Who Are Your Startup Competitors? The Answer Investors Want to Hear
The real answer is rarely “no one.” It is usually inertia, habit, and every old way of solving the problem.
The question sounds simple.
It is not.
If you are raising money, sooner or later someone will ask:
Who are your competitors?
And if you are not ready, the pitch can go off the rails fast.
The worst answer is not a complicated one.
It is this:
“We do not have any competitors.”
That is almost never true.
Even if nobody is building the exact same product, you are still competing with spreadsheets, email, old workflows, internal teams, consultants, manual processes, and the customer doing absolutely nothing.
That is the real field of battle.
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Key Takeaways
You always have competitors, even if they are not obvious.
In many cases, the real competition is inertia, manual work, or the status quo.
Saying “we have no competitors” weakens credibility.
A strong founder shows they understand the market, the alternatives, and the customer’s current behavior.
Competition is often a signal that the market is real.
The job is not to deny it, but to frame it clearly.
The best pitch answers compare against the real alternatives, not just direct rivals.
Investors want to know why customers will switch.
Confidence matters, but trashing competitors makes you look small.
Respect the landscape, explain your edge, and show why you win.
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Table of Contents
1. You Always Have Competitors
Most founders think competitors means “other startups with the same product.”
That is too narrow.
A calendar startup is not just competing with other calendar startups.
It is competing with email threads, shared assistants, Slack messages, and the sheer inconvenience of changing habits.
A modern finance tool is not just competing with fintech apps.
It is competing with bank portals, accountants, spreadsheets, and a finance team that already knows how to survive with messy systems.
A collaboration tool is not just competing with rivals in the category.
It is competing with inertia. And inertia is a serious competitor. It is free, familiar, and already installed.
The customer does not wake up wanting your startup.
They wake up wanting a result.
Your job is to show them why your path is the better one.
2. Competition Is Not A Weakness
A lot of founders panic when they see competitors.
They should not.
Competition is often a sign that the problem is real.
If multiple companies are fighting for the same space, that usually means there is demand, budget, and a reason customers care.
No competition can sometimes mean no market.
That does not mean you want a crowded mess with no room to breathe.
It means you want to understand the landscape properly.
In some cases, your real competition is the existing way of doing things.
If you are building software that replaces manual operations, your competition may be the operations team itself.
If you are building a new sales tool, your competition may be the status quo and a CRM already stitched into the company.
If you are building a new consumer product, your competition may be habit and attention span.
That is why the cleanest answer in a pitch is not “we have no competitors.”
It is:
“Here is the current way the problem is solved, here is who solves it today, and here is why we win.”
That sounds credible because it is.
3. The Best Founders Define Competition Broadly
This is where many pitches become weak.
Founders either make the market too small or too vague.
Both are mistakes.
If you define competitors too narrowly, you look naive.
If you define them too broadly, you look evasive.
The right move is to be precise.
Ask three questions:
What does the customer use today instead of us?
What do they compare us against in practice?
What else could they spend this money on?
A workflow startup might compete with an internal process, a spreadsheet, and an outsourced service.
A consumer app might compete with social media, entertainment, or just not solving the problem at all.
A B2B product might compete with a category leader, a legacy vendor, and a homegrown workaround that nobody wants to admit still exists.
That is the reality investors want to hear.
Not theater.
Not denial.
Not a fake blue ocean story with no friction.
Just the truth, framed clearly.
4. In A Pitch, Honesty Beats Bluster
When an investor asks about competition, they are not only testing product knowledge.
They are testing judgment.
They want to know whether you understand the market, whether you know what customers already do, and whether you can explain your edge without sounding defensive.
A good answer sounds like this:
“The customer currently solves this with X, Y, and a lot of manual work.
The direct competitors in our category are doing some of it well, but they are built for a different buyer and a different workflow.
We win because our product is faster, easier to adopt, and designed around the way this market actually behaves.”
That is much better than pretending nobody else exists.
If the market is crowded, say so.
If the market is fragmented, say so.
If the market is full of weak incumbents, say so.
And if you are copying a model from another geography, say that too.
That is not a problem.
Pretending otherwise is the problem.
Founders do not lose credibility because they have competitors.
They lose credibility because they try to hide them.
5. Do Not Trash Your Competitors
This is one of the easiest ways to look small.
When founders attack competitors too aggressively, they usually reveal insecurity, not strength.
You do not need to say the market leader is terrible.
You do not need to act like every rival is incompetent.
You do not need to turn a pitch into a takedown.
A stronger position is this:
“They do some things well. But they are solving for a different moment in the market.”
That kind of answer shows confidence.
It also shows maturity.
The best investors already know the competition exists.
Many of them have seen it up close.
Some of them have backed it.
Some of them know the founders personally.
Trying to bluff your way through that conversation is a bad move.
You are better off being direct, respectful, and clear about your wedge.
What matters is not whether competitors exist.
What matters is whether you understand why customers will switch.
6. The Question Behind The Question
When someone asks, “Who are your competitors?” they are often asking something more important:
Why now?
Why this approach?
Why will customers move?
Why will you win?
That is the real test.
A founder who understands competition well usually understands the market well.
A founder who understands the market well usually understands the customer well.
And a founder who understands the customer well has a real chance of building something people actually adopt.
So do not panic when the question comes.
Do not hide behind “we have none.”
Do not overcomplicate the answer.
Name the real alternatives.
Show the gap.
Explain the switch.
Make the market legible.
That is what investors are listening for.
Not a clever dodge.
A credible story.
7. Final Thought
Competition is not the enemy.
Confusion is.
If you know who you are competing against, what the customer uses today, and why your solution deserves the switch, then you are already ahead of most founders in the room.
The best answer is never “we have no competitors.”
The best answer is:
“Here is the market, here is the real alternative, and here is why we win.”
That is the kind of answer that earns trust.
And trust is what opens the next meeting.
Continue Exploring the Frontier
If this piece resonated, you may want to go deeper.
This article is part of our Capital Raising collection, where we explore the ideas, frameworks, and strategies that help founders, investors, and operators make better decisions.
You can also explore our main topic categories to discover more insights across entrepreneurship, venture capital, fundraising, company building, and frontier technologies.
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Important point!
Many founders think they're competing against another startup. More often they're competing against inertia.
The customer's current workaround, spreadsheet, email chain, legacy system, or habit is usually a much stronger competitor than the startup down the road.
People don't switch because something is better. Rather, when something is better and also worth the disruption to their existing workflow. That's a much higher bar than most founders realise!
Every startup has competition, even if it's spreadsheets and habits.