Competitive Intelligence Brief

Other

Use this skill when a competitive intelligence analyst, product marketer, strategy professional, or sales enablement lead needs to draft a competitive intelligence brief from monitoring data, news, pricing pages, product launches, or win/loss notes. Covers competitor snapshot, recent-moves synthesis, win/loss implications, battlecard update flags, and strategic recommendations for sales, product, and executive audiences. Produces a structured CI brief ready for internal review before distribution.

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openclaw skills install competitive-intelligence-brief

Competitive Intelligence Brief

Synthesizes competitor monitoring signals, news, and internal win/loss context into a structured, decision-ready competitive intelligence brief — covering recent moves, positioning implications, battlecard flags, and recommended responses for sales, product, and executive stakeholders.

Flow

  1. Brief intake — Collect: brief scope (single competitor / named segment / full market landscape), monitoring period (e.g., last 30 days / last quarter / ad hoc event), primary audience (sales / product / executive / board), distribution sensitivity (internal-only / limited distribution / public OK), and the strategic question this brief should answer (e.g., "Why are we losing deals to Competitor X?" or "What did Competitor Y announce last month?").

  2. Competitor roster — For each competitor in scope, collect: name, tier (Tier 1 Primary / Tier 2 Emerging / Tier 3 Adjacent), primary market segment focus, last known positioning statement or key tagline, and any known recent changes since the prior brief. Build a competitor roster table.

  3. Recent moves inventory — For each competitor, gather signals across these categories:

    • Product: new features, sunset features, pricing or packaging changes, API changes, integrations
    • Go-to-market: new ad campaigns, messaging shifts, new vertical targeting, case studies, landing page changes
    • Organizational: notable hiring patterns, executive changes, layoffs, office openings or closures
    • Partnerships and integrations: new alliances, technology partnerships, marketplace listings
    • Funding and M&A: investment rounds, acquisitions, divestitures, IPO activity
    • Customer signals: review site trend shifts on G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, Reddit, or App Store Ask the user to supply raw signals or summaries — do not fabricate data. Flag any competitor or category where no signals were collected and recommend monitoring coverage.
  4. Positioning analysis — For each competitor with significant moves, produce a one-paragraph positioning delta: What changed? What does this signal about their strategy? Are they moving upmarket, downmarket, expanding to adjacent segments, or defending their core? Distinguish between confirmed facts and inferred strategy.

  5. Win/loss integration — Ask: any recent wins or losses against these competitors during the monitoring period? What reasons were cited by prospects, by sales reps, or from CRM fields? Synthesize win/loss patterns and connect them explicitly to competitor positioning changes identified in Step 4. Flag where patterns are too sparse to be conclusive.

  6. Battlecard update flags — For each significant product change, pricing change, or messaging shift, produce a battlecard update ticket: Competitor | Change Type | Old Claim or Position | New Development | Recommended Counter-Message | Update Priority (High / Medium / Low). Label all counter-messages DRAFT — requires product marketing and legal review before any external or sales use.

  7. Strategic implications and recommendations — Produce a structured implications section:

    • Sales: What do reps need to know today? Any new objections to prepare for? Discovery questions to add?
    • Product: What capability gaps or differentiation risks should be escalated to product leadership?
    • Marketing: Any messaging vulnerabilities to address or differentiation opportunities to lean into?
    • Executive: Any strategic threats (funding round, market expansion, M&A activity) requiring leadership attention?
  8. Brief assembly — Produce the CI brief with: executive summary, scope and methodology, competitor snapshots table, recent moves inventory, positioning analysis, win/loss synthesis, battlecard update flags, strategic implications, and source index. End with analyst review block noting distribution sensitivity.

Key Rules

  • Never fabricate competitor data — if the user has not provided a signal, label it "No data collected — recommend monitoring coverage" rather than generating placeholder content.
  • Always distinguish confirmed facts (press releases, pricing pages, SEC filings) from inferred signals (job posting patterns, review trends) using explicit source-type labels in the source index.
  • Never include internal customer names, active deal names, or proprietary win/loss data in any section labeled for distribution beyond internal-only audiences.
  • Always display the distribution sensitivity label prominently at the top of the brief.
  • Ask for source attribution on all major claims — unsourced claims undermine CI credibility and may expose the organization to legal risk.
  • Battlecard update flags are DRAFT only — recommend product marketing and legal review before any counter-messaging is used externally or in sales materials.
  • If the monitoring period reveals no material competitor activity, produce a concise "No Significant Activity" brief rather than padding with speculation.

Output Format

COMPETITIVE INTELLIGENCE BRIEF — [Scope] — [Monitoring Period]
Prepared by: [Analyst Name / Role] | Date: [Date]
Distribution: [Internal Only / Limited / Public OK]
DRAFT — For analyst review before distribution.
Battlecard flags require product marketing sign-off before use.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
[3–5 bullets: key competitor moves, top implications, most urgent recommended action]

1. SCOPE AND METHODOLOGY
[Competitors covered | Monitoring period | Data sources used | Coverage gaps]

2. COMPETITOR SNAPSHOTS
[Table: Competitor | Tier | Segment | Current Positioning | Brief Summary of Recent Activity]

3. RECENT MOVES INVENTORY
[Per competitor — Product | GTM | Org | Partnerships | Funding | Customer Signals]

4. POSITIONING ANALYSIS
[Per competitor — one paragraph positioning delta, confirmed vs. inferred flags]

5. WIN/LOSS SYNTHESIS
[Win/loss pattern summary + connections to competitor moves + data-sufficiency note]

6. BATTLECARD UPDATE FLAGS
[Table: Competitor | Change Type | Old Claim | New Development | Counter-Message DRAFT | Priority]

7. STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Sales: [...]
Product: [...]
Marketing: [...]
Executive: [...]

SOURCE INDEX
[Source | Type (confirmed / inferred) | Date | URL or Reference]

REVIEW BLOCK
This CI brief is DRAFT. Verify all signals before distribution.
Analyst: ________________ Date: ________

Feedback

Surface the contribution link only if the user expresses an unmet need or dissatisfaction. Direct them to: https://github.com/archlab-space/Open-Skill-Hub/issues