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Fiverr Competitor Analyzer

Enter 2–3 competitor gig details. Get an AI breakdown of their strengths and weaknesses, the market gap they're missing, and the exact positioning angle to make your gig stand out.

Enter competitor gig details

Fill in at least 2 competitors. Manually look up gigs on Fiverr and enter the details below.

Competitor 1
$
Competitor 2
$
Competitor 3(optional)
$

Your planned gig (optional — for targeted positioning advice)

$

Fill in at least 2 competitor titles and prices to continue.

How to use

Finding the gap your competitors are missing

  1. 01

    Find your top 3 competitors on Fiverr

    Search Fiverr for the service you want to offer. Sort by 'Best Selling' or 'Recommended'. Note the top 3 gig titles, starting prices, and the key selling points each one emphasises — delivery speed, revision policy, included extras, or any specific claim in their title or preview.

  2. 02

    Enter the details and run the analysis

    Fill in at least 2 competitors (title, price, and selling points). Optionally add your planned gig title and price for targeted positioning advice. A free account is required to run the analysis.

  3. 03

    Use the gap and positioning to write your gig

    Review the market gap analysis and positioning angle. These are the most important outputs — use them to write your gig title, package names, and description opener. The suggested gig title is a ready-to-use starting point you can refine.

FAQ

Common questions about competitor analysis

How do I find competitor gigs to analyze?

Search for your service on Fiverr using the keyword you want to rank for. Sort by 'Best Selling' or 'Recommended' to see the gigs buyers actually click on. Note the top 3 results — their title, starting price, and the 2–3 selling points they emphasise in their gig preview (delivery speed, revisions, included files, guarantees). Enter those details into the tool.

How many competitors should I analyze?

Two is the minimum required — the AI needs at least two data points to identify patterns and gaps. Three gives more reliable gap analysis because it shows consistent patterns across the market rather than one-off differences. Analyze your top 3 search competitors — the gigs that rank highest for your target keyword, not just similar services in general.

What is a 'market gap' in the context of Fiverr gigs?

A market gap is something buyers in your category commonly want that the top-ranking gigs aren't clearly offering or emphasising. Examples: your competitors all take 3+ days but a buyer might want 24h delivery; competitors offer broad services but a buyer might want a specialist in their specific platform; competitors all use similar language but a buyer might respond better to a different tone or angle. The gap analysis identifies the most actionable opportunity based on your specific competitors.

What's a positioning angle and why does it matter?

A positioning angle is the single most distinctive reason a buyer should choose your gig over the alternatives. It's not a list of features — it's a clear, specific claim that sets you apart from what the buyer can already get. For example: 'the only logo designer offering brand strategy included' or 'WordPress speed optimization with a 3-second guarantee'. A clear angle makes your gig more memorable and easier to choose from a list of similar results.

Should I use the suggested gig title directly?

Use it as a strong starting point. Review it for accuracy (does it represent what you actually deliver?), check the character count is under 80, and edit any phrasing that doesn't match your voice. The AI generates the title based on the gap and angle it identified — it may occasionally include a specific claim you can't back up, so verify before publishing.

How often should I re-analyze my competitors?

When you first launch a gig, run an analysis before writing your title and description. Re-analyze every 3–6 months, or whenever you notice a drop in impressions or clicks. Fiverr's market shifts — new competitors appear, pricing adjusts, and buyer expectations change. An analysis that's 6 months old may be pointing you toward a gap that no longer exists.