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analyzing-competitive-landscapes

Maps competitive dynamics with market positioning, feature comparison, funding histories, and differentiation assessment. Use when analyzing startup competition, mapping market landscapes, or identifying competitive threats.

personAuthor: jakexiaohubgithub

Analyzing Competitive Landscapes

Maps competitive dynamics for venture-stage companies — positioning each player by product scope, go-to-market motion, funding trajectory, and defensibility. Designed for investment memos, deal screening, and portfolio strategy.

When To Use

  • Evaluating a target company's competitive position before a seed or Series A investment decision
  • Building a market map for a new sector thesis or fund strategy memo
  • Assessing whether a portfolio company's moat is widening or eroding
  • Responding to LP questions about competitive risk in a specific deal or sector
  • Comparing multiple deal opportunities within the same vertical

Inputs To Gather

  • Target company name and sector — the focal company or sector to map around
  • Known competitors — any companies the user already tracks; prompt for both direct and adjacent competitors
  • Data sources available — pitch decks, Crunchbase/PitchBook profiles, earnings transcripts, product demos, customer interviews
  • Funding history — rounds raised, lead investors, valuations (if known) for each competitor
  • Scope boundaries — geography (US-only vs. global), stage focus (pre-seed through growth), and time horizon for the analysis
  • Key evaluation dimensions — e.g., product breadth, pricing model, distribution channel, team pedigree, IP/defensibility

Workflow

  1. Define the competitive set

    • Start with direct competitors (same ICP, same core use case), then layer in adjacent competitors (overlapping feature sets or converging roadmaps) and potential entrants (incumbents with resources to pivot in)
    • Confirm the list with the user before proceeding — missing a key player invalidates the map
  2. Build company profiles

    • For each competitor, capture: founding year, HQ, headcount, total funding raised, last round details (date, size, lead investor, valuation if available), revenue model, primary customer segment, and notable customers or partnerships
    • Flag any data points sourced from estimates or secondhand reports with [VERIFY]
  3. Map market positioning

    • Plot competitors on a 2×2 matrix using the two most strategically relevant dimensions (e.g., enterprise vs. SMB on one axis, vertical-specific vs. horizontal on the other)
    • Identify white-space quadrants — these represent potential positioning opportunities or underserved segments
  4. Compare product and GTM

    • Build a feature comparison table covering core capabilities, integrations, pricing tiers, and deployment model (cloud/on-prem/hybrid)
    • Note each company's primary distribution channel: product-led growth, outbound sales, channel partnerships, or embedded/OEM
    • Highlight where the target company has clear feature parity gaps or unique differentiators
  5. Analyze funding trajectories

    • Chart cumulative funding over time for the top 5–8 competitors
    • Identify inflection points: large rounds that signal acceleration, down rounds or flat extensions that suggest trouble, and strategic investors that imply distribution advantages
    • Note investor overlap — shared investors across competitors can signal thesis conviction or create information asymmetry risks [VERIFY investor conflict policies]
  6. Assess defensibility and moat

    • Score each competitor on: network effects, switching costs, data/IP advantages, regulatory moats, and brand/community lock-in
    • Be explicit about which moats are structural vs. temporary (e.g., first-mover advantage without switching costs is temporary)
  7. Synthesize competitive risk assessment

    • Rank the top 3 competitive threats to the target company with a brief rationale for each
    • Call out the most likely competitive scenario over the next 12–24 months (consolidation, feature convergence, new entrant disruption, or market expansion)

Output

Structure the deliverable as follows:

  • Executive Summary — 3–5 sentence overview of the competitive landscape and where the target company sits
  • Market Map — 2×2 positioning matrix with brief annotations
  • Competitor Profiles — one paragraph per company covering stage, traction, differentiation, and funding
  • Feature Comparison Table — side-by-side grid of capabilities and GTM attributes
  • Funding Timeline — chronological view of capital raised across the competitive set
  • Defensibility Scorecard — moat ratings (strong / moderate / weak) per competitor across each dimension
  • Risk Assessment — ranked competitive threats with scenario analysis
  • Data Gaps & Caveats — list of unverified data points and information that could change the conclusions

Quality Checks

  • Every competitor profile includes at least funding data and product positioning; if either is missing, flag with [VERIFY]
  • The 2×2 matrix uses dimensions that actually differentiate the players — avoid axes where all companies cluster in one quadrant
  • Feature comparison is based on current shipping product, not roadmap claims, unless explicitly noted
  • Funding data references specific rounds with dates, not just "raised $X total" without context
  • Risk assessment distinguishes between competitors that are threats today vs. those that could become threats if they pivot or raise capital
  • No investor names or valuation figures are presented without source attribution or [VERIFY] tags
  • Analysis avoids conflating TAM size with the target company's realistic addressable share