Best Competitor Analysis Template 2026 (Fields That Matter)
A competitor analysis template is only useful if it turns scattered tab-hopping into a decision. Most fail because they collect trivia — logos, founding years, follower counts — and never get to the one question that matters: why does a buyer choose them over you, and what do you do about it? Here is what a strong 2026 template captures, and how to run the analysis so it changes what you ship and how you sell.
The fields that actually drive decisions
- Positioning line — the one sentence each competitor leads with. If three rivals say the same thing, that is your opening to say something else.
- Pricing & packaging — not just the number, but how they fence tiers. Where they gate a feature is where you can give it away.
- Target buyer — who they clearly built for. The segment they ignore is often your best beachhead.
- Proof & reviews — what customers praise and, more importantly, the recurring complaint. Public one-star reviews are a free product roadmap.
- Acquisition channels — where their traffic and demand come from, so you know which fights are crowded and which are open.
- Your wedge — the single reason a buyer switches. Every row should feed this column.
How to run it without drowning
- Pick five, not fifty. Three direct competitors and two adjacent ones. More than that and you collect, never decide.
- Mine the reviews. Read the three- and one-star reviews on the big marketplaces. The recurring complaint is your wedge, stated by their own customers.
- Map positioning to gaps. Lay the positioning lines side by side. The white space — what nobody is claiming — is where you plant your flag.
- Turn it into action. Each finding ends in a 'so we will…' — a pricing change, a message change, a feature, or a channel to attack.
Free vs paid
A free blank grid is fine if you already know which fields matter. A focused paid template earns its keep by pre-loading the decision-driving fields, the review-mining prompts, and a positioning map — so a non-strategist finishes a real analysis instead of a logo collage. For a few dollars you skip the part where you stare at an empty spreadsheet wondering what to even compare.
The output that matters
A good competitor analysis ends in three things: your one-line wedge, two messaging changes you can ship this week, and one product or pricing move for the quarter. If your template does not produce those, it is research theater. Make it end in decisions.
Skip the blank page. The
Competitor Analysis Template is a fill-in-the-blank, ready-to-edit version of everything on this page — structured so you finish in an afternoon instead of a weekend. One-time $49, yours to reuse forever.
Get the competitor analysis template $49 → FAQ
What should a competitor analysis template include?
Each competitor's positioning line, pricing and packaging, target buyer, proof and recurring complaints from reviews, acquisition channels, and a wedge column that captures why a buyer would switch to you.
How many competitors should I analyze?
Five is plenty: three direct and two adjacent. More than that and you collect trivia instead of reaching a decision.
Where do I find honest competitor weaknesses?
The three- and one-star reviews on the major marketplaces and app stores. The recurring complaint is your wedge, described by their own customers.
Page built 2026-06-14 from public, dated buying-intent signals. Updated as new signals land.
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