Competitor research is where SEO stops being guesswork and starts becoming a clear plan: what to build, what to fix, and what to prioritize first. When your closest rivals consistently show up above you in Google, they are also leaving a trail of evidence, the queries they win, the pages that attract clicks, and the sites that choose to link to them.
Firestarter SEO provides SEO competitor analysis built to identify three revenue-driving gaps: keyword gaps, content gaps, and link gaps. The goal is not to copy competitors. It’s to spot the opportunities they already proved are viable, then build a smarter path to outrank them.
What “SEO competitors” really means (and why it matters)
Your true SEO competitors are often not the businesses you compete with day to day. They are the domains that repeatedly rank for the same high-intent searches your customers use.
A competitor research service starts by validating who actually owns your search results across your services, locations, and product lines. That keeps the analysis grounded in the SERP reality, not assumptions.
After that, we benchmark your site against those competitors in three directions:
- visibility (keywords and rankings)
- relevance (content depth and intent match)
- authority (backlinks and referring domains)
The three gaps that decide who ranks
Most SEO plateaus come down to one of these gaps, or a combination of all three. Closing them in the right order is where momentum comes from.
Keyword gaps (what they rank for that you do not)
Keyword gap analysis compares your current keyword footprint against competitor footprints, then filters down to terms that are both relevant and worth winning.
This includes “missing” keywords you do not rank for at all, plus priority terms where you rank on page two while competitors take page one.
A useful keyword gap output is never just a giant export. It’s a prioritized set of targets grouped by intent, mapped to the best page type to win the click.
Content gaps (what they built that you did not)
Content gaps are not only “you need more blogs.” Often, the gap is structural: competitors answer the same questions with better page formats, clearer internal linking, stronger topical coverage, and more complete decision-stage pages.
We evaluate competitor content by theme and intent, then map what’s missing on your site:
- missing topics (no page exists)
- thin coverage (page exists, but does not satisfy the query)
- mismatched intent (page exists, but targets the wrong searcher goal)
Sometimes the highest ROI move is refreshing a few existing pages, not writing dozens of new ones.
Link gaps (who links to them, but not to you)
Backlinks remain a major differentiator in competitive search results, especially for transactional keywords. Link gap analysis compares your backlink profile to competitors and identifies referring domains that already link to similar businesses or content.
We focus on the strength and uniqueness of referring domains, topical relevance, and the context of the link, not vanity metrics or bulk counts.
What you get from Firestarter SEO’s competitor research
Competitor analysis is only useful if it turns into an execution-ready plan. The deliverable should tell you what to do next, in what order, and why it will work.
Here is how the core outputs typically line up:
| Gap Type | What We Analyze | What You Receive | What It Guides |
|---|---|---|---|
| Keyword gaps | Competitor ranking sets vs. yours, intent clusters, traffic potential | Prioritized keyword targets and mapping to page types | On-page optimization plan and content roadmap |
| Content gaps | Competitor top pages, topic coverage, SERP formats, intent match | Topic and page recommendations, refresh vs. new build decisions | Editorial calendar and site architecture updates |
| Link gaps | Referring domains, link context, anchor trends, intersect reports | Qualified outreach targets and linkable asset ideas | Link building plan and authority milestones |
You also receive a clear “why this competitor wins” view, which is often the fastest way to decide whether a keyword is realistically within reach now or better staged for later.
How we prioritize opportunities (so it stays practical)
The internet is full of keywords. Your budget, time, and content capacity are not. Prioritization is where competitor analysis becomes a growth asset instead of a report that gathers dust.
After reviewing the gap data, we typically filter opportunities using criteria that reflect business outcomes.
A prioritization pass often centers on:
- Intent fit: Does the query signal a buyer, a researcher, or a comparison shopper?
- Feasibility: How strong are the ranking pages and their link profiles?
- Traffic that matters: Does the keyword have real demand, or is it a “junk” term?
- Conversion alignment: Can we connect the query to a service, product, lead, or pipeline stage?
That is how competitor research stays revenue-first, rather than becoming a rankings-only exercise.
How competitor insights turn into page-one wins
Competitor research is most powerful when it feeds directly into implementation. Firestarter SEO’s broader approach follows a structured framework that begins with analysis and planning, then moves into on-site work and quality link building, followed by monitoring and reporting.
Once the gaps are identified, execution usually falls into three categories.
A typical action plan includes items like:
- Page targeting: Create new landing pages for uncovered service or location intent, or re-target existing pages that should be winning the keyword.
- Content upgrades: Expand thin sections, add missing subsections competitors cover, and tighten titles and headings to match search intent.
- Authority building: Pursue high-quality referring domains uncovered in the link intersect, supported by outreach-ready assets.
Local market competitor analysis (Denver and beyond)
Local SEO competitor research has different patterns than national SEO. Geo-modified searches, map pack results, service-area pages, citations, and review signals can change which competitors matter.
Firestarter SEO frequently supports businesses competing in U.S. local markets, including Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs, Fort Collins, Tampa, Raleigh, Oklahoma City, Wichita, and Las Vegas. The research process accounts for local SERP features and the reality that local competitors often win with fewer pages, but stronger relevance and trust signals.
If your business serves multiple cities, we can segment the competitor set by location, since the top-ranking domains in one market may not match another.
What we need from you to start
Competitor analysis moves faster when goals and constraints are clear. Even a short kickoff can prevent weeks of chasing the wrong targets.
Before research begins, it helps to share a few basics:
- primary services or product categories
- priority locations (if local or regional)
- top competitors you hear about from sales calls (we still validate them in SERPs)
- your best leads and highest-value conversions
If analytics and Search Console access are available, we can tie the findings to real performance data instead of tool-only estimates.
Reporting that stays transparent
A competitor research engagement should leave you with artifacts your team can use: keyword maps, content recommendations, and link targets that connect to specific pages and outcomes.
Firestarter SEO supports transparency through monthly reporting and dashboards when competitor research is part of an ongoing SEO campaign. When competitor analysis is delivered as a standalone service, the same expectation applies: clear documentation, clear priorities, and clear next steps.
If you want competitor research that translates directly into an execution plan for keywords, content, and links, Firestarter SEO can scope the analysis around your market, your search intent targets, and the competitive reality of your SERPs.

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