How to Track Competitor Pricing (Without Expensive Tools)
Manual pricing tracking falls apart fast. Here's how small teams track competitor pricing using free methods — Google Alerts, social listening, mystery shopping, and job postings as proxy signals.
Read article →What Is Competitive Intelligence? A Beginner's Guide
The simplest definition of competitive intelligence you'll find — plus the 5 types that actually matter, real examples, and how to build your first CI process from scratch.
Read article →Market Intelligence Tools: Build vs Buy for Growing Teams
Most research teams outgrow manual competitor tracking around month three. Here's how to decide between building, buying, or automating market intelligence — and what actually matters at each stage.
Read article →Competitive Intelligence for Small Business: What You're Missing (And How to Find It)
Most small businesses make decisions blind. Here's what competitive intelligence actually means, 5 signals worth tracking, and how to stop flying blind without hiring an analyst.
Read article →Market Intelligence for Insurance Underwriters: Speed Up Research Without Cutting Corners
Underwriters spend 2-4 hours per submission pulling data from 50+ sources. Here's how market intelligence platforms cut research time to minutes — without missing the details that matter.
Read article →Market Intelligence for Due Diligence Teams: Automate M&A Research Without Missing Critical Signals
PE and M&A teams manually compile market data across 30+ sources per deal. Here's how market intelligence platforms compress weeks of research into hours — without losing the depth that matters.
Read article →How to Monitor Competitors: A Systematic Guide to Competitive Intelligence Automation
Manual competitor tracking across websites, social media, job boards, and filings is slow and incomplete. Here's a 5-dimension framework for systematic competitor monitoring — and how to automate the parts that drain your time.
Read article →Competitive Analysis Framework: A 6-Step Process for Systematic Market Intelligence
Ad-hoc competitive research gives you a snapshot. A framework gives you a system. Here's the 6-step competitive analysis process — from defining your competitor landscape to monitoring changes and acting on signals.
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