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How to run an app competitor analysis

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Competitor analysis isn't about proving you're better. It's about finding the specific gap the incumbents left open — and confirming there's room for you.

App competitor analysis is the practice of studying everyone who serves your target user — direct rivals, indirect alternatives, and the status quo — to find the specific gap you can own. The method: identify the real competitors, mine their app-store reviews for unmet needs, tear down their product and onboarding, map features and pricing, and translate what you find into a position that is distinctly yours.

In short

You're not doing this to prove you're better. You're doing it to find the gap the incumbents leave open — the underserved need you can build a wedge around.

Why you're really doing this

Founders often avoid competitor analysis because finding competitors feels discouraging. It shouldn't — competition is proof of demand. The goal is not to copy or to despair, but to locate the space the leaders neglect: the workflow they handle badly, the segment they treat as an afterthought, the complaint they never address. That gap is where a new app lives.

Identify your true competitors

Look in three places. Direct competitors solve the same problem the same way. Indirect competitors solve it differently — a different app category, or a web tool. And the most overlooked: the status quo — the spreadsheet, the text messages, the pen and paper your user relies on today. The status quo is usually your real competition, and "good enough and free" is a harder rival than any app.

Mine the app-store reviews

App-store reviews are the single richest, cheapest source of insight you have. Read the one- and three-star reviews of the leading apps as a roadmap: recurring complaints are validated unmet needs someone else already paid to discover. Note what users wish the app did, where it frustrates them, and what makes them churn. The gap between what users want and what they currently get is your opportunity, handed to you for free.

Tear down their product

Use the top competitors as a real user would. Sign up, complete the core task, and pay attention to the onboarding especially — where it shines and where it loses you. You're looking for their core loop, their strengths you'll need to match, and the friction you can remove. First-hand experience reveals things no feature list will.

Map features and pricing

Build a simple comparison of the key players: their core features, their pricing model and price points, and their apparent target user. Patterns emerge quickly — where everyone converges (table stakes you'll need) and where they diverge (room to differentiate). Pricing tells you what the market has trained users to expect and pay.

Build a positioning map

Plot the competitors on two axes that matter to your user — for example, simplicity versus power, or price versus depth. The empty quadrants are candidate positions. A positioning map turns a pile of research into a clear picture of where you could stand apart, and it keeps you from launching into the crowded center where the incumbents already win.

Turn it into your wedge

The output of all this is a wedge: a specific, underserved user with a specific unmet need that you will serve better than anyone, at least to start. A wedge beats a broad "better version of everything," because it gives you a beachhead you can actually win before you expand. Feed the wedge back into your plan and your market read — it should shape your ICP, your MVP, and your positioning.

Common questions

How do I do a competitor analysis for an app?

Identify your true competitors (direct, indirect, and the status quo your users rely on today), mine the one- and three-star app-store reviews of the leaders for unmet needs, use their products first-hand to find friction, map features and pricing, plot a positioning map, and turn the gaps you find into a specific wedge you can own.

Who are my app's competitors?

More than the obvious direct rivals. Include indirect competitors that solve the same problem a different way, and especially the status quo — the spreadsheet, texts, or pen-and-paper your users use now. 'Good enough and free' is often the toughest competitor and the easiest to overlook.

How do I find a gap in the market?

Read the negative and middling reviews of the leading apps; recurring complaints are validated unmet needs. Combine that with a positioning map to spot underserved quadrants. The gap between what users want and what they currently get — for a specific segment — is where a new app can win.

What if my app has no competitors?

That's usually a warning, not a green light. No competitors often means no proven demand, or that the real competition is a non-app status quo you haven't counted. Dig until you find how people solve the problem today; if truly no one does, validate hard that they actually want it solved.

How many competitors should I analyze?

Enough to see the patterns — typically the handful of leaders plus a couple of indirect alternatives and the status quo. You're looking for where the market converges and diverges, which becomes clear after a focused set, not an exhaustive census.

Rather have it done for you?

Protobrief turns your idea into the whole build-ready plan — PRD, market, pricing, retention, tracking — before you spend a dollar on code.

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