How to Monitor Competitor Hiring
Learn how to track competitor job postings to uncover their strategy, identify expansion plans, and spot market opportunities before anyone else.
A competitor quietly doubles their engineering team. Six months later, they launch a product that eats into your market share. You only find out from the press release.
Job postings are public, real-time, and hard to fake. Every open role represents approved budget and a strategic decision. By monitoring what your competitors hire for, you can see their playbook unfold months before the results become visible.
What competitor hiring reveals
Different hiring patterns map to different strategic moves:
- Geographic expansion — A wave of "Store Manager", "Regional Sales", or "Site Lead" roles in new cities means they're entering new markets.
- New product lines — Clusters of "ML Engineer", "Payments", or "Security Engineer" roles signal upcoming product bets.
- Scaling up — A sudden jump in headcount for an existing team (e.g., 5x more SDRs) means they're accelerating growth in that area.
- Tech stack shifts — Hiring for technologies they didn't use before (e.g., switching from on-prem to cloud-native) reveals infrastructure changes.
- Leadership changes — New VP or C-level searches suggest strategic pivots or organizational restructuring.
The key is to track patterns over time, not individual postings.
How to set up competitor hiring monitoring
List your competitors
Start by collecting the company names and domains of the competitors you want to track. Focus on 5–15 companies — enough to spot trends without drowning in noise.
Create a job search filtered to those companies
Open a new job search and add your competitor companies using the Company name or Company domain filter. This scopes results to only their job postings.
Add filters to focus on the signals you care about
Depending on what you want to track, layer on additional filters:
- Job title — Filter for specific roles like "Data Engineer", "Site Lead", or "VP of Sales" to watch a particular function.
- Location — Watch for hiring in regions where they don't currently operate.
- Job description keywords — Search for specific technologies, product names, or tools mentioned in job descriptions.
- Date posted — Narrow to recent postings (e.g., last 7 or 30 days) to focus on active hiring.
Or leave filters broad to get a full picture of their hiring activity across all departments.
Save the search
Click Save to preserve your filters. You'll use this saved search to set up ongoing monitoring.
Set up alerts to get notified automatically
You have two options depending on how quickly you need to know:
- Email alerts — Get a daily or weekly digest of new competitor job postings. Set this up from your saved search under Email Alerts.
- Webhooks — Get real-time notifications pushed to Slack, your CRM, or any tool via webhooks. Ideal if you need to act fast (e.g., adjusting sales strategy when a competitor enters your territory).
Review and act on the signals
Check your alerts regularly and look for patterns:
- Are they hiring in a new city? Consider whether you need to accelerate your own expansion plans.
- Are they building a product team around a new capability? Decide if you should compete, differentiate, or ignore it.
- Are they scaling sales in your strongest market? Prepare your team with competitive positioning and objection handling.
The value comes from connecting the dots across multiple postings over time.
Example: Tracking a competitor's geographic expansion
Say you're a retail chain and want to know when a competitor plans to open stores in new cities. Create a job search with:
- Company name = your competitor
- Job title contains "Store Manager" or "Site Lead" or "Real Estate"
- Location = the regions you care about (or leave blank to discover new ones)
Set up a weekly email alert. When you see a cluster of operational roles appear in a city where they have no presence today, that's your early warning — typically 6–18 months before a location opens.
Example: Monitoring a competitor's tech stack changes
If you sell developer tools and want to know when competitors adopt or drop a technology:
- Company domain = competitor domains
- Job description keywords = the technology names you want to track (e.g., "Kubernetes", "Snowflake", "React Native")
A spike in job postings mentioning a new technology signals an adoption decision. A drop in mentions of a technology they previously hired for may signal a migration away from it.
Further reading
Spotting your competitors' next moves
How to monitor job postings automatically
How to send a slack message for every new job found
Email Alerts
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