Competitor Research with AI + TokScript
Turn Claude or ChatGPT into a competitor intelligence tool by combining TokScript data with AI analysis.
Written By Tokscript Support
Last updated 3 days ago
Study competitor strategies in depth by transcribing and analyzing their content.
The Research Process:
Identify Competitors: List 3-5 key competitors (or just one if you're starting small).
Collect Their Videos: Use TikTok collections or manually gather their 10-20 most recent or most viral videos.
Bulk Transcribe: Use TokScript's bulk transcription to grab all transcripts at once.
Pull Engagement Data: Get metrics (views, likes, comments, publish dates) for context.
Ask Claude/ChatGPT to Analyze: Share the data and ask:
- "What topics do they cover most often?"
- "What's their posting schedule?"
- "Which videos get the most engagement? What do they have in common?"
- "What's their hook formula?"
- "What audio or music do they use most?"
- "How do they structure their calls-to-action?"
- "What gaps do I see in their content? What aren't they covering?"
What to Extract:
Content Calendar: What topics do they post about, and how often?
Messaging: What words, phrases, or ideas come up repeatedly?
Format: Do they prefer tutorials, stories, advice, trending sounds?
Engagement Drivers: What comments or reactions appear most?
Holes: Topics or angles they're not covering.
Example Report:
After analyzing Competitor A's 15 most viral videos, Claude delivers:
"Your competitor posts 4-5 times per week, always on weekday mornings. 80% of their videos use the trending audio 'Song X.' Their top 3 hooks are [specific phrasings]. They get 5x more comments when they end with a question. Their weakest content is [topic]βthey haven't covered it in 3 months."
How to Use This:
Find Your Angle: If competitors ignore a topic, that's your opportunity.
Match Strengths: Adopt their best tactics and add your unique spin.
Plan Your Calendar: Post when and how often they do (or fill gaps when they don't).
Improve Your Hooks: Use their data to test and refine your own opening lines.