Attention competitors

Yoooo! I’m mixing it up this week. Two things before we dive in:

First, this week is a replay episode. I chose it because standing out has gotten harder than ever (sure, blame AI, I do!), and the advice and template below are timeless for cutting through the noise.

Second, instead of writing a new newsletter for you, I’ve been prepping something bigger — a live event to take your career and results to the next level. In four days I’m hosting a session titled “How to Make Your Content Stand Out and Drive Growth” with Amrita at Superside.

And I’m covering all the good stuff:

-The difference between content marketing and content strategy
-How to make your content stand out (for real)
-How to get exec buy in on your content strategy

This is the stuff I wish I knew sooner. If you wanna join, you can register here. Hope to see you there 🌊

Tell me if this sounds familiar: you don’t have in-house design resources or their queue is longer than a CVS receipt. So you rely on agencies that are slow, expensive, and deliver mediocre work (that was my life for years).

But no more. At Clari we use Superside, the #1 creative-as-a-subscription service designed with marketers and creatives in mind. Beautiful landing pages, sweet email designs, and much more — they do it all. They’re the real deal and their work is primo.

The content game is heating up, and competition is fierce.

To stay ahead, many people think: Well, I guess I need to create MORE content.

More blogs, more social media posts, more emails, more webinars, more, more, more.

But there’s a better way to increase web traffic, engagement, sales, and every other success metric.

It’s all about being different.

And in order to build something different, you have to stand out from your competitors.

But first, you have to know who they are.

Discover your true competitors

You have two types of competition: product and attention competitors.

Product competitors are who you compete with for budget.

Attention competitors are who you compete with for attention.

This is critical to understand because you must win mindshare before you win market share.

You will almost certainly fail to win your buyer’s budget if you don’t win their attention first. (Pretty hard to buy something you don’t know or care about.)

Winning mindshare requires designing a content strategy that is different from anything available to your target audience.

For example, if an interview-style podcast for novice rental property investors already exists, then creating the same thing but with the intention of being marginally better is a losing strategy. You’ll simply become noise. And that’s because you’re starting in second place (or worse).

You can pour your heart and soul into your content — but if it doesn’t stand out, i.e. it isn’t different — then no one will engage/follow/subscribe.

Remember “Different is better than better.”

But before you can build something different, you need to know what already exists. Here’s how:

How to find (or confirm) your Product Competitors:

  1. Save yourself some time and check your internal competitive documentation. Usually marketing or enablement teams have some sort of battle card, slide, or collateral.

  2. Then Google “[your company name] vs”

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A dropdown of common searches will pop up with your competitors.

Viola! Your market just told you who they’re comparing you to.

  1. Review comparable companies on your G2 Crowd profile

Now you have a list of the competitors battling you for budget. But you’re not done yet.

How to discover your Attention Competitors

Your goal is to see what content types, topics, and creators are popular with your audience.

Luckily, there are a bunch of “top 10” lists for pretty much everything under the sun that you can use to figure it out.

I recommend two search types:

1. “Top 10 [medium] for [audience]”

Example: Top ten podcasts for B2B recruiters.

Review five or so lists, and see which podcasts are consistently at the top. Those are who you want to check out (I’ll share how in the next section).

Then repeat, but swap podcasts for other content types, like newsletters, webinars, events, etc.

Bonus: You can also supplement and confirm your research by asking your target audience (customers are usually best): Hey do you follow or have you ever heard of [insert content type]?

2. Top 10 [audience or industry] thought leaders

Rinse and repeat the steps above, expect this time you can also analyze which topics these thought leaders are talking about on social media. The content with the most engagement is a signal that those are the topics your audience is most interested in.

You can spend a lot of time on the research phase, so I recommend picking five competitors from each bucket (or medium, if you’re specifically looking for newsletter competitors, for example), otherwise you can spend weeks combing through all the content on the internet.

Now that you have your list of “players,” it’s time to analyze their content to understand the option available to your audience.

How to develop your Competitive Content Landscape

Now that you need to understand what content exists and who publishes it, it’s time to analyze their characteristics to understand WHY it exists and WHY people are or are not interested in it.

To give you a jump start, I created a Competitive Content Landscape Template that you can steal (it’s yours, for free!).

Here’s how to use it:

  1. Plug in in your top 10 competitors

  2. Fill in the columns for each one

  3. Analyze what’s available and what’s popular (look for saturation and green space)

  4. Use those insights to design differentiated content (row 12)

Recap

If you truly want to dominate your category and rapidly build your audience, you have to create content that’s different from anything available. Don’t try to win the trap of “better.”

Map out ALL of your competitors then analyze them with your Competitive Content Landscape Template

Remember, someone’s always adding the noise, and someone else is breaking through it.

Holler at you next week,
Devin

In case you scrolled past the intro…

My mission is to help you take your content career and results to the next level. Heck, it’s why I write this newsletter every week. It’s also why I’m hosting a live session on Wednesday where I’ll teach you how to make your content stand out and drive growth.

If you wanna hang, you can register here.