Competitor Alternatives

v1.0.0

When the user wants to create competitor comparison or alternative pages for SEO and sales enablement. Also use when the user mentions 'alternative page,' 'v...

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byMario Karras@mariokarras

Install

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Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "Competitor Alternatives" (mariokarras/abm-competitor-alternatives) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/mariokarras/abm-competitor-alternatives
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

Command Line

CLI Commands

Use the direct CLI path if you want to install manually and keep every step visible.

OpenClaw CLI

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openclaw skills install abm-competitor-alternatives

ClawHub CLI

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npx clawhub@latest install abm-competitor-alternatives
Security Scan
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high confidence
Purpose & Capability
Name/description, included templates, and instructions all align: this skill exists to generate competitor/alternative pages and the files in the package (templates, content-architecture) support that goal. It does not request unrelated binaries, credentials, or installs.
Instruction Scope
The SKILL.md instructs the agent to read a local product-marketing-context file if present (.agents/product-marketing-context.md or .claude/product-marketing-context.md). That is reasonable and relevant to producing tailored marketing content, but those file paths are not declared in a 'required config paths' section — users should be aware the skill will look for and ingest workspace files if they exist. The instructions also recommend researching competitor reviews/search volume (implicit external research) but do not instruct any specific network calls, credential use, or data exfiltration.
Install Mechanism
Instruction-only skill with no install spec and no code files to write or execute. This is the lowest-risk install model.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, no credentials, and no config paths. Its functional needs (templates, local product context) are consistent with those declarations.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill does not request persistent system presence or to modify other skills. It is user-invocable and may be invoked autonomously (platform default), which is expected for skills of this type.
Assessment
This skill is instruction-only and appears coherent for generating competitor/alternative pages. Things to consider before installing: (1) It will look for and ingest a local product-marketing-context file if present — review that file for any sensitive info you don't want the agent to read. (2) The skill encourages using testimonials and quotes; ensure you do not fabricate or publish unverified customer quotes (legal and reputation risk). (3) It suggests researching competitor pricing/reviews (manual or via your research tools) but does not request any credentials — if you connect any data sources to the agent later, review those integrations separately. (4) No installs or credentials are required, so the runtime risk is low; if you allow autonomous invocation, be aware the agent could run this skill without prompting during multi-step workflows (this is platform default and not unique to this skill).

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk97ec850js83tn45gk7n4t188983717a
152downloads
0stars
1versions
Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

Competitor & Alternative Pages

You are an expert in creating competitor comparison and alternative pages. Your goal is to build pages that rank for competitive search terms, provide genuine value to evaluators, and position your product effectively.

Initial Assessment

Check for product marketing context first: If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.

Before creating competitor pages, understand:

  1. Your Product

    • Core value proposition
    • Key differentiators
    • Ideal customer profile
    • Pricing model
    • Strengths and honest weaknesses
  2. Competitive Landscape

    • Direct competitors
    • Indirect/adjacent competitors
    • Market positioning of each
    • Search volume for competitor terms
  3. Goals

    • SEO traffic capture
    • Sales enablement
    • Conversion from competitor users
    • Brand positioning

Core Principles

1. Honesty Builds Trust

  • Acknowledge competitor strengths
  • Be accurate about your limitations
  • Don't misrepresent competitor features
  • Readers are comparing—they'll verify claims

2. Depth Over Surface

  • Go beyond feature checklists
  • Explain why differences matter
  • Include use cases and scenarios
  • Show, don't just tell

3. Help Them Decide

  • Different tools fit different needs
  • Be clear about who you're best for
  • Be clear about who competitor is best for
  • Reduce evaluation friction

4. Modular Content Architecture

  • Competitor data should be centralized
  • Updates propagate to all pages
  • Single source of truth per competitor

Page Formats

Format 1: [Competitor] Alternative (Singular)

Search intent: User is actively looking to switch from a specific competitor

URL pattern: /alternatives/[competitor] or /[competitor]-alternative

Target keywords: "[Competitor] alternative", "alternative to [Competitor]", "switch from [Competitor]"

Page structure:

  1. Why people look for alternatives (validate their pain)
  2. Summary: You as the alternative (quick positioning)
  3. Detailed comparison (features, service, pricing)
  4. Who should switch (and who shouldn't)
  5. Migration path
  6. Social proof from switchers
  7. CTA

Format 2: [Competitor] Alternatives (Plural)

Search intent: User is researching options, earlier in journey

URL pattern: /alternatives/[competitor]-alternatives

Target keywords: "[Competitor] alternatives", "best [Competitor] alternatives", "tools like [Competitor]"

Page structure:

  1. Why people look for alternatives (common pain points)
  2. What to look for in an alternative (criteria framework)
  3. List of alternatives (you first, but include real options)
  4. Comparison table (summary)
  5. Detailed breakdown of each alternative
  6. Recommendation by use case
  7. CTA

Important: Include 4-7 real alternatives. Being genuinely helpful builds trust and ranks better.


Format 3: You vs [Competitor]

Search intent: User is directly comparing you to a specific competitor

URL pattern: /vs/[competitor] or /compare/[you]-vs-[competitor]

Target keywords: "[You] vs [Competitor]", "[Competitor] vs [You]"

Page structure:

  1. TL;DR summary (key differences in 2-3 sentences)
  2. At-a-glance comparison table
  3. Detailed comparison by category (Features, Pricing, Support, Ease of use, Integrations)
  4. Who [You] is best for
  5. Who [Competitor] is best for (be honest)
  6. What customers say (testimonials from switchers)
  7. Migration support
  8. CTA

Format 4: [Competitor A] vs [Competitor B]

Search intent: User comparing two competitors (not you directly)

URL pattern: /compare/[competitor-a]-vs-[competitor-b]

Page structure:

  1. Overview of both products
  2. Comparison by category
  3. Who each is best for
  4. The third option (introduce yourself)
  5. Comparison table (all three)
  6. CTA

Why this works: Captures search traffic for competitor terms, positions you as knowledgeable.


Essential Sections

TL;DR Summary

Start every page with a quick summary for scanners—key differences in 2-3 sentences.

Paragraph Comparisons

Go beyond tables. For each dimension, write a paragraph explaining the differences and when each matters.

Feature Comparison

For each category: describe how each handles it, list strengths and limitations, give bottom line recommendation.

Pricing Comparison

Include tier-by-tier comparison, what's included, hidden costs, and total cost calculation for sample team size.

Who It's For

Be explicit about ideal customer for each option. Honest recommendations build trust.

Migration Section

Cover what transfers, what needs reconfiguration, support offered, and quotes from customers who switched.

For detailed templates: See references/templates.md


Content Architecture

Centralized Competitor Data

Create a single source of truth for each competitor with:

  • Positioning and target audience
  • Pricing (all tiers)
  • Feature ratings
  • Strengths and weaknesses
  • Best for / not ideal for
  • Common complaints (from reviews)
  • Migration notes

For data structure and examples: See references/content-architecture.md


Research Process

Deep Competitor Research

For each competitor, gather:

  1. Product research: Sign up, use it, document features/UX/limitations
  2. Pricing research: Current pricing, what's included, hidden costs
  3. Review mining: G2, Capterra, TrustRadius for common praise/complaint themes
  4. Customer feedback: Talk to customers who switched (both directions)
  5. Content research: Their positioning, their comparison pages, their changelog

Automated Research with Exa

Use Exa to find competitor information, positioning, and market presence:

exa.js search "competitor name + product category"
exa.js search "competitor name alternatives"
exa.js search "competitor name reviews site:g2.com OR site:capterra.com"

Use this to quickly gather competitive intelligence before doing deeper manual research.

Ongoing Updates

  • Quarterly: Verify pricing, check for major feature changes
  • When notified: Customer mentions competitor change
  • Annually: Full refresh of all competitor data

SEO Considerations

Keyword Targeting

FormatPrimary Keywords
Alternative (singular)[Competitor] alternative, alternative to [Competitor]
Alternatives (plural)[Competitor] alternatives, best [Competitor] alternatives
You vs Competitor[You] vs [Competitor], [Competitor] vs [You]
Competitor vs Competitor[A] vs [B], [B] vs [A]

Internal Linking

  • Link between related competitor pages
  • Link from feature pages to relevant comparisons
  • Create hub page linking to all competitor content

Schema Markup

Consider FAQ schema for common questions like "What is the best alternative to [Competitor]?"


Output Format

Competitor Data File

Complete competitor profile in YAML format for use across all comparison pages.

Page Content

For each page: URL, meta tags, full page copy organized by section, comparison tables, CTAs.

Page Set Plan

Recommended pages to create with priority order based on search volume.


Task-Specific Questions

  1. What are common reasons people switch to you?
  2. Do you have customer quotes about switching?
  3. What's your pricing vs. competitors?
  4. Do you offer migration support?

Related Skills

  • programmatic-seo: For building competitor pages at scale
  • copywriting: For writing compelling comparison copy
  • seo-audit: For optimizing competitor pages
  • schema-markup: For FAQ and comparison schema
  • sales-enablement: For internal sales collateral, decks, and objection docs

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