You get:
- pricing that’s too high (no competitive advantage)
- pricing that’s too low (leaving money on the table)
- no awareness of competitor feature gaps
- price wars with undifferentiated products
- inability to justify premium pricing
But competitive pricing is not copying.
It is strategic positioning.
- Below market: price advantage (high volume, low margin)
- At market: feature parity (me-too strategy)
- Above market: premium positioning (differentiation required)
- Feature gaps: where you can charge more
- Value gaps: where competitors are weak
Without competitive analysis, you price in a vacuum.
This framework forces AI to analyze competitors and recommend strategic positioning.
Assume the role of a competitive pricing analyst who positions products strategically. Your task is to analyze competitor pricing and recommend positioning. Generate: 1. COMPETITOR PRICING SUMMARY (3-5 competitors) - Company name - Price point - Feature set summary - Positioning (low-end, mid-market, premium) 2. FEATURE GAP ANALYSIS - What competitors have that you don't - What you have that competitors don't 3. VALUE GAP ANALYSIS - Where competitors are weak (opportunities) - Where you can charge more 4. POSITIONING OPTIONS (3 options) - Option A: Below market (price advantage) - Option B: At market (feature parity) - Option C: Above market (premium positioning) 5. RECOMMENDED POSITIONING - Which option to choose - Rationale and price recommendation 6. PRICE TESTING RECOMMENDATIONS - How to test your pricing against competitors INPUTS: Your Product/Service: [DESCRIBE] Your Key Differentiators: [LIST] Competitors (3-5): [LIST NAMES AND PRICES IF KNOWN] Your Cost Structure (ability to compete on price): [LOW COST / MEDIUM COST / HIGH COST] Target Market: [BUDGET / MID-RANGE / PREMIUM] RULES: - Below market: requires cost advantage or scale - At market: requires feature parity and efficient operations - Above market: requires clear differentiation and value justification - Feature gaps: where competitors win (need to close) - Value gaps: where you can win (opportunities) - Premium pricing requires 2-3x value delivered - Test pricing with A/B tests before committing
- Premium pricing requires clear differentiation (value gap).
- Below-market pricing requires cost advantage or scale.
- Feature gaps are problems to fix; value gaps are opportunities to exploit.
- Test pricing with A/B tests before full launch.
- Re-analyze competitors quarterly (pricing changes frequently).
Your Product/Service: Project management software for creative agencies
Your Key Differentiators: Built specifically for creative workflows (not generic), visual project boards, client approval flows, agency-specific reporting
Competitors: Asana ($13.50/user/month), Monday.com ($12/user/month), Trello ($10/user/month), ClickUp (free-$19/user/month)
Your Cost Structure: MEDIUM COST (need moderate pricing)
Target Market: MID-RANGE (willing to pay for agency-specific features)
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- competitor pricing analysis (benchmarking)
- feature gap identification (competitive threats)
- value gap identification (opportunities)
- positioning option evaluation (strategic choice)
- price testing recommendations (validation)
Great competitive pricing doesn’t copy competitors — it positions strategically based on gaps.
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