A useful competitor analysis template should capture who the competitor serves, why customers choose them, price signals, proof, weak spots, and what your business should test next.
What you need before you start
- Decide the buying moment you are studying, such as first appointment, first order, emergency service, repeat purchase, or premium package.
- Pick three to seven competitors.
- Open each competitor's website, reviews, social profile, and pricing or booking page.
- Keep every note tied to a decision you might make.
Step-by-step process
- 01
Fill the snapshot
Capture the competitor name, website, location or market, target customer, and main offer.
- 02
Capture the promise
Write the plain-English promise customers see first. Do not paraphrase it into strategy language.
- 03
Score the evidence
Note reviews, guarantees, before-and-after proof, case studies, certifications, photos, press, or other trust signals.
- 04
Compare friction
Check how hard it is to get a price, book, call, order, compare packages, or understand the next step.
- 05
Choose one response
End each row with one action: copy nothing, improve proof, simplify pricing, sharpen copy, add a package, or track again later.
Copyable competitor analysis table
Copy this table into a spreadsheet or use it directly as a fill-in worksheet.
| Field | Competitor A | Competitor B | Competitor C | Our business |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main customer | Busy families | Budget shoppers | Premium buyers | Local repeat clients |
| Main promise | Same-day service | Lowest starting price | Expert-led results | Reliable work with clear communication |
| Price signal | $ | $$ | $$$ | $$ |
| Trust proof | Reviews | Guarantee | Portfolio | Reviews and referrals |
| Buying friction | Short form | Phone only | Long quote form | Booking page needs clarity |
| Opportunity | Speed | Price | Authority | Proof and booking clarity |
Filled example: local dental practice
The practice wants to know why new patients call other clinics first.
| Field | Clinic A | Clinic B | Clinic C | Our response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main promise | Emergency appointments today | Family dentistry near you | Cosmetic smile design | Create separate pages for emergency and family searches |
| Price signal | Insurance accepted | Membership plan | Financing available | Explain insurance and payment options earlier |
| Trust proof | Google reviews | Doctor bios | Before/after images | Add patient review themes by service |
| Friction | Fast click-to-call | Online booking | Consult request | Add mobile booking and clearer next step |
Common mistakes
- Filling every cell with long paragraphs.
- Scoring competitors without explaining why the score matters.
- Ignoring indirect competitors, marketplaces, and do-it-yourself alternatives.
- Turning the template into a brand audit before answering the customer choice question.
- Leaving the action column blank.
What to do next
- Use the pricing analysis guide if price is the unclear part.
- Use the tracking checklist if this research needs to become a monthly habit.
- Turn the top opportunity into a page, offer, proof, or review response improvement.
- Review the table with someone who speaks to customers every week.
Download the competitive analysis scorecard
Use the scorecard as your working comparison table for offers, prices, proof, marketing signals, reviews, and next actions.
Questions people ask
Can I use this competitor analysis template for local and online businesses?
Yes. The same columns work for local, ecommerce, service, creator, agency, and restaurant competitors. Change the price and visibility checks to match the buying journey.
What should I leave blank?
Leave a field blank when the competitor does not show it publicly. A blank price, unclear booking step, or missing proof can be an important finding.
Should I use scores?
Use simple labels such as strong, average, weak, or unknown. Exact numeric scores often look precise without helping the decision.