How to Find Your SEO Competitors

How To Do An SEO Competitor Analysis - Chapter 1

Find your SEO competitors

Last Updated: November 1, 2022

Before you can start digging into an SEO competitor analysis, you need to know who your SEO competitors actually are. You may think you know, but until you dive into the data, it's not always apparent.

So, where do we begin?

Let’s start with the manual process of identifying your SEO competitors:

  1. Enter your target keyword in Google

  2. Collect the results in a spreadsheet

  3. Identify which domains are ranking

  4. To get more accurate results for a topic, repeat steps 1-3 for three to five keywords per cluster

  5. Combine the results into one spreadsheet

  6. Calculate which domains appear in which positions, and the most frequently

You’ll need to repeat the above steps for every product, service, and content topic on your website.

Phew, talk about exhausting!

This process is laborious, and really only possible if you rank for a handful of keywords. But realistically, most sites rank for far more. What about hundreds of keywords, thousands, or tens of thousands? The most popular sites on the web can even rank for millions of keyword phrases! Checking rankings by hand becomes a cumbersome - and often inaccurate - process.

Beware of guessing!

Chasing the wrong competitors could be misshaping your SEO strategy (and wasting your time and money)!

To make your life easier, various SEO tool solutions can automatically look at all of the keywords you rank for in their databases, and accurately tell you who your true search competitors are.

One such solution is Moz's True Competitor tool. Let’s check it out:

1. Enter your domain or subdomain. For this example, let’s take a look at 1-800-Pet-Meds, an online pet pharmacy (1800petmeds.com).

2. You’ll see a list of your top 25 competitors. In the screenshot below, True Competitor shows 1-800-Pet-Meds’ biggest SERP competitors, and their Domain Authority (DA) scores. Their top 5 competitors are Chewy, PetCare Rx, PetCo, Walmart Pet Rx, and VCA Hospitals:


3. If you’re logged into Moz with a free trial or Pro account, you’ll see some additional metrics, such as a Rivalry score. Rivalry is on a scale of 1-100, and it combines your DA, your competitor’s DA, keyword overlap, keyword volume, and your rankings to give you one powerful way of identifying your competitors. The higher the Rivalry score, the bigger the rival.

4. Do you already know who your competitors are? That doesn’t mean you should skip this step! This tool can also validate your own competitor choices. If you have competitors in mind, run your site through this tool, and see what comes up. It's crucial to have metrics that substantiate your assumptions.

5. Final step: In the SEO Competitor Analysis Template, add your competitors to the True Competitors tab.

Now that we know our true competitors, we can use this data to perform an SEO competitor analysis.

How to Find Your SEO Competitors - Whiteboard Friday

 

How do you know who your true search competitors are? Check out this Whiteboard Friday for Lidia Infante's top-down and bottom-up approaches for identifying your competitors.

Next level: Niche market competitors

Oftentimes, a brand’s offering covers a wide span of products, services, and content. This can result in your competitors differing across the various verticals.

Let’s take a look at an example. PetSmart, a pet product retailer, offers a range of products for different animals, various in-store services, and a blog where they regularly post informational articles. Because they sell farm animal products such as chicken coops and hay bales, one of their SERP competitors is tractorsupply.com. Additionally, petsmart.com publishes advice on their blog - such as the best dog food for small breeds - which means they’re competing with magazine and informational sites like nymag.com and petkeen.com.

You may find your competitors differ due to:

  • A diverse group of products

  • Multiple service categories

  • A wide range of content topics

  • Seasonal products

  • Local aspects of your business

  • Various customer personas you serve

One practical way to think about it is this: if the content on your website is organized by subfolders or subdomains, there’s a chance that each subfolder has a different set of competitors. You’ve now discovered a whole new way to think about your SEO competition!


Next up: How To Conduct Competitor Keyword Analysis