What product managers who are consistently beating competitors know – with Jay Nakagawa
Chad McAllister, PhD
Product management professor, practitioner, and top-1% podcast host. I help product managers and leaders prepare for the next step in their careers.
To listen to the interview, search for Product Mastery Now on your favorite podcast player.
Elevating product strategy through advanced competitive intelligence
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TLDR
In this episode of Product Mastery Now, I interview Jay Nakagawa, Director of Competitive Intelligence at Dell Technologies and a 25-year product management veteran. Our discussion reveals proven methods for understanding competitors and developing effective product strategies. Jay shares practical tools and frameworks product managers can use to gather competitive intelligence ethically and systematically. One compelling insight is that looking at competitors through our own lens often leads to misunderstandings – we need frameworks and methods to see the market from their perspective.
Understanding Competitive Intelligence in Product Management
The Evolution of Competitive Intelligence
Jay has an interesting background that shapes his perspective on competitive intelligence. After spending over 20 years as a product manager, he found himself increasingly drawn to analyzing competition and developing strategies to outperform rivals. When Dell acquired EMC, Jay had the opportunity to transform this skill into a new career direction, leading competitive intelligence efforts.
His experience reveals an important shift in how companies approach competitive analysis. While understanding customer needs remains essential, gaining deep competitive insights has become equally valuable for product success.
The Problem with Traditional Analysis
Many product managers rely on SWOT analysis for competitive insights. However, Jay explains that in his field, they jokingly call SWOT a “Silly Waste of Time” because it reveals little about competition. Instead of providing deep insights into competitor strategies and capabilities, SWOT tends to focus on internal factors and broad market opportunities.
Core Functions of Modern Competitive Intelligence
Jay learned about competitive intelligence from the Academy of Competitive Intelligence, which teaches product managers not only frameworks but also how to use them practically. Based on Jay’s experience at Dell Technologies, effective competitive intelligence includes:
FunctionDescriptionBusiness ImpactCompetition AnalysisUnderstanding competitor products and strategiesImproved product differentiationStrategic EvaluationAssessment of corporate and product strategiesBetter strategic planningMarket Motion AnalysisUnderstanding go-to-market approachesEnhanced market positioningSales SupportEnabling sales teams with competitive insightsIncreased win ratesProduct DirectionInforming product management decisionsMore effective roadmap planning
Essential Frameworks for Competitive Analysis
Porter’s Five Forces in Practice
Jay shares an example of how to apply Porter’s Five Forces using the large aircraft manufacturing industry:
Understanding Competitor Perspective
Jay shares a metaphor about competitor analysis: Picture a kitten looking in a mirror and seeing a lion’s reflection. While we see the kitten, we need to understand that the competitor sees themselves as a lion. This perspective helps explain why competitors’ actions that seem irrational often make perfect sense from their viewpoint.
Jack recommends you focus on your primary competitors. Use Four Corners Analysis to understand their market:
The answers to these questions give you a good idea of what your competitor will do over the next 24 months. Then understand their biases and blind spots that you can exploit.
Advanced Competitive Intelligence Techniques
The Triangulation Method
Jay explains how his team combines multiple sources to build reliable competitive insights:
Creative Research Methods
Jay shares an example about a team that used a creative but ethical way to gather competitive intelligence for a pharmaceutical company. The team needed to understand a competitor’s capacity for manufacturing vaccines but couldn’t access internal information. Their solution? They contacted the local fire department to review the building’s fire mitigation plan, which revealed details about the facility’s size and potential production capacity.
Practical Information Sources
Here are specific places where product managers can find competitive insights:
Source TypeExamplesInformation GainedProfessional PublicationsMcKinsey reports, Boston Consulting Group articlesStrategic direction, market trendsCareer SitesLinkedIn, Glassdoor, company career pagesTechnology investments, skill requirementsIndustry EventsConferences, trade shows, webinarsProduct roadmaps, partnership strategiesFinancial SourcesAnnual reports, investor presentationsInvestment priorities, market focus
Connecting Intelligence to Product Strategy
Common Product Management Challenges
Jay observes that many product managers have become highly specialized, focusing deeply on specific features or release optimization. While specialization has its benefits, it can lead to:
Predicting Competitor Actions
Jay shares four common ways competitors respond to market moves:
1. Imitation Response
When competitors can’t innovate quickly, they often try to copy successful features. Jay references Tony Fadell’s experience with the Nest thermostat as an example of how established companies respond to innovative products.
2. Innovation Response
Some competitors will develop alternative approaches rather than direct copies. This often leads to market differentiation and can benefit customers through increased choice.
3. Legal Response
Jay notes that when competitors can’t compete effectively through products, they may turn to legal challenges, particularly around patents or regulatory compliance.
4. Acquisition Response
Larger competitors might attempt to buy innovative companies rather than competing directly, especially when facing significant technical or market barriers.
Evaluating Competitor Claims
Assessing Investment Levels
Jay’s organization looks at publicly available data to figure out the market direction where competitors are going in the next four years. They try to answer the questions, “Why does a company do what they’re doing? Why are they investing in that technology?”
Jay shares a quote from a friend: “Vision without execution is called delusion.” If a competitor claims a particular business objective is part of their vision, you should investigate whether they really have the ability to execute on that vision.
Vision vs. Execution
Drawing from his experience, Jay shares these warning signs of a disconnect between vision and execution:
Innovation Through Competitive Intelligence
Finding Market Opportunities
Jay shares how competitive intelligence can reveal innovation opportunities. He uses the example of Tony Fadell’s development of the Nest thermostat:
Conclusion
Throughout our discussion, Jay emphasizes that competitive intelligence isn’t about following competitors – it’s about understanding the market landscape to make better product decisions. The goal is creating differentiated products that solve real customer problems while maintaining awareness of competitive dynamics.
Useful links:
Innovation Quote
“Ideas can come from anywhere.” – based on the story of Tony Fadell, inventor of the Nest thermostat
Application Questions
Bio
Jay Nakagawa is a 25+ year veteran product manager, with a track record of successfully building new products and developing turn-around strategies resulting in high revenue growth. As director of Competitive Intelligence with Dell Technologies, he and his team have been instrumental in providing critical guidance to product management teams providing insights that encompass how to create differentiated offerings to the market.
To listen to the interview, search for Product Mastery Now on your favorite podcast player.