When it comes to marketing your brand online there is just so much to do. We spend our days researching, creating, implementing, and then measuring the success of our efforts. There are dozens of channels to participate in, and obviously thousands of ways to go about marketing your brand, but however you slice it—online marketing comes down to introducing new audiences to your brand, keeping your current brand users happy, and evolving the brand/company itself.
Unfortunately I think the first two steps often overshadow that third step to the process—evolving the brand/company itself, probably because to grow as a company you really need to take a pause and evaluate where you are currently standing. As marketers, the idea of pausing is equated with losing momentum which scares the hell out of us all. This industry moves too quickly, and pausing to reflect on where your brand is compared to your competitors seems like time poorly spent.
I am here to argue just the opposite. A few weeks ago I gave a presentation at PubCon South on “Competitive Intelligence on the Social Web,” and I wanted to extract a few of my key arguments and offer them up the SEOmoz audience both as thought provokers and for feedback. In my opinion competitive intelligence is one of those marketing steps we all say we did, but few of us rarely do. It’s true. Most of us are big fat liars when it comes to “doing competitive intelligence.”
For example, competitive intelligence IS NOT:
- Sitting in a room and ranting about your competitor’s latest marketing move
- Grabbing lunch with your Product Manager and creating a roadmap based on what your competitors have that you don’t.
- Putting together a grid of you and your competitor’s website’s traffic stats, never to be looked at again.
- Googling your competitor’s brand name to see what latest things are noted in the SERP’s
Sorry friends that is not competitive intelligence.
However, competitive intelligence IS:
- Understanding what direction your competitor's are headed & how that might intersect or parallel your own
- Knowing what products you are pushing out and how they match up or differ from your competitor's
- Mapping out a list of key differentials and attributes for your biggest competitors and yourself
- Researching & monitoring a variety of platforms to better understand your competitors
Okay now that we all have a better sense of what it is, let’s talk about how to do it. Instead of throwing a 20-slide PowerPoint at you I thought I would dilute it down to a few key steps toward understanding your competitive landscape, and perhaps more importantly I want to tie those into how you can use this information for company gains.
The Grid of Awesomeness:
Okay maybe that name is a bit of an exaggeration, but either way, the first key step toward understanding your competitors is getting them all down on paper and forcing yourself to research key attributes. I have included below an example grid that you can use to get you started.
You might ask yourself—how do I know which competitors to include? This can differ depending on the size of your company and the scope of your industry but a great place to start is the “3-1-1 rule”. I usually suggest you pick 3 brands that are often grouped with yours, either in roundup articles, or in conversation. Those are your primary competitors. Then choose one “dreamer,” which would be the brand in your vertical you hope to be one day. Lastly, I suggest including one “newbie” in your competitive analysis, this is assuming that isn’t you of course. By picking a newbie in your industry you can often gain perspective into where your industry is moving, and key marketing channels to consider since they tend to operate pretty lean.
After you have chosen your competitors I suggest filling out the following for them: name, size, products, features, price points, affiliate program description (do they have one? What are the key attributes?), playing grounds (what channels, platforms, communities are they dominating?), advocates/influencers (who is lobbying for them?), notes. Don’t forget to fill this out for your company as well!
Example Grid:
Product Growth & Benchmarking:
This is perhaps the most time consuming element to competitive intelligence when it is done well. There needs to be someone in charge of competitive intelligence maintenance. This person should subscribe to your competitor’s blog so you are hearing about product launches as they happen, and all company announcements in real time. You can also gain a lot of insight from reading the comments to those posts.
In addition to this you should set up Google Alerts for your competitor’s brand plus the words “launches” and “announces.” We all know that Google Alerts are limited and somewhat unreliable, but you should have a daily digest set to notify you of any big moves your competitor's are making. You never know which could be a real momentum changer.
The last step to this is really to keep a pulse on the traffic growth to their sites by checking Alexa or Compete monthly. While it may seem a strain on your time and resources it’s beneficial for you to know what momentum trajectory your competitor’s are on.
Monitoring Mentions:
This is what most people think competitive intelligence is. While it's not the only piece to the competitive intelligence puzzle, it certainly is an important one. There are so many tools available to us (most free) that help us keep an eye on what our competitors do…it’s actually a bit creepy how many tools and sites are out there to help us be shady. I personally support this shadiness.
Some examples would include sites like: Whostalkin, SocialMention, Backtype, etc. All of these allow you to search a competitor’s brand or products and find out the latest things said about them. These social web aggregators search a number of channels like images, videos, blogs, new feeds, etc. They are great for understanding how a product launch might have gone for a competitor or how any other announcement was received.
Other ways to spy on your competitor’s in the social web—create private twitter lists and monitor their brand and employee’s feeds, sign up for competitor’s newsletters, etc. The key is know where they are pushing out the most crucial information and then making sure you have someone dabbling in that space.
Hiring Espionage:
Now that you have a sense of where your competitor’s currently stand and what they are doing right now, it’s time to spy on them and try to figure out their next moves. Hiring espionage is a great way to do this. You can gain a great sense of where your competitors are moving by looking at who they are investing in from an employee perspective.
A great way to do this is to keep an eye on their company job listings, and occasionally throw their brand into a job meta-engine. The best possible place to spy on hiring moves is by going to LinkedIn and finding their company profile page. There is a section down at the bottom that shows recent hires. You can defer tons of information from this section—are they hiring a bunch of sales people? Top-level engineers? Whatever team they are stacking up is probably the team they are focusing on.
The Takeaway:
The important thing to remember is that competitive intelligence isn’t something you do once and never revisit again. It also isn’t something that you can base on intuition or informal conversations with coworkers. Competitive intelligence is a key process that can be used to inform instrumental decisions you make. The better you understand your competitors the clearer perspective you have on your industry and audience as a whole. Competitive intelligence enables you to better speak on your strengths, brainstorm ideas for quick gains, and make more data-driven decisions all around.
Plus you get to pretend you are a spy which is just all sorts of fun (please note trench coat and night vision goggles are optional).
Joanna Lord, come on down!
I echo the sentiments above. I've been looking forward to your post and I wasn't disappointed.
1) Many thanks for not throwing a 20-slide PowerPoint at me first thing in the morning.
2) You forgot to mention the sunglasses with the side mirrors. A spy essential.
3) This is an incredibly detailed road map for performing CI like a pro. Having come from the Googling your competitor’s brand name to see what latest things are noted in the SERP’s camp, you have really opened my eyes to what CI really is. So thanks.
Now your next post needs to be on showing me how to find the time to add this to my routine. :)
Ha glad it was useful. I have had a few comments about how scalable this process is...maybe I can work it into a follow-up post. You are right though "good competitive intel" can be really time consuming, and depending on the immediate goals or a company it may have to take a back burner...with that said...just like anytime you don't look before leaping you might get burned.
Also...sunglasses with side mirrors...seriously how did I forget those? {smacks self on back of the head} :)
Re: social web.
One thing you can do is to befriend your competitor's employees on Facebook and to follow them on twitter. Don't bother with the official company Facebook page or twitter, or the senior people in the company. See what their low level employees are saying. People spill a lot on the Internet and you can pick up some good stuff this way.
Old school trick readapted to modern times... I used it as "internal marketing tool"... the place to befriend people was always the coffee machine corner.
You are spot on! I try to read as many of my primary competitor's employees personal blogs & streams as I can. Friendfeed is great for that. The ranting & raving tends to spill the beans more often than not :)
Thanks for the idea!
And finally the day many were waiting has come: Joanna has published her first post on SEOmoz.
And the post is one of the 'to be bookmarked' kind.
I thank you especially because:
And I love the espionage tactic (writing while looking at my Bogart poster in the office).
Haha you are WAY too kind, thanks so much for the words of encouragement. I was certainly overdue on getting a post up.
I am glad I laced in some quality information into my ramblings, and love that you can appreciate the shadiness of the espionage angle :)
A nice refresher and interesting thinking, Joanna, thank you!
I would say we should not forget our SEO espionage tools. E.g. KeywordSpy lets you spy your competition's AdWords, including teir keywords, their ads, their landing page URLs. Surely this should be a part of competitive analysis.
I want to add that Alexa is potentially a highly misleading tool and I would not recommend relying on it in most cases. It is only useful for compating extremely large websites with huge amount of traffic, but for the purposes of smaller sites it should best be ignored. Alexa measures traffic by tracking visitors whohave theAlexa bar installed (i.e. a tiny minority of all users). Here, I have just thought up a competitive use forAlexa: if you want to mislead your competitors into thinking that you have higher traffic than they, require that all your employees and associates install the Alexa toolbar in all their browsers on all computers and set their home pages to your company website, to ensure that Alexa registers all those visits to the site. This is guaranteed to boost your Alexa rank, which isn't worth much. :)
You are sooooo right re: Alexa. In fact Compete is just as skewed with their toolbar downloads swaying the accuracy. I use traffic in competitive intel with a huge grain of salt in there. I more or less use it as a comparitive analysis tool...more with summaries--they are "doubling" in traffic or they have "dropped a 1/3rd in a quarter" etc. But you make a really good point that never should you look at those stats as true reflectors of where your competitors stand.
Also really good point re: specific espionage tools, maybe I will do a follow-up post tackling that side of it? thanks for the idea :)
Thanks, yeah, actually I would be really grateful for an authoritative up-to-date post on current espionage tools! I am not exactly up-to-date on them myself. I like KeywordSpy. Then of course SEOmoz's own new Open Site Explorer is a top-notch tool that can (and must) be used to analyze competition's backlink profiles (I used to use Yahoo with SEOquanke but I have converted!). Would you look at a competitor’s competitive analysis offering?! :) SEObook has some tools like that. Then, in addition to the ones you've mentioned, there's QuantCast, HitWise, SpyFu, Semphonic, Trellian's Competitive Intelligence... I haven't tried them all though I've read the hype on most. Not least the riches of SEOmoz! If you could review much of this and recommend a state-of-the-art complete set, I for one would find it hugely helpful. What do others think? And perhaps you can mention other stuff to mention?
Love the post very informative.
The hiring espionage - job postings - is a really obvious when you think about it but very often overlooked wealth of knowledge great to point it out =).
CIntel is an area that can be so powerful for gaining ground on the competition and I really will find this post helpful as this is an area I personally havent been that active in beside as you had refrenced the set-it-and-forget-it types of CIntel.
Right?! I just read your comment when I saw in my RSS that LinkedIn rolled out the function to "follow company profiles" today...sounds like they were reading our minds!
Now not only can people looking for a job have a stronger handle on their top choice companies, but we as competitive intel spys will be able to segment out our hiring espionage more efficiently :)
You really shouldn't have posted this.
You realize you just set the bar for your subsequent posts extremely high! ;)
Either way, excellent addition. As SEO/SMO continues to become viewed under the general umbrella of marketing, this level of competitive intelligence has perhaps been a little slower to be adopted.
It should be interesting to watch as this area continues to evolve, which I think will happen from both sides...
traditional marketers turning to the web for deeper insights and tapping into all the rich information that is now at their fingertips, as well as from SEO and online marketers who are starting to adopt competitive intelligence...and using all the tools they know so well for new ways.
A quite off topic note, but funny IMO... when I first read SMO in a book I was wondering what was that acronim... therefore (it was some years ago) I opened my consumed english-italian-english dictionary and found out something that wasn't fitting with what I was reading:
Abbreviation of sorbitan monooleate
From that time I started to Google english acronyms.
Oh man! don't make me nervous for 2nd time I post as well :) Thanks for the kind words & I think you are spot on with your prediction...traditional marketers are certainly turning to the web and competitive intel strategies to help gain perspective but also stretch past theories further.
I really believe that as our industry continues to grow we could potentially see competitive intelligence as a key component in a marketer's job description...perhaps the analyst's role? As more tools roll out to help us gather information, I believe more people will begin lacing them into every day to-do lists...we shall see ;)
Thankx a ton man as i am new in this industry. Thankx for introducing whoistalkin, socialmention and backtype. i never heard that before.
No problem! Those are some great sites, I use Whostalkin all the time, plus the team behind that site is a great one--I see lots of potential in where they are taking the site. I would expect even more functionality and good stuff from those aggregators, as we all become more obsessed with streamlining our social web searches. :)
great! how can tracking competitor on facebook?how can do that?
Terrific work! That is the kind of info that are supposed to be shared around the internet. Shame on Google for not positioning this submit upper! Come on over and talk over with my web site . Thanks =)
Don't know how this slipped through my feed reader yesterday (Bad feed reader! Bad!). Great inaugural post, Joanna. I really like the 3-1-1 rule - I realized that I tend to do something similar when I'm doing competitive analysis for CRO projects, but I never thought about it quite that way. Sometimes, you have an implicit structure in your head and don't even realize it.
I think the -1-1 aspect can be really enlightening. We tend to think too narrowly about the competition, and it can really help to consider not only the huge players (who we'd never dream of competing with) but also the up-and-comers, who are often forced to innovate.
Absolutely. I have had clients in the past that actually only tracked their main competitor--one company! I would always shake my head and note that if that company exited or was acquired they would have no other data to use for benchmarking or strategy sessions.
Up and comers in my mind have always been the most enlightening. My entrepreneurial experiences often remind me of how hard I worked at picking the right places to spend my time--few resources, no budget, and a lot of drive can lead to lean and strong strategies--definitely strategies worth noting and following :)
Don't forget that while tracking your competitors, it's important to follow the industry as a whole. If the entire industry is moving one way, you should probably follow, unless that falls under your specific differentiation.
In the end, differentiation is the key for long term success (like you said, just copying competitors gets nobody nowhere).
Whoa CrimsonGirl, or should I call you MadameX?
That is some more seriously good spy advice.
Mata Hari...
Great post Joanna! Sounds like a lot of work! Do you put a limit on how much time you should spend doing it?
Yeah scaling the process is hard. My baseline is to -- at the very least-- revisit the grid every quarter (our industry just moves so fast) and to have the automated alerts set up. If you do those two and visit their blogs weekly you will have a huge leap on most other companies.
Also if your competitor happens to be SEOmoz...I would double that workload, maybe triple it? #justsayin #hadtogetthatinthere :)
Ha ha!
#gotcha! ;)
If i am a newbie and i haven't been grouped with any other brand so far, then how i will pick my primary competitors. For me every competitor is a 'dreamer'. And could you explain, how picking another newbie in my industry can help me in gaining perspective into where my industry is moving. By 'size' do you mean 'employee base', 'client base', 'market share' or something else. Could you also elaborate on 'price points'. Thanks
You bring up some interesting caveats...if you are a newbie to an industry than everyone is a "dreamer." I would suggest picking the two or three competitors that are currently leading the way in your industry and using them as benchmarks. As far as size goes...I really mean traffic to their website, or possible size of company meaning numbers of employees. It won't do you (as a startup) any good to compare yourself to a company of 100+ people, but if there is another two or three person shop that is bringing in 100,000+ uniques a month...you def want to be monitoring their efforts. As far as price points...I really mean what is the monetization for these competitors? "price per product" "price per membership" or "price per advertisement on their site' would all be examples of ways your competitors are monetizing.
I hope that helps! Feel free to shoot other questions my way :) It all comes down to finding companies you are competing with for share of voice and really understanding what you off that they dont/vice a versa :)
Thanks. What if all my leading competitors are too big and miles ahead of me in terms of branding, traffic and price points. One of my client gets 600k+ visits a month. Though not a small brand but is like a newbie in comparison to leading sites like ehow, about.com, answers.com etc.
That is certainly a common dilemma for newcomers to any space. I usually suggest taking the current numbers for these bigger players and trying to deter from it where they were when they first started & also the growth trajectory they were on. There is so much historical data out there on any brand when it comes to growth & timelines as it aligns with product launches, branding moves, and marketing initiatives. This is where competitive intelligence becomes more about the research and using the data as a guide not so much as a comparitive tool.
Also you can always use similar brands to you (in marketing approach and size) in a different vertical to help guide you on challenges you may face as a startup and ways to research where your time/efforts should go. :)
well let me be the first to say Congrats on landing a client with 600k visits per month as a newbie! That says something about your trust/likeability I'm sure.
Churn in the SERPs right now means that the competitor you were focused on is gone, and someone new has popped up from page 3 who was not on your radar. And the SERPs seems to churn every 6-8 weeks at the moment as G re-runs Panda.
There are other dangers too. What if you copy your competitors strategy and they then get penalised for it, and so do you? "Everyone is doing it" is no excuse. I think sometimes we focus too much on what our competitors are doing, and not enough on making sure there are no loose ends in our own operation. Be unique and focis on your own stuff.
ha you read my mind. I posted this purely because I couldn't find my thumbdrive ;)
Great article...
Most of the "NOT" section is what I am forced to put up with from the market researchers at work....I shall be forwarding this on to them.
However, I wish someone would of said that the trench coat and night vision goggles were optional eailier...
While they may be optional I strongly suggest them ;)
Glad I could help you (cough) (cough) remind other team members of the importance in doing competitive intel ha :)
Sweet! Now I can read this instead of searching for your PPT from PubCon South.
Great post, this is really helpful. Time to refine my competitive intelligence process.
A lot of times the more you can learn about your competition the more you can learn about your own company.
You speak the truth my friend! You also just managed to sum up in one sentence what took me a dozen paragraphs to relay :) --such a good bottomline takeaway. Thanks!
Great post, I used the LinkedIn strategy to show a client that his largest competitor was hiring a bunch of web/SEM people, and that he had to do the same. Now he did nothing with the insight, but perhaps a separate post is needed for "how to knock your client in the head when he makes a bad decision".
Keep up the great work!
Or, instead of waiting for a separate post, just include a blackjack in your spy outfit. For those moments when you need a...helper.
Or call yourself "Mr. Brown" or Mr. White, or Mr. Orange... or any of Tarantino's characters.