By David Ronald
Competitive intelligence has long been one of the core responsibilities of product marketing.
Yet, despite significant investments in tools, analysts, and research, many competitive intelligence programs fail to achieve their primary objective: helping sales teams win more deals.
The problem, as we all know, isn't a lack of information because many organizations have access to an overwhelming amount of competitor data – product marketers collect feature comparisons, monitor competitor websites, subscribe to analyst reports, and gather feedback from customers and prospects.
A successful competitive intelligence program is measured by whether sales teams use it and whether it helps them close business, not by the volume of data it produces.
Too often in my experience competitive intelligence becomes an academic exercise.
In this blog post I present a program that uses a different approach, a program that sales teams actually use.
Why Most Competitive Intelligence Programs Fail
The biggest mistake companies make is focusing on competitors instead of customers.
Competitive intelligence teams frequently become obsessed with tracking every product update, feature release, executive hire, funding announcement, and pricing change.
While this information can be useful, it rarely helps a sales representative navigate a live conversation with a prospect. Buyers are purchasing outcomes, not a feature list.
So, when sales teams engage with prospects, the real challenge is understanding why a buyer may choose one vendor over another and how to position their solution against competing alternatives.
Another common problem is information overload. Product marketing teams often create comprehensive documents that contain dozens of pages of research. While thoroughness may be appreciated internally, sales representatives rarely have time to consume lengthy reports before a customer call.
The reality is that sellers need concise, actionable guidance. They want to know how competitors are positioning themselves, where they are vulnerable, what objections they commonly raise, and how successful customers evaluate alternatives.
Without this practical focus, even the most detailed competitive intelligence program will struggle to gain adoption.
Start With the Questions Sales Teams Actually Ask
The most effective competitive intelligence programs begin by understanding the needs of the sales organization.
Instead of asking, "What do we know about our competitors?" product marketers should ask, "What information would help our sales team win more deals?"
The answers are often surprisingly consistent. Sellers want to understand why prospects choose competitors, which objections arise most frequently, and how successful sales representatives position the company's strengths during competitive evaluations.
Listening to sales calls can provide invaluable insight, as can interviewing account executives, sales engineers, customer success managers, and solution consultants.
These frontline teams interact with buyers every day and often have a clearer understanding of competitive dynamics than any report could provide.
By grounding competitive intelligence in real-world selling situations, organizations create content that directly addresses the challenges sales teams face.
Creating Battlecards That People Actually Use
Battlecards remain one of the most popular competitive intelligence tools, but many organizations overcomplicate them.
A battlecard should not attempt to capture everything known about a competitor. It should, instead, function as a quick-reference guide that helps sellers prepare for conversations and respond to objections.
The most effective battlecards focus on buyer concerns rather than product features. They explain how competitors position themselves in the market, what strengths prospects perceive, where weaknesses exist, and how to reframe competitive discussions around customer outcomes.
Clarity matters more than completeness. A concise two-page battlecard that sales representatives consult regularly creates significantly more value than a twenty-page document that remains unread.
And the best battlecards also evolve continuously. Competitive markets change quickly, and static content becomes outdated. Consequently, product marketing teams should establish processes for regularly collecting feedback from sales teams and updating materials based on actual field experience.
When sellers see their input reflected in competitive content, adoption naturally increases.
Building a Continuous Intelligence Network
Competitive intelligence should never be the responsibility of a single individual or team.
Organizations that excel in this area create networks of contributors across the business.
- Sales representatives provide feedback from active opportunities.
- Customer success teams identify competitor activity during renewals.
- Product managers track market trends.
- Executives share insights gathered from customers, analysts, and industry events.
When competitive intelligence becomes a company-wide discipline, the quality and timeliness of information improve dramatically.
Technology can support this process, but culture matters more. Employees should feel encouraged to share competitive insights whenever they encounter them.
A simple mechanism for capturing information often proves more effective than a sophisticated platform that nobody uses.
The goal is to create a continuous flow of intelligence that helps the organization respond quickly to changing market conditions.
Monitoring Competitors Without Expensive Tools
Many organizations assume they need costly software platforms to build an effective competitive intelligence program.
While specialized tools can be valuable, they are not prerequisites for success, especially as a surprising amount of competitive insight is publicly available.
- Competitor websites reveal positioning changes, product launches, and messaging priorities.
- Earnings calls provide information about strategic direction and business performance.
- Customer reviews on software review sites often highlight strengths and weaknesses that prospects are discussing internally.
Additionally, industry events, webinars, podcasts, and social media channels can also provide valuable signals.
Frankly it’s amazing how many companies share their priorities openly if organizations take the time to listen carefully.
The key is consistency. Rather than attempting to monitor everything, establish a structured process for reviewing key sources and sharing relevant findings with stakeholders.
Over time, these small efforts compound into a rich understanding of the competitive landscape.
Turning Insights Into Messaging
Collecting intelligence is the first step – the real value comes from translating insights into messaging that influences buyer decisions.
This is where product marketing can have the greatest impact. Competitive insights should inform positioning, differentiation, sales enablement, and content strategy.
If competitors consistently emphasize a particular strength, organizations should evaluate whether they need to address that narrative directly or shift buyer attention toward a different set of priorities.
The objective is not to attack competitors, especially as direct comparisons can sometimes strengthen a competitor's position by reinforcing their relevance.
Instead, effective messaging helps buyers understand why your solution is uniquely suited to their needs – this shifts conversations away from feature comparisons and toward business outcomes, strategic priorities, and long-term value.
When competitive intelligence informs messaging, the entire go-to-market organization benefits.
Measuring Competitive Intelligence Success
One of the biggest challenges facing competitive intelligence programs in my experience is demonstrating value.
Traditional metrics often focus on outputs such as the number of battlecards created, competitors tracked, or reports distributed.
While these measurements may indicate activity, they do not necessarily indicate impact.
A stronger approach is to focus on business outcomes.
- Are sales teams using competitive content?
- Are competitive win rates improving?
- Are sellers reporting greater confidence during evaluations?
- Are objection handling conversations becoming more effective?
Organizations should also monitor engagement with competitive resources and gather qualitative feedback from the field. Understanding what sales teams find useful can guide future investments and improvements.
Ultimately, the purpose of competitive intelligence is not to create information. It is to influence decisions and improve business performance.
The Future of Competitive Intelligence
The rise of artificial intelligence is changing how organizations collect, analyze, and distribute competitive information.
AI tools can monitor websites, summarize content, identify emerging trends, and accelerate research activities – tasks that once required hours of manual effort can now be completed in minutes.
Technology, however, does not eliminate the need for strategic thinking.
Competitive intelligence remains fundamentally about understanding buyers, markets, and positioning. AI can help organizations process information faster, but human judgment is still required to determine which insights matter and how they should influence go-to-market strategy.
In my opinion, and tell me if you think I’m wrong, the companies that succeed will combine the speed of AI with the expertise of product marketers, sales leaders, and customer-facing teams.
Conclusion
Competitive intelligence is most effective when it is viewed as a revenue-driving function rather than a research project, and its primary goal is to help sales teams win more business.
Organizations that focus on practical insights, create usable content, encourage company-wide participation, and connect intelligence directly to messaging and sales execution will build programs that generate measurable impact.
The winners will not necessarily be the companies with the most information. They will be the companies that turn information into action.
Thanks for reading.
Are you interested in discussing how to build a competitive intelligence program your sales teams actually use? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.























