Install
openclaw skills install @nissan/competitive-positioning-researchStrategic competitive analysis skill for positioning research. Defines comparison dimensions, selects structural analogues, researches each comp, scores your approach 1-5, and produces ranked recommendations. Use before writing public-facing pages or when product positioning decisions are being made. Hard limit: 4 web searches per session.
openclaw skills install @nissan/competitive-positioning-researchOwner: Archie | Maintained by: Sara
Triggers:
Not for:
This skill is for strategic/UX research — "how did the best examples in this space solve this specific problem, and how do we stack up?" Not "is this claim correct?"
Before searching, lock down:
Don't start searching until you've written these down. Undefined scope = research sprawl.
Pick 4–6 platforms. More is noise. Selection criteria:
For each platform, find:
Search patterns that work:
"[platform] landing page teardown""[platform] early growth strategy""[platform] cold start problem""two-sided marketplace [specific problem] best practices""[platform] how they solved [problem]"Model knowledge vs. web search: For well-known platforms (Airbnb, Stripe, Uber, Replicate), Archie has sufficient model knowledge for structural patterns. Use web search for specifics — a changed CTA, a pivot, a dated case study.
Build a scoring table against the dimensions from Step 1. Score each 1–5 with a brief, honest note.
A 2/5 with a real explanation is more useful than a 4/5 that flatters the team. Score what exists, not what was intended.
Ranked by impact, not effort. For each recommendation:
# [Topic] — Competitive Positioning Research
_Date: YYYY-MM-DD | Analyst: Archie_
## Executive Summary
[3–4 sentences: headline finding + top recommendation]
## Comparison Dimensions
[The 3–5 dimensions being scored, and why they matter]
## Case Studies
### [Platform]
- **What they did:** ...
- **When (early vs mature):** ...
- **Key lesson:** ...
## Scoring Table
| Dimension | Score (1-5) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
## Recommendations (ranked by impact)
1. **[Change]** — [why, which comp supports it] — [effort]
## What We Got Right
[Strengths to preserve]
| Type | Comps | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Quick (known category) | 2–4 | 8–10 min |
| Full (novel category) | 5–6 | 15–20 min |
Hard limit: 4 web searches. Synthesise from what you find. If you haven't found enough after 4 searches, scope was too broad — narrow the question, not the search count.
Date: 2026-03-24
Product: Reddi Agent Protocol (two-sided agent marketplace)
Problem: Two-sided landing page hero CTA — which side to prioritise?
File: projects/reddi-agent-protocol/reviews/archie-marketplace-research-2026-03-24.md
Comps studied: Stripe, Uber, Airbnb, Hugging Face, Replicate (5 — right call, stopped before noise)
Dimensions scored: Side prioritisation, supply-side hook, demand-side hook, chicken-and-egg acknowledgement, social proof, trust signals
Headline finding: Seller-first hero is defensible at pre-supply stage, but the page is missing three things: cold-start acknowledgement, zero-friction demo, and any social proof. The "Browse Agents" CTA risks leading to a near-empty index — an active anti-signal.
Top recommendation: Add a dual-path hero split so both sides feel directly spoken to without diluting the primary message.
Surprise: Replicate — the closest structural analogue — led with consumers from day one, and made a live runnable demo the primary conversion mechanism on the landing page. Not a "coming soon" but an actual working model you could run from the hero. That's the bar for our live demo CTA.
Score that stung: Chicken-and-egg handling got 1/5. The page doesn't acknowledge it's early-stage, and "why join a marketplace with no one in it yet?" has no answer anywhere on the page. Honest score, actionable gap.
Too many comps. Six becomes noise. Pick four or five strong structural analogues, research them properly, and stop.
Comparing to direct competitors. Direct comp analysis introduces defensive bias. Structural analogues (same problem, different space) produce better lessons. Airbnb teaches more about marketplace cold starts than any other agent marketplace would.
Generous scoring. A scoring table where everything is 3–4/5 is useless. The purpose of the table is to surface gaps. If nothing scores below 3, you're flattering the work, not analysing it.
Searching too broadly. two-sided marketplace returns 10 years of generic content. Replicate model provider growth strategy returns the specific insight you need. Start specific, widen only if necessary.
Grepping the full repo. Archie times out on grep -r across a full project directory. Always read targeted files by path. Never use recursive search on a large workspace.
This skill was written 2026-03-24 by Sara, based on Archie's marketplace research for Reddi Agent Protocol.