The Complete SaaS Competitive Analysis Template
If you've ever tried to analyze a competitor without a structured approach, you know how quickly it gets overwhelming. You open their pricing page, then their features page, then their blog, then their Twitter, then a review site — and two hours later you have a dozen browser tabs open and no coherent picture of your competitive position.
We've analyzed over 100 SaaS competitors at Spyglass. This is the exact template we use. It covers everything you need to build a complete competitive picture in a structured, repeatable way.
Why You Need a Standardized Template
Without a template, competitor analysis is reactive and inconsistent. You might focus on pricing for one competitor and features for another, making it impossible to compare them side by side. A template forces you to collect the same data points for every competitor — which is what makes analysis actually useful.
Here's what a good competitive analysis template enables:
- Apples-to-apples comparisons — Same data, same format, every time
- Spot trends over time — Update the template monthly and track changes
- Share across your team — Everyone sees the same competitive landscape
- Turn data into decisions — Structured data reveals patterns that freeform notes miss
The Spyglass Competitive Analysis Framework
Our template covers 6 dimensions. Each answers a specific strategic question:
1. Pricing Analysis
The pricing section captures the competitor's entire pricing structure. This is the most dynamic dimension — pricing changes frequently and directly impacts your position.
Pricing Template Fields
- Pricing model: Per-seat, usage-based, tiered, flat-rate, hybrid
- Tier names and prices: List each tier with exact monthly/annual pricing
- Value metric: What drives the price (seats, API calls, storage, active users)?
- Free tier: Does it exist? What's included? MAU or feature limits?
- Free trial: Length (14-day, 30-day), credit card required?
- Annual discount: Percentage off for annual billing (typically 15-25%)
- Hidden costs: Setup fees, onboarding charges, overage fees, add-ons
- Recent changes: Any pricing changes in the last 6 months? Direction?
Example: If you're analyzing Notion versus Coda, you'd note that Notion charges $10/user/month for Plus while Coda charges $12/user/month for Team. But Notion's free tier caps at 7-day page history while Coda's free tier caps at 50 objects. These nuances matter when positioning against each other.
2. Feature Comparison
Map every feature across your product and each competitor's. Be specific — vague categories like "analytics" aren't helpful. Break features down into sub-features.
Feature Template Fields
- Core features matrix: Feature name, present/absent, quality rating (basic/good/excellent)
- Unique features: Things only this competitor has (potential competitive advantages)
- Missing features: Features they lack that you or others have (potential differentiators)
- Integration ecosystem: Native integrations (list them), API quality, Zapier support
- Platform support: Web, mobile apps (iOS/Android), browser extensions, desktop apps
- Performance/reliability: Any known uptime issues, speed complaints, or SLA offerings
Pro tip: Don't just count features — assess depth. A competitor might have "analytics" as a single chart while you have a full dashboard suite. Your feature matrix should capture these quality differences.
3. Positioning and Messaging
How does the competitor describe themselves? Who are they targeting? What claims do they make? This section reveals their strategic priorities.
Positioning Template Fields
- Tagline and headline: The exact language they use on their homepage hero
- Target audience: Who they explicitly market to (enterprise, SMB, indie, specific vertical)
- Key messaging pillars: Top 3-5 claims or benefits they emphasize
- Differentiation claims: How they say they're different from alternatives
- Tone and voice: Professional, casual, technical, aspirational, fear-based
- Customer logos: What types of customers they feature as social proof
- Comparison pages: Do they have a "vs competitor" page? What's their spin?
4. Go-to-Market Strategy
Understanding how competitors reach customers tells you where the battle for attention is being fought.
GTM Template Fields
- Content strategy: Blog frequency, topics, content formats (written, video, podcast)
- SEO keywords: What organic keywords do they rank for? (Use tools or manual search)
- Paid channels: Google Ads, social ads, sponsored content, affiliate programs
- Social presence: Active platforms, follower counts, engagement levels, posting cadence
- Distribution channels: ProductHunt launches, AppSumo deals, newsletter partnerships
- Sales model: Self-serve, sales-assisted, hybrid, partner/reseller
- Community: Active community? Slack/Discord? Forums? Events?
5. Customer Experience
Reviews and customer feedback reveal strengths and weaknesses that aren't visible on the surface.
Customer Experience Template Fields
- Review site scores: G2, Capterra, Trustpilot ratings (overall and by category)
- Common praise: Top 5 things customers consistently praise
- Common complaints: Top 5 things customers consistently complain about
- Support quality: Response times, support channels, self-service resources
- Onboarding experience: How easy is it to get started? Time-to-value for new users
- Churn signals: What causes customers to leave according to reviews
6. Financial and Business Signals
These indicators help you understand the competitor's health and trajectory.
Business Signals Template Fields
- Funding/backing: Bootstrapped, VC-funded, acquired? Amount and round?
- Team size: Approximate headcount (LinkedIn, job listings, about page)
- Hiring patterns: What roles are they hiring for? (Signals strategic priorities)
- Recent launches: New products, features, or major updates in last 6 months
- Leadership changes: New executives, departures, board changes
- Growth indicators: Traffic trends, job growth, customer count if disclosed
Putting It All Together: The Analysis Matrix
Once you've filled out the template for each competitor, create a comparison matrix. This is where the real insights emerge:
| Dimension | You | Competitor A | Competitor B |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price | $19/mo | $29/mo | $49/mo |
| Free tier | Yes (basic) | No | Yes (generous) |
| Key differentiator | Speed | Depth | Integration |
| Target customer | Indie founders | Mid-market | Enterprise |
| G2 rating | 4.5 | 4.3 | 4.7 |
| Funding | Bootstrapped | $5M Series A | $20M Series B |
The matrix reveals patterns. For example, you might discover that your cheapest competitor has no free tier — which means a free tier could be your winning wedge. Or that the highest-rated competitor is also the most expensive — suggesting room for a premium positioning.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Analysis paralysis: The template is a tool, not a mandate. Fill what's relevant. If a competitor has no public pricing, note that as a data point and move on.
- One-time analysis: Competitive analysis isn't a project you finish. It's a practice you maintain. Revisit your template monthly.
- Ignoring indirect competitors: The tools your customers use alongside yours often become competitors. Include adjacent products that could pivot into your space.
- Confirmation bias: Don't use the template to prove your product is better. Be honest about where competitors win — that's where you need to improve.
- No action items: Every analysis should produce at least one strategic action. If you're just collecting data, you're missing the point.
"A competitive analysis without a template is like navigating without a map. You'll move, but you won't know if you're going the right direction."
How to Make This a Weekly Habit
Block 30 minutes every Friday. Open your template for one competitor. Update any changed fields. Review alerts from your monitoring tools. Add one insight to your strategic notes. That's it. Thirty minutes, once a week, keeps you ahead of 90% of founders who do no competitive analysis at all.
For the remaining 10% — the ones who run structured, ongoing CI programs — tools like Spyglass automate the data collection so you can focus on analysis and action. But even a manual template beats nothing.
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