Document and analyze competitor posting schedules, content themes, hook styles, and promotional timing to spot gaps and counter-programming opportunities. Knowing what your competitors post — and more importantly, what they avoid — is one of the highest-leverage research inputs for ecommerce content strategy.
| Decision | Strong | Acceptable | Weak |
|---|---|---|---|
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Competitor sample size | 5–8 direct competitors analyzed | 3–4 competitors | 1–2 competitors |
| Analysis time window | 90 days of posts | 30–60 days | Last 7–10 posts only |
| Content categories tracked | 6+ distinct content types | 4–5 types | High/low performer sorting only |
| Gap identification method | Cross-competitor gap + engagement analysis | Single competitor gap | No gap analysis — only description |
| Counter-programming logic | Specific angle + timing recommendation | General "post more X" advice | No counter-programming output |
| Engagement signal depth | Views + likes + comment themes | Views/likes only | Follower count only |
| Hook pattern analysis | First-3-second pattern documented | Hook topic noted | No hook analysis |
Identify 5–8 direct competitors. Include:
Do not include — Generic lifestyle brands, aspirational brands so different from you that their audience doesn't overlap, or brands in non-overlapping geographies.
Create a simple tracking sheet with one row per post. For each post, record:
Track at least 30 posts per competitor to get meaningful patterns.
For each competitor, identify:
Note — Posting patterns are a proxy for what's working. Brands that have optimized their content calendar will show clear patterns; brands that haven't will show randomness.
For each competitor, sort posts by view count (or engagement rate if views aren't visible) and identify:
Look for patterns that appear across multiple competitors — cross-competitor top performers are especially valuable signals.
Create a 2×2 matrix for content topics/types:
| High Engagement When Posted | Low Engagement When Posted | |
|---|---|---|
| --- | --- | --- |
| All competitors post it | Proven category, competitive | Saturated, avoid |
| Some post it | Opportunity — differentiate your execution | Test carefully |
| No one posts it | High-value gap — explore first | Likely a dead end — skip |
The top-right of the top-left cell (high engagement, no or few competitors) is your primary opportunity target.
Extract the first 3 seconds of your competitors' top 10 performing posts. Categorize each hook:
Identify which hook types appear most in the top performers across your competitor set.
Combine the gap analysis with posting pattern data to build counter-programming opportunities:
Input:
Output:
COMPETITOR POSTING PATTERN SUMMARY
Brand A (Large, 250k followers):
- Posts 5×/week; peaks on Monday and Thursday evenings (7–9pm)
- 70% educational content (skincare routines, ingredient explanations)
- 20% product demos; 10% promotional
- Top performers — "Ingredient explained" videos (avg 45k views)
- Bottom performers — Brand origin stories (avg 3k views)
- Hook pattern — 80% of top posts use the bold claim hook ("This ingredient does X")
Brand B (Mid-size, 80k followers):
- Posts 3×/week; no clear day pattern
- 50% UGC/testimonial reposts; 40% product demos; 10% promotional
- Top performers — Before/after UGC (avg 85k views for category)
- Hook pattern — Testimonial hooks dominate top performers
Brand C (Small, similar stage to you):
- Posts 7×/week (high frequency)
- Heavy trend participation (TikTok sounds/formats)
- Inconsistent performance; 3–5k views on most, occasional viral 200k+ on trend content
- Hook pattern — Trend participation hooks; some question hooks
CONTENT GAP ANALYSIS
| Content Type | Competitor Coverage | Engagement Level | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ingredient science deep-dives | A does this; B/C don't | High for A | Opportunity — execute better |
| Application technique videos | None | Unknown | High-value gap to test |
| Skin type specific advice | None | Unknown | High-value gap to test |
| Skincare myth debunking | 1 of 6 (Brand D) | High | Gap opportunity |
| Morning vs. evening routine | 3 of 6 | Medium | Competitive, differentiate execution |
| Product ingredient stories | None | Unknown | Worth testing |
HOOK PATTERN FINDING
Bold claim hooks dominate top performers across brands (4 of 6 competitors).
No competitor is using problem-declaration hooks in the first 3 seconds despite
this format working in adjacent beauty categories. First-mover opportunity.
COUNTER-PROGRAMMING RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Target Tuesday/Wednesday posting — all large competitors post heavily Mon/Thu;
Tuesday is the lowest competition day in this competitor set
2. Build a "Skin Type Guide" series — no competitor covers this explicitly;
high search relevance for buyer decision stage
3. Test problem-declaration hooks ("I had dull skin for 3 years...") — competitors
are all using bold claim hooks; differentiated format may stand out
4. Avoid generic "routine video" content — 4 of 6 competitors produce this;
only worth doing with a strong differentiation angle
Input:
Output:
PROMOTIONAL TIMING INTELLIGENCE
Large brands all run promotions aligned with these triggers:
- 2–3 days before major sale events (Prime Day, Black Friday)
- 5–7 posts of "last chance" content in final 48 hours of a sale
- Post-sale content is rare — brands go quiet after sale ends
COUNTER-PROGRAMMING OPPORTUNITY — Post high-value non-promotional content
immediately after competitor sale events end — when they go quiet and their
audience is still engaged. This is the lowest competition content window
in the category calendar.
TOP PERFORMING CONTENT TYPES (cross-competitor)
1. Drop protection demonstration videos (avg 120k views across category)
2. "Worst case scenario" destruction content (high viral potential when it works)
3. Before/after phone protection comparisons
BOTTOM PERFORMING CONTENT TYPES
1. Pure product beauty shots — under 5k views consistently
2. Feature list read-aloud — among lowest performers across all brands
3. Brand values / sustainability content — low traction in this category
GAP — No competitor is doing customer story content (how they broke their
previous phone and switched to a protective case). Emotional, problem-aware
angle absent from entire category. Test a 5-part series.
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