Competitive Battlecard Library Builder
Build a standing library of competitor battlecards your whole sales team reuses.
What is the Competitive Battlecard Library Builder?
The Competitive Battlecard Library Builder is a free AI skill that creates a standing library of competitor battlecards for a food and beverage sales team, covering multiple named competitors rather than prepping for one meeting. You give it your brand, the competitors you face repeatedly, and what you know about each; it returns one battlecard per competitor — their genuine position, strengths, and vulnerabilities, our differentiated angle, a talk track, and the proof points still needed — plus a maintenance plan for keeping the library current as the competitive set shifts. It is built for sales leaders and key account teams who are tired of every rep improvising a different answer to the same 'why you over them' question. Because it forces every claim about a competitor to be either grounded or flagged as unverified, the library stays credible instead of turning into folklore. Pairing it with real food and beverage trend data keeps the positioning current, not frozen at the day it was written.
Who it's for
- Sales leaders building a shared competitive reference for the team
- Key account managers who face the same competitors in every meeting
- Sales enablement or trade marketing teams maintaining rep tools
- National account directors onboarding new reps onto the competitive set
What you get
- One battlecard per named competitor, in a consistent format
- Genuine strengths and vulnerabilities for each, flagged where unverified
- A talk track and our differentiated angle per competitor
- Proof points still needed to strengthen each card
- A maintenance plan: ownership, cadence, field-feedback loop
- Rules for using the cards live without sounding scripted
How to use it
- 1Paste the prompt into ChatGPT, Claude or Gemini.
- 2List your named competitors and what you know about each.
- 3Answer its clarifying questions to sharpen the cards.
- 4Ask it to add a new competitor card as the field flags one.
See it in action
Example input
Brand: fictional 'Solace Foods' oat milk, sold in grocery dairy-alternative sets across roughly 3,000 US grocery stores. We want a standing battlecard library covering our three biggest competitors: fictional 'OatWell' (the category leader, roughly 40% category share), fictional 'Meadow Stream' (a fast-growing challenger brand up double digits year over year), and private label. Our sales team currently improvises answers differently in every meeting and we want one shared reference the whole team pulls from and updates quarterly.
Example output
Competitive battlecard library: Solace Foods oat milk Library structure (how the team should use this): This is a standing reference, not a one-meeting prep doc — organize it as one battlecard per competitor, reviewed and updated quarterly, so every rep answers a "why you over OatWell" question the same way regardless of which meeting they're in. Battlecard 1: vs. OatWell (category leader, ~40% share) Their position: category leader, widest distribution, broadest flavor range, the safe default buyers already know. Where they're strong: brand recognition, shelf presence, buyer familiarity — hardest to dislodge on pure awareness. Where they're vulnerable: insert known weaknesses, such as a price position, a recent reformulation complaint, or a thinner innovation pipeline; do not guess at a weakness you cannot support with something real. Our angle: don't attack their strength, which is awareness — compete on the dimension where Solace is genuinely differentiated, such as sourcing, taste test results, or a specific certification. Talk track: "OatWell owns the shelf today because they were first. We're not asking you to replace them, we're asking you to give shoppers who want [our specific differentiator] a reason to trade up." Proof points needed: insert velocity, taste-test, or trial data once available. Battlecard 2: vs. Meadow Stream (fast-growing challenger) Their position: newer, growing fast, likely winning on a specific trend angle worth naming if known. Where they're strong: momentum, buyer curiosity about the newest thing. Where they're vulnerable: momentum is not the same as proven repeat — a fast-growing challenger often has thinner velocity history than the pitch implies. Our angle: contrast Solace's proven track record against their newness, positioning stability and repeat purchase as the safer bet, without dismissing their momentum outright. Talk track: "Meadow Stream is exciting in a pitch meeting. The real question is repeat rate six months in — we can show you ours." Proof points needed: insert repeat-purchase or velocity data. Battlecard 3: vs. private label Their position: lowest price, guaranteed shelf presence, no sell-in required. Where they're strong: price, and the buyer's own margin on it. Where they're vulnerable: private label rarely drives category growth or recruits new shoppers into the category, it captures existing demand at lower margin. Our angle: position Solace as the item that grows the category by recruiting new oat-milk buyers, which private label structurally cannot do. Talk track: "Private label captures shoppers already in the category. Solace is built to bring new shoppers into oat milk in the first place — that's incremental to your category, not just margin on existing demand." Proof points needed: insert new-buyer or category-growth data. How to keep this current: - Assign one owner per competitor card, responsible for a quarterly refresh. - Any rep who hears a new competitor claim or price move in the field should flag it for the next update — the library is only as good as what the field feeds back into it. - Retire or merge cards for competitors that stop appearing in real meetings; a stale card nobody trusts undermines the whole library. Rules for using this in a live meeting: Never read a battlecard talk track verbatim — internalize the angle, then answer in your own words specific to that buyer's stated concern. A battlecard prepares the argument, it does not replace listening to the actual objection in the room. Want a fourth card added for a specific regional competitor, or a one-page quick-reference version for reps to carry into meetings?
The prompt
Here's the start of the prompt. Download the free bundle for the full, ready-to-paste version — plus the installable Claude Skill and Custom-GPT instructions.
# Role You are a CPG competitive intelligence lead who builds standing battlecard libraries for sales teams. Unlike prep for a single meeting, you build a reusable reference covering multiple named competitors that the whole team draws on and updates over time. # Context I'll provide - Our brand and category: [BRAND / CATEGORY] - Named competitors to cover: [COMPETITOR 1, COMPETITOR 2, COMPETITOR 3...] - What we know about each competitor's position and claims: [COMPETITOR NOTES] - Our genuine differentiators: [OUR DIFFERENTIATORS] - How the team currently handles competitive questions (optional): [CURRENT STATE] # Your task 1. If our brand context or the named competitors are missing or vague, ask up to 3 clarifying questions BEFORE writing anything.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a competitive battlecard library?
- A competitive battlecard library is a standing, maintained set of reference documents, one per named competitor, covering their position, strengths, vulnerabilities, and the talk tracks a sales team uses to respond, kept current over time rather than rebuilt from scratch for every meeting. This skill builds that library across multiple competitors at once, with a maintenance plan so it doesn't go stale.
- How is this different from the Buyer Meeting Prep & Battlecard skill?
- The Buyer Meeting Prep & Battlecard builds a one-time prep pack, including a battlecard, for a single specific upcoming meeting with one buyer. This skill builds a standing library covering multiple named competitors that the whole sales team draws on across many meetings, with an ownership and update plan so it stays current. Many teams build this library once, then pull from it every time they run the meeting-specific prep skill.
- Which AI models does this prompt work with?
- Any capable chat model — ChatGPT, Claude, or Google Gemini. Because a battlecard library is a shared team asset, many sales leaders save it as a Custom GPT or a reusable skill so the same structure gets used every time a card is added or refreshed.
- What if I don't have hard data on a competitor's weaknesses yet?
- Give it whatever you genuinely know — pricing, positioning, things buyers have said about them — and it will build the strongest card that evidence supports, marking anything unconfirmed as an assumption to verify rather than presenting a guess as fact. Battlecards built on invented competitor weaknesses tend to fall apart the first time a buyer pushes back on one in a real meeting.
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