Getting your own brand in order is the first step. The second is knowing what your competitors are doing, what they are not doing, and where your content can fill the gap. Here is a practical guide to competitor content analysis, content benchmarking, and building a B2B content differentiation plan from what you find.
You can have the most consistent brand voice in your market. Your guidelines can be tight, your governance in place, your tone nailed across every channel. But if you have not looked at what competitors are publishing, which topics they own, and where they are leaving opportunities on the table, you are planning in a vacuum.
In our recent guide to building brand authority through content consistency, we made the case that getting your own house in order comes first. This article picks up where that one left off. Brand consistency gives you a foundation. Competitor content analysis tells you where to build on it.
The CMI and MarketingProfs 2026 B2B Content and Marketing Trends Report found that 24% of B2B marketers cite differentiating content from competitors as a top challenge. That figure is stubborn. It has barely moved year on year, which tells us that most brands know this is a problem but have not found a structured way to address it. This guide gives you exactly that.
Table of Contents
- What Does Content Benchmarking Actually Look Like? (And Where Do Most B2B Brands Stop Too Early?)
- Content Gap Analysis Techniques That Go Beyond Keyword Research
- How to Turn Competitor Insights into a B2B Content Differentiation Plan
- Frequently Asked Questions About B2B Competitor Content Analysis
- Ready to See Where Your B2B Content Stands Against the Competition?
What Does Content Benchmarking Actually Look Like? (And Where Do Most B2B Brands Stop Too Early?)
Most B2B brands have some awareness of what their competitors are publishing. A scroll through LinkedIn here, a glance at a rival’s blog there. But that is not content benchmarking. That is browsing. A proper competitor content audit is a structured process for understanding where your content sits relative to the market, and it starts with getting specific about what you are measuring.
Research by Zebracat found that 59% of marketers already use competitor content analysis to inform their approach. That is a majority, but the quality of that analysis varies enormously. Surface-level monitoring, checking what competitors have published recently, is where most brands stop. Systematic content benchmarking goes further.
Your content competitors are not always the same as your business competitors. A company you would never pitch against might be outranking you for the same search terms or publishing the thought leadership your audience reads. Identify who is competing for your audience’s attention, not just their budget.
Then catalogue what you find. What content types and formats are they using? How frequently are they publishing? Which channels are they active on, and which are they ignoring? What topics do they cover, and at what depth? The Content Type Matrix is a useful reference here for categorising what you see across a competitive set.
Here is where it gets interesting. Human evaluation is the most underrated part of this process. SEO tools will tell you about traffic estimates, keyword rankings, and backlink profiles. But reading competitor content as a user, not through a dashboard, reveals things data cannot: the quality of the writing, the depth of insight, the tone, the experience of moving through their site. Combine that human judgement with technical performance data, and you get a far more accurate picture of where you stand.
Pay attention to what competitors are not doing, too. Channels they are absent from, topics they have not covered, formats they have not tried. These are not just gaps. They are opportunities.
Content Gap Analysis Techniques That Go Beyond Keyword Research
Once you know where your competitors stand, the next step is identifying what they are missing. This is content gap analysis, and it is about more than finding keywords they have not targeted.
A strong gap analysis looks at four dimensions: topics, channels, formats, and audience needs. Topic gaps are the most obvious: the subjects your competitors have not addressed or have only covered at a surface level. Channel gaps reveal platforms where they are inactive, but your audience is present. Format gaps highlight content types they are not producing, perhaps long-form guides, video, or downloadable resources. Audience gaps identify segments or pain points that are underserved across the competitive set.
Social listening is particularly effective for competitor content analysis. AI-powered tools can identify where current industry conversations are happening and where they are headed. Research by Mordor Intelligence, reported in the Influencer Marketing Hub’s 2025 Social Media Listening Report, projects the global social listening market to nearly double from $9.6 billion to $18.4 billion by 2030, reflecting how seriously brands now take this as a source of competitive intelligence.
For B2B specifically, social listening reveals not just what people are saying about your competitors, but what questions they are asking that nobody is answering well.
Treat your website content a bit like social media. Look at what conversations your industry is having right now, where those conversations are headed, and be timely. The brands that create content in response to real audience questions, rather than publishing to an internal calendar alone, are the ones that fill gaps competitors have not even noticed.
Your proprietary data is a differentiator in itself. Client insights, case study outcomes, and first-hand industry experience create content that competitors simply cannot replicate. We explored this idea in depth in Your Proprietary Data is Your Competitive Moat, and the principle applies directly to gap analysis techniques: the data you already have is often the content nobody else can produce.
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How to Turn Competitor Insights into a B2B Content Differentiation Plan
If you have followed the first two steps, you now have a catalogue of competitor content assets, an evaluation of their quality and performance, and a map of the gaps across topics, channels, formats, and audience needs. The content differentiation plan is what you build from those findings.
Start by mapping your content positioning against competitors. Where do you sit on dimensions like depth versus breadth, technical versus accessible, thought leadership versus tactical? Visualising this on a simple matrix can be revealing. It shows where the market is crowded and where there is space for your brand to lead.
According to HubSpot’s 2026 State of Marketing Report, only 52% of organisations have a clearly defined proposition that differentiates them from competitors. That means nearly half the market has not done this positioning work. If you have, you are already ahead. And if you have not, the content benchmarking and gap analysis you have just completed gives you the raw material to start.
Brand differentiation is not one thing. It happens across multiple dimensions: the quality of your content, the authority of your perspective, the formats you produce, the channels you are active on, the speed at which you respond to trends, and the consistency of your brand voice. We covered the consistency piece in The Content Consistency Framework. What competitor content analysis adds is the external view, the intelligence that tells you where consistency alone is not enough and where you need to actively position your content differently.
This analysis should fit naturally into your content planning cycle. In our work with clients, competitor content analysis sits at the start of a campaign, during planning, and again at the end, during review. It feeds into the planning process we use across our 12-week content campaigns. The brands that treat it as a recurring activity, not a one-off project, are the ones that stay ahead.
We explored the broader differentiation challenge in The B2B Content Differentiation Crisis, where the research shows most B2B brands already sound alike. Competitor content analysis is how you make sure yours does not.
Frequently Asked Questions About B2B Competitor Content Analysis
Here are the questions we hear most often from B2B brands looking to benchmark their content against the competition and build a content differentiation plan.
What is competitor content analysis in B2B marketing?
Competitor content analysis is the process of systematically reviewing what your competitors are publishing, where they are publishing it, and how well it performs. In B2B, it goes beyond website content to include thought leadership, social media activity, downloadable resources, and email campaigns. The goal is to understand the competitive content environment so you can position your own brand more effectively.
How do you conduct a competitor content audit for B2B?
Start by identifying your content competitors, which may differ from your business competitors. Catalogue their content by type, format, topic, and channel. Evaluate quality through both human review and technical performance data such as SEO metrics and social engagement. Document your findings in a structured format that allows you to compare across competitors and identify patterns.
What is the difference between content benchmarking and content gap analysis?
Content benchmarking measures where your content sits relative to competitors: volume, quality, performance, and channel presence. Content gap analysis identifies what is missing, the topics, formats, channels, and audience needs that are underserved in your competitive set. Benchmarking tells you where you stand. Gap analysis tells you where the opportunities are.
How can you use AI for competitor content analysis?
AI tools can audit competitor content at scale, compare topic coverage across multiple competitors, track keyword rankings over time, and conduct social listening to identify new industry conversations. AI is particularly useful for content gap analysis, surfacing patterns and trends that would take significant time to identify manually. It works best when combined with human evaluation of content quality and brand experience.
What are the best gap analysis techniques for B2B content?
A content gap analysis identifies areas where your competitors are underperforming or absent. It covers four dimensions: topic gaps (subjects not covered or covered poorly), channel gaps (platforms where competitors are inactive), format gaps (content types not being produced), and audience gaps (segments or pain points that are underserved). Social listening and keyword research are both effective starting points.
How often should B2B brands analyse competitor content?
At a minimum, conduct a competitor content analysis quarterly. Ideally, it should be part of every content campaign cycle, sitting at the planning stage and again during post-campaign review. Ongoing social listening can supplement these periodic reviews with real-time competitive intelligence.
What tools are useful for B2B content benchmarking?
The most useful tool categories include SEO platforms for keyword and backlink data, social listening tools for conversation and sentiment tracking, content audit tools for cataloguing and comparing assets, and AI-powered analytics for identifying gaps at scale. The specific tools matter less than having a consistent process that combines technical data with human editorial judgement.
How do you build a content differentiation plan from competitor analysis?
Combine your content benchmarking and gap analysis findings. Map your brand against competitors on dimensions like content depth, topic authority, format variety, channel presence, and brand voice. Identify where the market is crowded and where there is space for your brand to lead. Then translate those positioning insights into specific content priorities for your next campaign cycle.
What role does human evaluation play in a competitor content audit?
Technical data shows performance metrics: traffic estimates, keyword rankings, and engagement rates. But it does not tell you whether the content is well written, whether it builds trust, or whether the user experience is strong. Reading competitor content as a potential buyer reveals quality signals that no tool can measure. The best competitor content analysis combines both perspectives.
How does competitor content analysis fit into a B2B content marketing campaign?
It belongs at two points in any campaign cycle. At the start, during planning, it informs your approach by showing where competitors are strong, where they are weak, and where the opportunities sit. At the end, during review, it helps you assess how your campaign performed relative to the competitive environment and what to adjust for the next cycle.
Ready to See Where Your B2B Content Stands Against the Competition?
Competitor content analysis gives you the intelligence. Content gap analysis shows the opportunity. And a content differentiation plan turns both into action. Together, they are the external counterpart to the internal brand consistency work we covered in The Content Consistency Framework.
Want help building competitor content analysis into your next content campaign?
Get in touch and let’s talk about how our approach can help.




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