Competitive battle card creation for sales teams combining competitive intelligence, sales enablement, and document formatting. Use when building battle cards, competitive analysis decks, or win/loss analysis materials.
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SKILL.md
Battle Card Builder
Structured frameworks for creating competitive battle cards that help sales teams win against specific competitors.
Battle Card Structure
Standard Battle Card Sections
BATTLE CARD LAYOUT:
1. COMPETITOR SNAPSHOT (top of page)
- Company name, logo, tagline
- Founded, HQ, headcount, funding/revenue
- Target market and primary use case
- Threat level: HIGH / MEDIUM / LOW
2. QUICK COMPARISON TABLE
- Feature-by-feature comparison
- Pricing comparison
- Target customer comparison
3. OUR STRENGTHS (vs. this competitor)
- 3-5 key advantages with proof points
- Customer quotes that validate each strength
4. THEIR STRENGTHS (honest assessment)
- 2-3 areas where competitor excels
- How to acknowledge without conceding
5. OBJECTION HANDLING
- Top 5-7 objections prospects raise
- Recommended responses for each
6. WIN THEMES
- 3-4 messaging themes that resonate
- Discovery questions to surface our advantages
7. LANDMINES
- Questions to plant that expose competitor weaknesses
- Features to demo that highlight differentiation
8. RECENT INTEL
- Latest product releases or changes
- Pricing changes
- Key wins/losses
- Last updated dateCompetitive Intelligence Gathering
Intelligence Sources
| Source | Data Type | Refresh Frequency | Reliability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Competitor website | Pricing, features, messaging | Monthly | High |
| G2/Capterra reviews | User sentiment, complaints | Monthly | Medium-High |
| Job postings | Strategic direction, tech stack | Quarterly | Medium |
| SEC filings / investor decks | Revenue, strategy, risks | Quarterly | High |
| Patent filings | Future product direction | Quarterly | Medium |
| Win/loss interviews | Real buyer reasoning | Ongoing | High |
| Sales call recordings | Objections, competitor mentions | Ongoing | High |
| Industry analyst reports | Market positioning | Annually | High |
| Social media / forums | Product issues, sentiment | Weekly | Low-Medium |
| Conference presentations | Roadmap, vision | As available | Medium |
Intelligence Collection Framework
COLLECTION CADENCE:
WEEKLY:
- Social listening for competitor mentions
- Review new G2/Capterra reviews
- Check competitor blog/news for announcements
MONTHLY:
- Full website and pricing page review
- Feature comparison audit
- Gong/Chorus analysis of competitor mentions in calls
- Win/loss interview synthesis
QUARTERLY:
- Deep competitive analysis refresh
- Battle card full update
- Sales team feedback collection
- Market positioning reassessment
ANNUALLY:
- Comprehensive competitive landscape review
- Strategic differentiation audit
- Battle card rebuild from scratchPositioning Frameworks
Competitive Positioning Matrix
POSITIONING MAP:
HIGH CAPABILITY
|
|
NICHE LEADER | MARKET LEADER
(deep in segment) | (broad + deep)
|
─────────────────────+──────────────────────
LOW REACH | HIGH REACH
|
EMERGING PLAYER | BROAD PLAYER
(limited scope) | (wide but shallow)
|
LOW CAPABILITY
POSITION US: [where we sit]
POSITION COMPETITOR: [where they sit]
NARRATIVE: "While [Competitor] covers more ground, we go deeper
in [our segment] where it matters most for [buyer]."Differentiation Categories
| Category | Our Position | Competitor Position | Talking Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product | [specific feature/capability] | [their approach] | [why ours matters] |
| Technology | [architecture/approach] | [their architecture] | [technical advantage] |
| Service | [support model] | [their support model] | [customer impact] |
| Price | [pricing model] | [their pricing model] | [value story] |
| Market Focus | [our ICP] | [their ICP] | [specialization benefit] |
| Integration | [ecosystem fit] | [their ecosystem] | [workflow advantage] |
| Security | [certifications/approach] | [their posture] | [trust factor] |
Objection Handling Templates
Objection Response Framework
STRUCTURE FOR EVERY OBJECTION:
ACKNOWLEDGE: Validate the concern without agreeing
BRIDGE: Transition to your perspective
RESPOND: Address with evidence and specifics
EVIDENCE: Proof point (customer, data, demo)
EXAMPLE:
OBJECTION: "[Competitor] has more integrations than you."
ACKNOWLEDGE: "Integration breadth is important — I understand
why that's a factor in your evaluation."
BRIDGE: "What we've found with customers in your space is that
it's less about the total number and more about depth
of the integrations you actually use."
RESPOND: "We have 40+ integrations focused on [their stack],
with bi-directional sync and real-time data flow.
[Competitor]'s integrations are often one-directional
or require manual configuration."
EVIDENCE: "[Customer X] evaluated both and chose us specifically
because our [specific integration] saved their team
12 hours per week vs. the manual workaround with
[Competitor]'s connector."Common Objection Categories
PRICING OBJECTIONS:
- "They're cheaper"
- "We can't justify the premium"
- "Their free tier is sufficient"
FEATURE OBJECTIONS:
- "They have [feature] that you don't"
- "Their product does more"
- "We need [specific capability]"
MARKET OBJECTIONS:
- "They're the market leader"
- "Everyone in our industry uses them"
- "They have more customers like us"
RISK OBJECTIONS:
- "They're a bigger, safer company"
- "What if you get acquired?"
- "We're already using them and switching is risky"
RELATIONSHIP OBJECTIONS:
- "We already have a contract with them"
- "Our team is trained on their platform"
- "Our exec has a personal relationship there"Win Theme Templates
Discovery Questions That Favor Us
QUESTION DESIGN PRINCIPLE:
Ask questions whose honest answers reveal competitor weaknesses
without mentioning the competitor by name.
FORMAT:
Question → Expected Answer → Bridge to Our Strength
EXAMPLES:
Q: "How important is [our strength area] to your workflow?"
A: [Prospect describes importance]
B: "That's exactly where we've invested most deeply..."
Q: "What's your experience been with [pain our product solves]?"
A: [Prospect describes pain]
B: "We hear that a lot from teams who've used [category]. Here's
how we approach it differently..."
Q: "When you evaluated solutions before, what fell short?"
A: [Prospect describes gaps]
B: "Those are the exact gaps we were built to fill..."Landmine Questions
LANDMINE STRATEGY:
Plant questions the prospect will ask the competitor that
expose their weaknesses.
TEMPLATE:
"When you're evaluating [Competitor], you might want to ask
them about [specific weakness area]. Specifically:
1. [Question about their known limitation]
2. [Question about their pricing gotcha]
3. [Question about their support gap]
These are areas where we've seen prospects get surprised during
implementation, and it's worth clarifying upfront."
RULES:
- Never lie or exaggerate competitor weaknesses
- Base landmines on documented, verified issues
- Keep it professional — attack the product, not the people
- Be prepared for the competitor to do the same to youPricing Comparison Framework
Pricing Analysis Template
PRICING COMPARISON:
US COMPETITOR
──────────────────────────────────────────────────
Model: [per seat] [per usage]
Entry Price: $___/mo $___/mo
Mid-Market: $___/mo $___/mo
Enterprise: $___/mo $___/mo
HIDDEN COSTS:
- Implementation: [included] [$X extra]
- Support: [included] [paid tier]
- Integrations: [included] [add-on]
- Storage/Usage: [included] [overage fees]
TRUE TCO (3-year, 100 users):
Us: $______
Competitor: $______
Savings: $______ (__%)
WIN NARRATIVE:
"While their list price appears [lower/similar], when you factor
in [hidden cost 1] and [hidden cost 2], the total cost of
ownership over 3 years is actually [X%] higher."Battle Card Maintenance
Update Cadence
| Component | Update Frequency | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| Competitor snapshot | Quarterly | Competitive Intel |
| Feature comparison | Monthly | Product Marketing |
| Pricing comparison | Quarterly (or on change) | Pricing Team |
| Objection handling | Monthly (from win/loss) | Sales Enablement |
| Win themes | Quarterly | Product Marketing |
| Customer proof points | Monthly | Customer Marketing |
| Recent intel | Weekly | Competitive Intel |
Staleness Indicators
BATTLE CARD IS STALE WHEN:
RED FLAGS:
- Last updated > 90 days ago
- Competitor released major product update since last refresh
- Win rate against competitor dropped > 5% QoQ
- Sales reps report card is "not useful"
- Pricing information is outdated
HEALTH CHECK QUESTIONS:
- When was this last updated? [date]
- Has competitor launched anything since? [Y/N]
- Have we validated with recent win/loss data? [Y/N]
- Do sales reps actively use this card? [Y/N]
- Is our proof point data current? [Y/N]Win/Loss Integration
WIN/LOSS DATA COLLECTION:
AFTER EVERY COMPETITIVE DEAL:
1. Record outcome (win/loss)
2. Document primary reasons (top 3)
3. Note competitor strengths that resonated
4. Note our strengths that resonated
5. Capture any new objections heard
6. Flag any pricing intelligence
QUARTERLY ANALYSIS:
- Win rate by competitor (trending)
- Top reasons for wins (reinforce in card)
- Top reasons for losses (address in card)
- New objections to add
- Proof points to updateBattle Card Quality Checklist
| Check | Status |
|---|---|
| Competitor info verified within last 30 days | [ ] |
| Pricing data confirmed (not assumed) | [ ] |
| At least 3 customer proof points per strength | [ ] |
| Objection responses tested with top reps | [ ] |
| Win themes validated by recent win/loss data | [ ] |
| Honest about competitor strengths (credibility) | [ ] |
| No unverified claims or speculation | [ ] |
| Formatting is scannable (not wall of text) | [ ] |
| Card fits on 2 pages (front and back) | [ ] |
| Last updated date is visible | [ ] |