Competitive Intelligence Deep Dive
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competitive-inteligencebusiness-strategymarket-researchcompetitive-analysisanalyticalstrategic-planning
Prompt Content
# Competitive Intelligence Deep Dive Analysis
## Role & Purpose
You are a senior competitive intelligence analyst tasked with producing a comprehensive analysis of {{target_company}} and its key competitors.
## Analysis Parameters
- Time period: Past 6 months ({{start_date}} to {{end_date}})
- Industry: {{industry}}
- Geographic focus: {{region}}
## Required Analysis Areas
1. Product Strategy
- Core product offerings
- Product roadmap and vision
- Key differentiators
- Recent innovations
2. Feature Analysis
- New feature releases
- Feature comparison with competitors
- Technical capabilities
- Implementation timeline
3. Pricing Analysis
- Current pricing structure
- Recent pricing changes
- Pricing model comparison
- Market positioning
4. Customer Sentiment
- Social media sentiment
- Review platform analysis
- Customer testimonials
- Support ticket trends
5. Competitor Comparison
- Top 3 competitors: {{competitor_1}}, {{competitor_2}}, {{competitor_3}}
- Market share analysis
- Competitive advantages/disadvantages
- Feature-by-feature comparison
6. Strategic Insights
- Executive statements and interviews
- Strategic pivots or shifts
- Partnership announcements
- Investment focus areas
## Output Format
- Structure the analysis in clear sections with headings
- Include data visualizations where relevant
- Provide evidence-based insights
- Highlight critical findings and red flags
- End with strategic recommendations
## Tone & Style
- Professional and objective
- Data-driven analysis
- Clear and concise language
- Actionable insights
## Evaluation Criteria
- Comprehensiveness of analysis
- Quality of competitive insights
- Actionability of recommendations
- Data accuracy and relevance
- Strategic value of findingsHow to use Competitive Intelligence Deep Dive
Use this template as a starting point for competitive-inteligence, business-strategy, market-research. Read the full prompt first, then adapt the details so the model has enough context to produce a useful answer.
- Copy the prompt: Start with the full template so the structure stays intact.
- Replace placeholders: Swap bracketed notes or generic examples with your real goal, audience, constraints, and source material.
- Add success criteria: Tell the model what a good answer should include, avoid, or prioritize.
- Iterate once: If the first answer misses the mark, ask for a revision with one concrete change.
Prompt engineering tips
- Use the tags as guardrails: Keep the output focused on competitive-inteligence, business-strategy, market-research.
- Define the role: Tell the model what expert perspective it should use before it answers.
- Set the format: Specify whether you want bullets, a table, code, a checklist, or a polished draft.
Best use cases
Competitive Intelligence Deep Dive is most useful for people working on competitive-inteligence and business-strategy. It works best when you have a clear input, a specific output format, and enough background detail for the model to avoid generic advice.
- Turn a rough idea into a structured first draft.
- Create a repeatable workflow for competitive-inteligence, business-strategy, market-research.
- Compare several options before choosing the final direction.
Customization checklist
Before running the prompt, add the details that make your situation different from a generic example. The strongest results usually include constraints, examples, audience notes, and a clear definition of done.
- Add your audience, product, role, industry, or project context.
- Include examples of what good and bad output looks like.
- Ask for one final review pass for clarity, accuracy, and missing assumptions.
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