Analyzing Competitor Articles
Before you write a single word, you must understand what already ranks. The top 5 SERP results are your direct competitors — and Google has already told you they are good enough to rank. Your job is not to copy them. Your job is to find what they missed, do what they did poorly, and deliver what they promised but didn't fully deliver.
This lesson teaches you a systematic competitor analysis process that produces actionable writing insights in 30 minutes or less.
Part 1 — How to Read the Top 5 SERP Results Strategically
The 30-Minute SERP Audit
Don't read competitor articles for pleasure. Read them for gaps. Follow this structured process.
flowchart TD
A[Search Primary Keyword\nIncognito Mode] --> B[Open Top 5 Results\nin Separate Tabs]
B --> C[For Each Result:\nAudit 6 Dimensions]
C --> D[Record in\nCompetitor Matrix]
D --> E[Identify Gaps\n+ Opportunities]
E --> F[Define Your\nDifferentiation Angle]
style A fill:#1A3557,color:#fff
style F fill:#217346,color:#fff
The 6-Dimension Audit
For each competitor, evaluate:
| Dimension | What to Note | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Content type | Guide, listicle, comparison, tutorial? | Tells you what format Google rewards for this query |
| Word count | Approximate length | Sets your depth benchmark (not target — depth ≠ length) |
| H2 structure | List every H2 heading | Reveals the "standard" coverage expectations |
| Depth per section | Surface-level or deep? | Identifies sections you can beat by going deeper |
| Media usage | Images, tables, videos, diagrams? | Tells you the visual standard you must match or exceed |
| Freshness | Publication or update date | Outdated content = opportunity to be the fresher source |
Part 2 — Mapping Competitor H2 Patterns
The H2 Matrix
The H2 Matrix is your most powerful pre-writing tool. It reveals what Google considers "mandatory coverage" and where the gaps live.
- How to Build It
- How to Interpret It
| H2 Topic | Comp 1 | Comp 2 | Comp 3 | Comp 4 | Comp 5 | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| What is [topic]? | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | 5/5 |
| Benefits of [topic] | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | 4/5 |
| How to get started | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | 4/5 |
| Common mistakes | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | 1/5 |
| Case study / real example | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | 0/5 |
| FAQ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | 3/5 |
Frequency-based decisions:
- 5/5 or 4/5 → This topic is mandatory. Google expects it. Include it, but add more depth than competitors.
- 2/5 or 3/5 → This topic is valuable but not universal. Include it with a fresh angle.
- 1/5 or 0/5 → This is your gap opportunity. If the topic is relevant to the reader, covering it is your differentiation.
In the example above, "Common mistakes" and "Case study / real example" are covered by 1 or 0 competitors. Adding these sections with genuine depth immediately differentiates your article from 80–100% of the competition.
Part 3 — Identifying Content Gaps and Missing Angles
Types of Content Gaps
- Coverage Gaps
- Depth Gaps
- Freshness Gaps
- Experience Gaps
Topics that competitors don't cover at all. Found through the H2 matrix (0/5 frequency).
Examples:
- No competitor mentions pricing or cost
- No competitor includes a real-world case study
- No competitor addresses the #1 PAA question
Topics that competitors mention but don't explore. They write 2 sentences where 2 paragraphs are needed.
Examples:
- "Implementation" is an H2 but contains only "Follow the instructions on the website"
- "Pricing" mentions one plan but doesn't compare tiers
- "Getting started" lists steps but has no screenshots or examples
Data, examples, or recommendations that are outdated in competitor articles.
Examples:
- Competitor cites 2021 statistics when 2024 data is available
- Competitor recommends a tool that has been discontinued
- Competitor's screenshots show an old UI
No competitor provides first-hand experience or original data. All articles are "researched summaries."
Examples:
- No competitor actually tested the products they recommend
- No competitor shares their own results or methodology
- No competitor includes original diagrams or frameworks
Part 4 — Bad vs. Good Examples
- ❌ No Competitor Analysis
- ✅ Systematic Competitor Analysis
The writer's process: "I received a brief for 'best email marketing tools.' I know Mailchimp and ConvertKit are popular, so I'll write about those plus a few others I've heard of. I'll structure it with an intro, a list of tools, and a conclusion."
(Why it fails: The writer never checked what already ranks. They don't know that every competitor lists 10+ tools, includes pricing tables, and has a "best for" category per tool. Their article will be thinner than every competitor on page 1 — which means page 2 or worse.)
The writer's process: "I searched 'best email marketing tools' and audited the top 5. Here's what I found:
- All 5 list 8–15 tools with brief summaries
- Only 1/5 includes pricing comparison tables
- 0/5 mentions actual deliverability rates (they all say 'high deliverability' without data)
- 3/5 are updated in 2024 but use 2022 screenshots
- 0/5 tested the tools themselves — all are research summaries
My angle: 'We tested 6 email marketing tools for 60 days. Here are actual deliverability rates, setup times, and annoyances the marketing pages don't tell you about.' I'll include fresh screenshots and a pricing table that updates."
(Why it wins: Every gap identified leads to a specific differentiation decision. The writer knows exactly why their article will be better — and can prove it.)
Part 5 — AI Collaboration Guidelines
AI cannot access live SERP results, but it can help you structure your analysis and identify patterns once you provide the raw data.
The "Competitor H2 Analyzer" Prompt
Role: SEO Content Analyst Task: I am analyzing the top 5 competitor articles for the keyword "[keyword]". Here are their H2 headings: [Paste H2 lists from 5 competitors]
- Create an H2 frequency matrix showing which topics appear in how many competitors.
- Identify the 3 biggest coverage gaps (topics with 0/5 or 1/5 frequency).
- For each gap, suggest how I could cover it to differentiate my article.
- Recommend 2 additional topics that none of them cover but readers would find valuable.
The "Beat This" Checklist Prompt
Role: Content Strategy Director Task: Based on this competitor analysis data, create a "Beat This" checklist — a list of specific improvements my article must make over the current top results: [Paste your competitor analysis notes] Format each item as: "Competitor does [X]. We will do [Y] instead, because [reason]."
Part 6 — Output Checklist
- SERP audit habit: You search the primary keyword in incognito before every article.
- 6-dimension audit: You evaluate content type, word count, H2 structure, depth, media, and freshness for each competitor.
- H2 matrix: You build a frequency matrix before outlining your own article.
- Gap identification: You can identify coverage, depth, freshness, and experience gaps.
- Angle from gaps: Your differentiation angle traces directly to a specific gap you identified.
- "Beat This" list: You have a concrete checklist of ways your article will be better.
Internal use only. Do not distribute externally. For questions or suggested updates, raise with the content lead.