SaaS Competitive Analysis: The Only Checklist You'll Ever Need
Most SaaS founders approach competitive analysis the same way: they open a competitor's website, poke around for 20 minutes, write down a few notes, and call it done. The result is a shallow, incomplete picture that misses critical signals and leads to bad strategic decisions.
A proper competitive analysis isn't complicated — but it is systematic. You need to look at the same dimensions for every competitor, every time. That's where a checklist helps. Once you have a repeatable process, you can analyze a competitor in 45 minutes instead of half a day, and you won't miss anything important.
This checklist is organized into five sections. Use it for every competitor you analyze. Print it, bookmark it, or keep it open in a tab. After 3-4 analyses, the process will become automatic.
Section 1: Pricing Analysis
Pricing is the most visible and most impactful competitive signal. Start here.
- List all pricing tiers with monthly and annual prices
- Note the value metric (per seat, usage-based, hybrid, flat)
- Calculate annual discount percentage
- Identify which features are in which tier
- Check for hidden fees (setup, overage, API usage)
- Look for free trial length and credit card requirements
- Note any grandfathered plans or legacy pricing
- Check pricing page for social proof (customer logos, testimonials)
- Compare their price-to-feature ratio against yours
- Check if they recently changed pricing (use Wayback Machine or change monitoring)
Section 2: Feature Analysis
Features are the meat of any competitive comparison. But don't just count features — assess quality and relevance.
- List all major features from their website, docs, and changelog
- Note features they market as "unique" or "only we have"
- Check integration marketplace (which tools do they connect to?)
- Review their API documentation quality
- Test their onboarding flow (sign up for a trial if possible)
- Check mobile experience (responsive web, native apps)
- Review their changelog for recent feature velocity
- Note features you have that they don't (your differentiators)
- Note features they have that you don't (your gaps)
- Assess feature quality: does their implementation actually work well?
Section 3: Positioning and Messaging
How competitors talk about themselves reveals their target market, their perceived differentiators, and their strategy.
- Write down their tagline and value proposition
- Identify their target customer (size, industry, role)
- Note their primary "enemy" — who do they position against?
- Analyze their hero section: what's the first thing they want you to see?
- Review their case studies and customer stories
- Check their social media presence and content tone
- Note their SEO keywords and content topics
- Review their about page and company narrative
- Check their comparison pages (if they compare to others)
- Identify positioning changes over time (via Wayback Machine)
"Your competitor's positioning is a goldmine of strategic insight. It tells you exactly which customers they're chasing and which battle they've chosen to fight."
Section 4: Customer Experience
Customer experience is where many SaaS products differentiate. It's harder to copy than features.
- Read recent reviews on G2, Capterra, and ProductHunt
- Check their response rate and quality on review platforms
- Review their support documentation and knowledge base
- Test their customer support (email, chat, or phone)
- Check their NPS or satisfaction scores if published
- Look at their churn-related content (do they publish churn rates?)
- Review their cancellation flow (easy or painful?)
- Check community engagement (forums, Slack groups, Discord)
- Note common complaints across review platforms
- Assess overall customer sentiment trend (improving or declining?)
Section 5: Business Signals
These signals tell you about their growth trajectory, stability, and strategic direction.
- Check job postings (which roles are they hiring for?)
- Look for funding announcements or investor news
- Check team size and growth on LinkedIn
- Review their Crunchbase profile
- Check their app's rating and download trends (if mobile)
- Monitor their website traffic trends (SimilarWeb estimate)
- Check for acquisitions or partnerships
- Review their data room or investor materials (if public)
- Note any regulatory or legal filings
- Assess their overall momentum (growing, stable, or declining?)
Putting It All Together
Once you've gone through all five sections, you should be able to answer three questions:
- Where are they vulnerable? What can you attack? (Pricing gaps, feature weaknesses, customer complaints)
- Where are they strong? What do you need to match or counter? (Brand recognition, feature depth, distribution)
- Where are they going? What does their hiring, funding, and product direction tell you about their strategy?
Keep your analysis in a central place — a spreadsheet, a Notion doc, or a competitive intelligence tool. Update it quarterly for each competitor. The value compounds over time as you build a history of their moves and your assessments.
How Often Should You Run This Checklist?
| Frequency | Scope | When |
|---|---|---|
| Full analysis | All 5 sections (45-60 min) | Quarterly for top 3 competitors |
| Quick scan | Sections 1 + 3 (15 min) | Monthly for top 3, Quarterly for rest |
| Change check | Alerts + diffs (5 min) | Weekly for all tracked competitors |
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