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How to Conduct an Effective Competitive Analysis During the Product Discovery Phase

Auteur n°3 – Benjamin

By Benjamin Massa
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Summary – To avoid launching a miscalibrated product in an already saturated market and risking an empty promise, competitive analysis during discovery is essential. It combines mapping direct, indirect and manual alternatives, digging into user feedback, UX testing and audits of offerings, pricing and SEO/acquisition channels to uncover gaps and weak signals. Solution: deploy a structured, modular, field-based process to fuel your hypotheses and prioritize your MVP with concrete insights before a single line of code.

Many teams claim differentiation without having truly explored what already exists. They rely on intuition, a list of “innovative” features, or an appealing sales angle, only to discover too late that the market is saturated, their promise lacks credibility, or a competitor already meets the need better.

A rigorous competitive analysis during the product discovery phase is not just a marketing benchmark: it’s a safeguard that reduces risk, sharpens your positioning, and uncovers real opportunities before any development begins.

Why Competitive Analysis Is Essential in Product Discovery

It reveals the actual market landscape and highlights blind spots where unmet needs lie. It provides a detailed understanding of the strengths, limitations, and pricing strategies of existing players.

Identify Existing Players

Before forming any product hypothesis, it’s crucial to map out existing solutions. This includes not only the most visible competitors but also those embedded in your prospects’ internal workflows.

By analyzing their key features, positioning, and user experience, you get an accurate snapshot of what users already know and accept. This helps you avoid reinventing the wheel or launching an obsolete MVP right out of the gate.

This work also enables you to map the dominant acquisition channels and the messages that resonate. Such a systemic view guides your strategic choices and sets the stage for the rest of the discovery.

Explore Underserved Needs and Frustrations

Beyond the “who does what,” a good competitive analysis identifies recurring pain points among users. These could be poorly implemented features, unsuitable pricing, or an overly complex user journey.

By sifting through reviews on platforms and specialized forums, you uncover unresolved frustrations. These insights become potential differentiation hypotheses.

With this approach, you can document the gaps between marketing promises and actual usage, building a solid foundation to prioritize your MVP.

Case Study: Uncovering Hidden Opportunities

A Swiss organization involved in internal logistics discovered, through a competitive analysis, that all market tools charged warehouse management modules in volume tiers.

By examining user feedback, they noticed that a sub-segment of SMEs didn’t require tiered pricing but preferred a flat fee. This blind spot allowed them to offer a unique model, validated through a series of interviews, and attract qualified traffic before coding a prototype.

This example illustrates how competitive analysis sharpens clarity and prevents investment in false differentiators.

Identify Relevant Competitors

There is no “universal” list of competitors: you must focus on those who truly influence your audience’s decision. Not all players carry the same weight in a potential user’s choice.

Select Direct Competitors

Direct competitors offer a similar solution for the same customer segment. Your analysis should cover functional coverage, claimed use cases, and proposed workflows.

By understanding their core promise and pricing positioning, you gauge the barrier to entry for a new entrant. This analysis alerts you to essential standard features.

It also provides performance and UX benchmarks to calibrate your own success criteria.

Recognize Indirect Competitors

Indirect competitors address the same need with a different lever. For example, a specialized reporting tool can be replaced by a more general BI suite or an advanced Excel plugin.

These alternative solutions aren’t always found via search engines: you need to listen to industry communities and analyze ad-hoc internal workflows.

This lets you capture weak adoption signals and understand how prospects manage without your solution.

Don’t Overlook Workaround Alternatives

Before any software purchase, some users prefer to stick with manual or semi-automated processes. A spreadsheet, a macro script, or an outsourced service can be formidable competitors.

Perceived cost, ease of integration, and trust in proven methods are significant barriers to a new product. Accounting for them prevents overestimating your offering’s added value.

This perspective pushes you to justify your technical and UX choices against workflows often invisible in traditional benchmarks.

Illustration: Nuances in a Specialized Sector

A Swiss digital startup targeting the medical sector believed it had identified two main SaaS competitors. However, in field discussions, it found that most facilities used an in-house module integrated into their ERP.

This workaround, scarcely documented online, was the deciding factor in purchasing. The example shows that a superficial Google search isn’t enough to grasp real competition.

By incorporating this insight, the team redefined its MVP to interface directly with the ERP rather than replace a third-party tool.

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Deep Dive into Their Offering and Business Model

Beyond the homepage, you need to test the solution, evaluate the UX, decipher the offering structure, and observe the pricing logic. Every packaging detail reveals strategic choices.

Critical Product and UX Analysis

Logging into the tool, walking through a complete scenario, and assessing interface fluidity are essential steps. It’s not just about ticking off features; it’s about measuring the actual user experience.

Note friction points, load times, and the clarity of user flows. These observations feed into your prototypes and test sessions.

This will tell you whether your MVP should prioritize execution speed, guided onboarding, or integrated support.

Offering Structure and Value Proposition

Examine how plans are segmented: which features are locked in each version? Which modules are optional and billed separately?

Understanding this pricing framework helps you create your own value matrix. You avoid incoherent combinations and align your proposition with market expectations.

It also guides your messaging by highlighting clear benefits for each target segment.

Business Model and Pricing

A price that’s too low can signal a lack of robustness, while a price that’s too high demands a strongly supported promise. Analyze billing models: subscription, freemium, pay-as-you-go, setup fee…

Identify margin tiers and psychological thresholds. This allows you to calibrate your own pricing grid with full awareness.

You might decide to offer a free module to penetrate the market or command a premium price for specialized expertise.

Analyze SEO Presence, Acquisition Channels, and User Feedback

Competitive analysis encompasses marketing aspects: SEO, content, and social media. It should also leverage customer reviews to reveal hidden strengths and weaknesses.

Content and Keyword Audit

Identify the keywords your competitors rank for and the topics they cover. Analyze the quality, depth, and publishing frequency.

This helps you spot untouched themes and adjust your own editorial strategy to capture qualified organic traffic.

You’ll also understand how the market is “educated” and which messages have become commonplace.

Channel Evaluation and Editorial Tone

On LinkedIn, Slack, newsletters or podcasts, each competitor builds a brand universe. Study their tone, posting rhythm, and engagement levels.

This shows how they occupy your prospects’ mindshare and guides your own visibility channels.

By uncovering underutilized formats, you can create a more impactful entry point for your audience.

User Feedback Analysis

Forums, review platforms, and industry communities are a goldmine for understanding true points of satisfaction and irritation.

Comments often reveal unannounced use cases, recurring flaws, or expectations overlooked by official marketing.

These insights guide your prioritization of features and refine your value proposition.

Example: Revealing Feedback

A Swiss watchmaking SME planned to integrate a complex scheduling module. When analyzing reviews of an existing tool, it found that most users prioritized a simplified interface and 100% reliability above all.

Instead of copying advanced features, it designed a clean visual calendar, validated in two weeks of testing, and achieved a 30% increase in adoption.

This example demonstrates how listening to your competitors’ users can effectively steer your discovery process.

Understand the Market to Differentiate Better

A thorough competitive analysis is a clarity lever that fuels every stage of product discovery: identifying players, exploring needs, testing positioning, and prioritizing features. Without it, you move forward blindly and risk launching a poorly calibrated product.

At Edana, we support managers and product teams in structuring contextualized, modular, and scalable discovery processes. Our experts help you turn insights into concrete decisions, from hypothesis to MVP.

Discuss your challenges with an Edana expert

By Benjamin

Digital expert

PUBLISHED BY

Benjamin Massa

Benjamin is an senior strategy consultant with 360° skills and a strong mastery of the digital markets across various industries. He advises our clients on strategic and operational matters and elaborates powerful tailor made solutions allowing enterprises and organizations to achieve their goals. Building the digital leaders of tomorrow is his day-to-day job.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions about competitive analysis

When should you start a competitive analysis in the product discovery phase?

Competitive analysis should begin as early as the product hypothesis stage, before any prototype. It allows you to assess the market, identify existing players and their strengths. This helps refine your positioning, spot untapped niches, and reduce the risk of developing an MVP that is redundant or misaligned with actual user needs.

How can you identify direct and indirect competitors during discovery?

Combine online research, specialized forums, and discussions with your prospects to map both mainstream and workaround solutions. Don't forget in-house modules or scripts used internally—they act as workaround competitors. This systemic approach ensures you won't overlook influential alternatives in your clients' workflows.

How do you identify unmet needs that existing tools don't address?

Analyze feedback on review platforms and industry forums to spot recurring frustrations. Supplement this with user interviews to understand workaround usages and pain points. These insights provide a list of differentiation hypotheses to validate before moving to development.

What criteria should you use to evaluate competitors' business models?

Examine the offer segmentation, paid add-ons, volume tiers, and billing models (subscription, freemium, pay-per-use). Identify psychological price points and profit margins. This analysis helps you build a coherent value matrix and align your pricing with market expectations.

How can you leverage user feedback for competing tools?

Gather reviews on specialized platforms, forums, and professional communities. Segment the feedback by use case and identify points of satisfaction and disappointment. Incorporate these insights into your prototypes to prioritize high-impact features and improve user experience from the testing phase onward.

Which metrics should you track to measure the impact of a competitive analysis?

Track the number of opportunities and gaps identified, the proportion of unmet needs converted into hypotheses, and the adoption rate of prototypes based on these insights. Also measure qualified traffic and engagement during test sessions to validate the relevance of your positioning.

What mistakes should you avoid during the discovery phase of competitive analysis?

Don't limit yourself to the first five Google results and don't forget about internally built solutions. Avoid merging direct and indirect competitors without distinction, and don't rely solely on product listings: actually test the tools to understand their UX and limitations.

How do you prioritize features after a competitive analysis?

Use a prioritization matrix (impact vs. effort), weighting unmet needs and business potential. Validate key hypotheses through interviews or quick tests. This modular approach ensures an MVP that is scalable, secure, and tailored to your market's specific context.

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