If you think competitors = rival companies, you’re wrong!
Most people think competition is (just) a set of rival companies.
And that’s not true.
Because the biggest competitor isn’t any other business, it’s what your customer is already doing today.
- Sometimes that means using a tool.
- Sometimes that means a hack.
- Sometimes that means doing nothing.
Once you truly understand this, the way you analyze and perceive your competition changes. And, I’m gonna do that to you today!
How traditional competitive analysis is broken
The traditional competitive analysis approach focuses primarily on direct rivals and their features (offerings). Often, ignoring the force that quietly stops most buyers from switching: habits.
- People stick to the process they know, even if it slows them down.
- They repeat the same workflow because it feels safe.
- They stick to the conventional processes because the cost of changing feels heavier than the gains they expect.
While popular frameworks like Porter’s five forces consider all the important aspects, including suppliers, substitutes, threats, and power, they miss the fact that the strongest substitute is often the customer’s current routine, not another product.
Take Upmetrics, for example:
We compete with other planning tools, yes.
But the real competition is still Word files, Google Docs, PDF templates, and spreadsheets that founders keep reusing.
Founders know traditional templates are labour-intensive and time-consuming, but they just couldn’t make that shift. They delay adopting better tools.
It is not because alternatives are better. It is because switching feels expensive in time and attention.
Here’s how we integrate this new layer into our existing competitive analysis process.
The modern (and the right) competitive analysis process
The better competitive analysis approach includes three categories.
- Direct competitors
Products that solve the same job in a similar way. - Indirect competitors
Products that solve the same job in a different way. - Behavioral competitors
What your audience already does instead of using any product.
This includes templates, manual hacks, “ask someone on the team,” and the most common one: “do nothing for now.”
When you add this third layer, the picture changes.
- You see why adoption is slow, even when your product is solid.
- You see why some prospects keep circling back without converting.
- You see where friction hides.
This method also surfaces gaps in messaging.
If habit is the real competition, the pitch needs to reduce friction rather than show more features.
How this shift improves your plan and strategy
You gain clarity.
Once you understand real competition, you stop chasing rival feature sets and start fixing switching barriers.
Investors notice this.
They want founders who understand the market with sharp precision.
When you acknowledge behavioral competition, you prove you understand adoption, not just product.
It signals that your plan is grounded in reality instead of theory.
It also simplifies strategy work.
If spreadsheets are the real rival, build faster onboarding.
If inertia is the rival, build quick wins that show value within minutes.
If habits are the rival, design workflows that feel familiar instead of foreign.
Better reasoning leads to better planning.
Better planning leads to better decisions.
The bottom line
Competition is not only rival companies. It is users’ behaviors, habits, and the comfort of staying the same.
If you update your competitive analysis to reflect this, your strategy becomes more truthful and your decisions sharper.
If you want structured ways to map direct, indirect, and behavioral competitors for your business, use Upmetrics AI to simplify it for you!
Until the next time,
Happy business planning
