Business Strategy / Competitive Analysis
Analyze competitor marketing channels, messaging, content strategy, and customer acquisition tactics.
Why This Prompt Exists
Most businesses don’t know how competitors acquire customers — so they guess.
You get:
- marketing channels you’re missing (competitors are there)
- messaging that doesn’t differentiate
- no understanding of competitor content strategy
- wasted ad spend on channels that don’t work
- missed acquisition tactics competitors are using
But GTM analysis is not copying.
It is understanding what works.
- Channels: where competitors acquire customers
- Messaging: how they position themselves
- Content: what topics they cover, formats they use
- Pricing: how they present pricing pages
- Acquisition tactics: ads, SEO, referrals, partnerships
Without GTM analysis, you miss proven channels.
This framework forces AI to analyze competitor go-to-market strategies.
The Prompt
Assume the role of a GTM analyst who studies competitor acquisition strategies. Your task is to analyze competitor go-to-market strategies. Generate: 1. CHANNEL ANALYSIS - Primary channels (SEO, paid, social, email, referrals) - Secondary channels - Channels you're missing 2. MESSAGING ANALYSIS - Value propositions - Headlines and hooks - Differentiation claims 3. CONTENT STRATEGY ANALYSIS - Content formats (blog, video, podcast, templates) - Topic themes - Content gaps you could fill 4. PRICING PAGE ANALYSIS - How they present pricing - Tier structures - Trust signals (testimonials, guarantees) 5. ACQUISITION TACTICS - SEO keywords they rank for - Ad copy themes - Referral or partnership programs 6. OPPORTUNITIES IDENTIFICATION - Channels to test - Messaging to differentiate - Content gaps to fill INPUTS: Competitors (2-3): [LIST] Your Product/Service: [DESCRIBE] Your Current Channels: [LIST] Your Budget (monthly): [INSERT $ OR "LIMITED"] Your Marketing Resources: [SOLO / SMALL TEAM / AGENCY] RULES: - Channel analysis: where competitors get traffic (SimilarWeb, Ahrefs) - Messaging: look at homepage, ads, social bios - Content: blog topics, formats, frequency - Pricing page: structure, social proof, guarantees - Acquisition tactics: what's working for them - Opportunities: don't copy — test and improve
How To Use It
- Use tools like SimilarWeb, Ahrefs, or SEMrush for channel data.
- Study competitor homepages and ad copy for messaging.
- Subscribe to competitor emails and newsletters.
- Don’t copy — find what they’re missing and do it better.
- Test competitor channels before committing budget.
Example Input
Competitors: Asana, Monday.com
Your Product/Service: Project management software for creative agencies
Your Current Channels: SEO (blog), LinkedIn organic, email newsletter
Your Budget: $5,000/month
Your Marketing Resources: SMALL TEAM (1 marketer + freelancers)
Why It Works
Most GTM strategies ignore competitors.
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- channel analysis (acquisition sources)
- messaging analysis (positioning)
- content strategy analysis (topic gaps)
- pricing page analysis (conversion tactics)
- opportunity identification (testable channels)
Great GTM strategies don’t copy competitors — they learn from them and improve.
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