry
- Business development professionals identifying partners/threats
Methodology Foundation
Source: Michael Porter - Harvard Business School (1979-present) + modern competitive intelligence best practices
Core Principle: Industry structure, together with a company's relative position within the industry, are the two basic drivers of company profitability. Understand the five competitive forces to anticipate shifts, shape industry evolution, and find better strategic positions.
"The essence of strategy formulation is coping with competition."
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |
What This Skill Does
When invoked, I will guide you through comprehensive competitive analysis:
- Define your competitive arena - Identify industry boundaries and key players
- Analyze the Five Forces - Evaluate each competitive force systematically
- Map competitor landscape - Profile direct and indirect competitors
- Assess industry attractiveness - Determine profit potential
- Identify strategic opportunities - Find positioning gaps and advantages
- Monitor competitive dynamics - Set up ongoing intelligence gathering
How to Use
Provide information about your competitive situation:
Example prompts:
- "Analyze the competitive landscape for [industry/market]"
- "Apply Porter's Five Forces to my [business type]"
- "Create a competitor analysis for [company/product]"
- "Assess the threat of new entrants in [market]"
- "Evaluate supplier/buyer power in [industry]"
- "Help me find competitive positioning opportunities"
Information that helps:
- Your industry or market
- Key competitors you're aware of
- Your product/service category
- Geographic scope
- Target customer segment
- Current market position
Instructions
The Five Forces Framework
Overview
Porter's Five Forces determine the competitive structure of an industry and its profitability.
Threat of
New Entrants
↓
Supplier → COMPETITIVE ← Buyer
Power RIVALRY Power
↑
Threat of
Substitutes
| Force | Key Question | High = |
|---|---|---|
| Rivalry | How intense is competition? | Lower profits |
| New Entrants | How easy to enter? | More competition |
| Supplier Power | Can suppliers dictate terms? | Higher costs |
| Buyer Power | Can customers dictate terms? | Lower prices |
| Substitutes | Are alternatives available? | Less pricing power |
Force 1: Competitive Rivalry
Analyze the intensity of competition among existing players.
Assessment Questions
| Factor | Questions to Ask |
|---|---|
| Number of competitors | How many significant players exist? |
| Market concentration | Is it dominated by few or fragmented? |
| Industry growth | Growing, stable, or declining? |
| Product differentiation | Are products similar or distinct? |
| Switching costs | How hard is it for customers to switch? |
| Exit barriers | Can companies easily leave? |
| Fixed costs | Do high fixed costs drive price competition? |
Rivalry Intensity Scale
| Level | Characteristics | Profit Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Low | Few competitors, differentiated products, high growth | Higher margins |
| Medium | Several competitors, some differentiation, stable growth | Moderate margins |
| High | Many competitors, commodity products, slow/negative growth | Thin margins |
Red Flags (High Rivalry)
- Frequent price wars
- Heavy advertising spending
- Constant product launches
- Difficulty maintaining margins
- High customer churn
Force 2: Threat of New Entrants
Analyze how easy or difficult it is for new players to enter your market.
Barriers to Entry Assessment
| Barrier | Low Threat | High Threat |
|---|---|---|
| Capital requirements | Low startup costs | High investment needed |
| Economies of scale | Small players viable | Must be large to compete |
| Brand loyalty | Weak brands | Strong incumbent brands |
| Switching costs | Easy to try new | Locked-in customers |
| Distribution access | Open channels | Controlled by incumbents |
| Regulatory | Few requirements | Heavy licensing/compliance |
| Technology/IP | Accessible tech | Patents, proprietary tech |
| Network effects | Weak | Strong winner-take-all |
Entry Threat Signals
- Venture capital flowing into your space
- Adjacent companies expanding into your market
- International competitors entering
- Technology reducing traditional barriers
- Regulatory changes opening markets
Force 3: Supplier Power
Analyze the leverage suppliers have over industry participants.
Supplier Power Assessment
| Factor | Low Power | High Power |
|---|---|---|
| Number of suppliers | Many alternatives | Few/sole source |
| Uniqueness | Commodity inputs | Proprietary/specialized |
| Switching costs | Easy to change | Expensive/difficult |
| Forward integration | Unlikely | Credible threat |
| Importance to supplier | Major customer | Small customer |
| Substitute inputs | Available | None |
High Supplier Power Examples
- Specialized software vendors (few alternatives)
- Rare material suppliers (limited sources)
- Highly skilled labor markets (talent scarcity)
- Platform dependencies (AWS, Shopify, etc.)
Force 4: Buyer Power
Analyze the leverage customers have over your business.
Buyer Power Assessment
| Factor | Low Power | High Power |
|---|---|---|
| Buyer concentration | Many small buyers | Few large buyers |
| Purchase volume | Small orders | Large orders |
| Standardization | Differentiated products | Commodity products |
| Switching costs | High costs to change | Easy to switch |
| Price sensitivity | Value-focused | Price-focused |
| Information | Limited knowledge | Well-informed |
| Backward integration | Unlikely | Credible threat |
Managing Buyer Power
- Differentiate your offering
- Create switching costs (integrations, training, data)
- Target less price-sensitive segments
- Build brand loyalty
- Diversify customer base
Force 5: Threat of Substitutes
Analyze alternatives that meet the same customer need differently.
Substitute Threat Assessment
| Factor | Low Threat | High Threat |
|---|---|---|
| Price-performance | Worse value |