Everything Your Competitors Are Doing Is Visible — If You Know Where to Look
Every competitor signals their strategy publicly through their website copy, their job postings, their ad library, their SEO content, their pricing page changes, and their social media. They're not hiding it. They're just not labelling it "competitive intelligence report."
AI competitor analysis tools aggregate and interpret these signals at a speed and scale no human analyst can match. This guide shows you exactly where to look, which tools do it best, and how to turn raw competitive data into positioning decisions in under two hours per month.
The 6 Competitive Intelligence Sources Every Marketer Should Monitor
1. Their website (content, messaging, pricing)
A competitor's homepage is a positioning statement. Their pricing page reveals their go-to-market strategy. Their blog reveals their keyword targets and thought leadership agenda. Most marketers check competitor websites occasionally. Systematic monitoring changes what you see.
AI tool: Crayon or SimilarWeb for automated change detection. Manual review with Claude for synthesis and strategic interpretation.
2. Their ad library
Meta's Ad Library and Google's Transparency Center show every ad a company is currently running — creative, copy, and targeting signals. You can see which offers they're pushing, which audiences they're targeting, and which messages they're testing. Completely free, completely legal.
AI tool: Paste ad copy into Claude and ask: "What is the strategic positioning this brand is signalling? What audience are they targeting? What objection are they pre-handling?"
3. Their SEO content
Semrush and Ahrefs show every keyword a competitor ranks for, which pages drive their organic traffic, and which keywords they're targeting with new content. This reveals their content strategy, their target audience, and the search intent they're trying to capture — months before it shows up in their results.
AI tool: Semrush competitor analysis + Claude for gap identification and strategic brief.
4. Their job postings
Job postings are the single most underused competitive intelligence source. A competitor hiring five performance marketers signals they're shifting to paid growth. A hire for a VP of Enterprise Sales signals a market expansion. A wave of AI engineer hires signals a product pivot. You can see their strategic priorities 6–12 months before they announce them.
AI tool: Monitor competitor career pages via Crayon alerts or manual monthly review. Paste job postings into Claude for strategic interpretation.
5. Their review data
G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, and App Store reviews contain unfiltered customer opinions about competitor products. What customers love, what they complain about, what feature requests recur — all publicly available. This is voice-of-customer research on your competitors, free.
AI tool: Export competitor reviews and paste into Claude: "Identify the 3 most common positive themes, the 3 most common complaints, and any pattern that suggests an unmet need we could position against."
6. Their social media and LinkedIn
What a competitor publishes on LinkedIn reveals what they want to be known for. Engagement patterns reveal which messages land with their audience. Executive posts reveal strategic priorities and culture signals. LinkedIn company page follower growth is a leading indicator of brand momentum.
The Monthly Competitor Intelligence Workflow
Two hours per month. Run this every first Monday.
- Ad library check (20 min) — Review Meta Ad Library and Google Transparency Center for your top 3 competitors. Screenshot new ads. Note new offers, new messages, new landing page tests.
- Semrush keyword gap (20 min) — Run a keyword gap report for top 3 competitors versus your domain. Flag any keyword they rank for (positions 1–10) that you don't target. Add to content backlog.
- Job posting review (15 min) — Check competitor careers pages for new roles posted in the last 30 days. Log any strategic signal hires.
- Review mining (15 min) — Read the last 10 G2 or Capterra reviews for each competitor. Flag recurring complaints.
- Claude synthesis (10 min) — Paste all gathered data into Claude and run the synthesis prompt below.
The Claude Competitor Analysis Synthesis Prompt
Act as a senior marketing strategist. I've gathered the following competitive intelligence this month: [PASTE ALL DATA]. Tell me: (1) what strategic shift, if any, is each competitor making based on these signals? (2) what positioning gap are they all leaving open that we could own? (3) one specific content or campaign recommendation based on a competitor weakness I've identified. Be specific and direct.
Your Competitive Intelligence Skill File
Running this workflow monthly produces compound insight. Over six months, you'll see patterns in competitor behaviour that no single snapshot reveals. Load the KissMySkills competitor analysis skill file into Claude to get a structured intelligence analyst persona that applies consistent frameworks to your data every session — without re-explaining the methodology each time.