I remember first starting my business. At that time, I knew the basics of marketing and a little about sales.
What I didn’t know was the depth of my competitive business landscape. The outcome of this knowledge gap wasn’t pretty, as many competitors quickly surpassed me.
Turns out I am not alone — because if you’re reading this post, you want to beat your competition. One tactical way to do this is by creating a competitive matrix.
How?
You run a competitive analysis and document your findings using a competitive analysis template.
A competitive matrix helps to identify competitors and lay out their products, sales, and marketing strategies in a visual format. When I did this, I learned about my market position, how to differentiate myself, and how to improve my processes so they outshined competitors.
Below, I’ll walk you through what a competitive matrix is and then review some templates and examples.
In this article:
What Is a Competitive Matrix?
A competitive matrix is a way to visualize your competitor analysis. There are different competitive matrices you can use to compare yourself to your competitors. You can use a competitive matrix to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, or threats to your company.
Competitor Matrix Types
- Competitive Advantage Matrix. Helps you understand the differentiation and profit potential of your business.
- SWOT Analysis. Assesses the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of your business.
- Competitive Profile Matrix. Compares your business against competitors based on key success factors and overall performance.
- Sales Matrix. Gauges the potential of sales opportunities.
- Product Feature and Benefit Matrix. Evaluates how your offer matches customer needs.
- Price Matrix. Helps you determine the pricing for your product strategically.
Competitive Advantage Matrix
Using this information, the competitive advantage matrix is segmented into four quadrants:
- Stalemate industries. Few opportunities to differentiate and the impact on revenue is small. The odd of profiting in these industries is low.
- Volume industries. Few opportunities to differentiate, but the impact on revenue is high. The odds of profiting in these industries is high.
- Fragmented industries. Many opportunities to differentiate, but limited impact. Here, businesses can have a substantial profit potential if they offer differentiated and value-added products and services.
- Specialized industries. Many opportunities to differentiate with great profit potential, especially if the business can learn the ropes of its specialized offering and have the resources to scale.
Testing Out the Competitive Advantage Matrix
Stalemate (Few advantages with small potential)
A small and local retail store that sell everyday products like groceries might be in this category.
Growth potential is also limited because of the low profit margin of the business.
Volume (Few advantages with great potential)
Fragmented (Many advantages with small potential)
Etsy is a niched online marketplace for handmade, vintage, and unique goods.
Specialized (Many advantages with great potential)
SWOT Analysis
But how do I determine what information goes into my SWOT analysis?
Below are some questions I consider.
Strength Questions
Weakness Questions
Opportunity Questions
- What are the current trends?
- What is my market missing?
- Is there available talent that I could hire?
- Are my competitors failing to satisfy their customers?
- Is my target market changing in a way that could help me?
Threat Questions
- Who are my competitors?
- Has there been an increase in competition?
- What are the obstacles I am currently facing?
- Are my employees satisfied with their pay and benefits?
- Are government regulations going to affect me?
- Is there a product on the market that will make mine outdated?
Competitive Profile Matrix
The last step is to calculate the score.
Testing Out the Competitive Profile Matrix
Sales Matrix
With this simple matrix, I get enormous benefits, such as:
- Insights into what I should do and when.
- Not getting stuck by sending content and promotions to bad-fit prospects.
- Not wasting valuable time that could be redirected elsewhere.
Product Feature and Benefit Matrix
- Irrelevant. Low importance and low distinction.
- Overinvested. Low importance and high distinction.
- Key liabilities. Low importance and high distinction.
- Key differentiators. High importance and high distinction.
In the price matrix, there are four quadrants:
Now, when creating a pricing matrix, I’d recommend you go from:
- Penetration to economy
- Skimming to economy
- Premium only (requires marketing budget to raise awareness)
To improve on it further, check what your competitors did and see if you can do the same or better.
The Benefits of Competitive Matrices
The goal of the competitive matrix is to see at a glance the competitive landscape and my position in the marketplace. This will help me see gaps and hone in on my unique value proposition.
How to Find Competitor Data
Here are some places I check when researching my competitors:
- Competitor website
- Website sitemap
- Social media accounts
- Yahoo Finance
- Crunchbase
- SimilarWeb
- Angellist
- SEC Filings
- YouTube
- Brochures
- Trade shows
- Newsletters
How to Present Competitive Analysis Data
During my time at a B2B content marketing agency, we always presented data to clients. It was always “here is what your competitors are doing” and “here is what we recommend.”
To do this, we always included set elements to present our data so it told a story that stuck:
- Know the audience you’re presenting to. It’s okay to have different presentations for different audiences. For instance, while we created detailed documents of a client’s competitive position, we shared a quick summary with founders. However, the detailed slides go to C-level executives in the marketing or SEO department.
- Use quality graphics. Whether it’s a matrix template, a screenshot, or an image, ensure it has high resolution.
- Use competitor logos. Visual impact is key. Use logos to help your audience know the brand you’re referring to.
- Show the product. Include your audience’s asset, which helps them connect the data you’re sharing to the outcome they can expect.
- Maintain consistency. Don’t present A about Competitor 1 and then jump to B about Competitor 2. Discuss one thing about all competitors before discussing the next.
- Be factual. Present where your client’s competitor is thriving and where they are falling short. This gives the client an obvious opportunity for what they can swoop in on immediately.
Competitive Matrix Templates
1. Two-Feature Competitive Landscape Chart
2. Content Marketing Analysis Template
3. SWOT Analysis Template
4. Review Tracker
With this template, you can also use a scoring system to normalize the averages.
Competitive Matrix Examples
1. HubSpot
2. SugarSync
3. 360iResearch
In this example, 360iResearch reports on survey management software. This is a competitor grid showing which companies have the best product satisfaction and business strategy.