A small business competitor tracking checklist should monitor price changes, offers, reviews, ratings, search visibility, ads, website updates, new services, social proof, and customer complaints at a monthly rhythm.
What you need before you start
- A short competitor list from your first analysis.
- One owner for the checklist, even if several people contribute observations.
- A monthly review date.
- A place to save screenshots or notes when a visible change matters.
Step-by-step process
- 01
Track only decision-changing signals
Do not monitor everything. Watch the signals that could affect your pricing, offer, website, reviews, ads, sales calls, or local visibility.
- 02
Use the same checks each month
Consistency matters more than depth. A simple repeated pass makes changes obvious.
- 03
Record the change, not just the page
Write what changed, when you saw it, and why it might matter. Save a screenshot when the change affects pricing or claims.
- 04
Assign a response level
Use watch, discuss, respond, or ignore. Most changes are worth watching, not reacting to immediately.
- 05
Close with one action
The checklist is useful only if it ends in a decision: update nothing, improve proof, adjust offer, change price, or create a sales note.
Monthly competitor tracking checklist
Run this once a month for core competitors. Use a lighter weekly scan only in fast-moving categories.
| Signal | What to check | Status label | Action trigger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pricing | Starting price, bundles, discounts, fees | Changed / same / hidden | Customer objections mention price |
| Offers | Packages, guarantees, trials, lead magnets | New / same / removed | Competitor adds a stronger entry offer |
| Reviews | Rating, count, recency, repeated themes | Improving / steady / slipping | Repeated complaint creates opportunity |
| Search visibility | Map pack, organic results, directories | Up / same / down | You lose visibility on buying phrases |
| Website | Hero, pages, booking, proof, FAQs | Changed / same | Competitor removes friction you still have |
| Ads and social | Visible ads, promotions, content themes | Active / quiet | Offer starts appearing repeatedly |
Filled example: monthly competitor watch
A local agency runs a 20-minute check on three competitors before its monthly sales meeting.
| Competitor | Change spotted | Why it matters | Response level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio A | Added fixed-price audit | May appeal to budget-conscious leads | Discuss |
| Studio B | Published retail case study | Competes for same niche | Respond |
| Studio C | Reviews mention slow support | Our support can be stronger proof | Use in sales notes |
Common mistakes
- Tracking too many competitors and skipping the monthly review.
- Reacting to every discount or homepage change.
- Saving screenshots without writing the business implication.
- Ignoring review changes because they do not look like marketing.
- Letting tracking become research theater instead of decision support.
What to do next
- Choose your top five competitors to track monthly.
- Create one row per competitor and one row per signal.
- Add a status label: changed, same, watch, discuss, respond, ignore.
- Review changes before pricing, campaign, website, or sales updates.
Turn competitor research into a habit
Use the checklist to catch meaningful changes without letting competitor watching consume your week.
Questions people ask
What should I track about competitors?
Track prices, packages, discounts, reviews, visible complaints, search visibility, local profile changes, website proof, ads, and new offers.
How often should small businesses track competitors?
Monthly works for most small businesses. Use weekly checks only when pricing, ads, inventory, or seasonal offers change quickly.
Should I use alerts or a spreadsheet?
Use whichever you will maintain. A spreadsheet is enough for most small teams; alerts help when changes are frequent or easy to miss.