Competitor monitoring usually means watching the other company: their pricing page, their changelog, their hiring, their social. It is useful for staying aware of the market. But the most expensive thing a competitor does to you happens nowhere on their public footprint. It happens in your accounts, when one of your buyers takes their reachout. No amount of monitoring the competitor will show you that.
Competitor monitoring, where it changes the outcome
Most competitor monitoring watches a rival's public moves. The monitoring that wins a deal watches your own accounts: which of your buyers a competitor is reaching.
What is competitor monitoring?
Competitor monitoring is tracking a rival's public footprint over time: pricing changes, launches, content, hiring, reviews, social. It keeps marketing and product aware of what competitors are doing in the market. It is monitoring of the competitor, from the outside, and it is blind to what happens inside your own pipeline.
Two things people mean by "monitoring competitors"
| Market monitoring | Account-level (deal) monitoring | |
|---|---|---|
| What you watch | The competitor's public moves | Your buyers' activity with competitors |
| Answers | What did the rival just do? | Which of my accounts is a rival in? |
| Subject | The competitor | Your own buyer |
| Tools | Crayon, Kompyte, Visualping | Deal Intelligence (verified competitor activity) |
One watches the rival. The other watches your pipeline. Only the second one tells a rep a deal has gone competitive in time to do anything about it.
The monitoring that wins deals is buyer-side, not competitor surveillance
Deal Intelligence is not a competitor-monitoring tool. It does not watch your rivals. It surfaces a confirmed event at your own accounts: a named buyer accepted a reachout from a named competitor, verified to the contact. It is a buyer-side signal about your pipeline, not surveillance of the competitor, which is both more useful and cleaner: you learn a deal is competitive from your buyer's behavior, not from spying on anyone.
It arrives in the surfaces you already run: verified competitor activity in Clay, Claude, your CRM, and Slack. See also competitive intelligence for sales and signs a deal has gone competitive.