AI-Powered
Competitor Research
Know what your competitors changed — before your customers do.
This agent uses GPT Researcher (26k+ GitHub stars) to perform deep, multi-source research on your top 5 competitors. It monitors websites, pricing pages, product launches, content strategy, and social activity — then delivers bi-weekly intelligence briefs with executive summaries, detailed change logs, and strategic recommendations.
Free to start — no credit card required
What It Does
- Deep web research powered by GPT Researcher — tree-like exploration across 20+ sources per competitor
- Automated monitoring of competitor websites, pricing pages, product launches, and blog content
- Content strategy and keyword tracking to see what competitors are ranking for
- Bi-weekly intelligence briefs: what changed, why it matters, what you should do
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GPT Researcher (26k+ GitHub stars)
An open deep-research agent that uses planner and execution agents to systematically investigate topics across 20+ web sources. Its deep research feature employs tree-like exploration patterns to recursively explore subtopics, producing comprehensive reports with full source tracking.
- Tree-like deep research across 20+ web sources
- Planner-executor architecture for systematic investigation
- Recursive subtopic exploration for comprehensive coverage
- Source tracking and citation for every finding
- Can research local documents (PDF, CSV, Excel) alongside web data
- Smart filtering to separate signal from noise
How It Works
Define Your Competitive Landscape
Specify your top 5 competitors and what to monitor: pricing, features, content, hiring, funding, social media. The agent builds a research framework for each.
Deep Research Across 20+ Sources
GPT Researcher's planner-executor agents systematically scan competitor websites, press releases, blog posts, job listings, social profiles, and third-party coverage. Tree-like exploration surfaces details that simple monitoring tools miss.
Bi-Weekly Intelligence Briefs
Receive structured reports with three sections: executive summary (what happened), detailed change log (with citations), and strategic implications (what you should consider doing in response).