Competitive content intelligence

Track competitor content before it becomes your blind spot

Content Radar helps SEO, growth, and content teams monitor competitor sources, discover new pages, review candidate URLs, and connect competitor content movement to keyword opportunity and editorial action.

Compliant source discoveryCandidate URL reviewKeyword mappingConnector-ready
Content Radar  /  Sources

12

Competitors

+2 this month

38

Sources

+7 this month

64

New this wk

+18% vs last wk

Sources

4 active

Northstar Labs Blog

RSS · 18 articles

Healthy

OrbitScale Newsletter

Atom · 21 articles

Healthy

SignalStack Resources

Sitemap · 14 articles

Healthy

BrightBench Newsroom

RSS · 11 articles

Review

Candidate queue

3 pending review

Keyword mapping

ai searchproduct-led SEOcontent velocitycomparison pages

The problem

Competitor intelligence is scattered across too many signals

Growth, SEO, and content teams miss competitor content changes because relevant signals live across separate tools, manual checks, and ad hoc research. By the time patterns emerge, momentum has already shifted.

Content Radar pulls those signals into one organized workspace: structured sources, candidate URL queues, keyword mappings, and reports that make competitor content movement visible and actionable.

See how it works
Competitor blogs
RSS and Atom feeds
Sitemaps and resource hubs
Google Alerts notifications
Newsrooms and press pages
Manual research notes
Spreadsheet URL lists
Keyword tool exports
Content Radar: one organized workspace

How it works

From competitor to content brief in six steps

A workflow designed for teams that need to turn competitor content movement into clear, prioritized actions.

1

Add competitors

Add organizations you want to monitor. Each competitor anchors the sources, candidate URLs, and content attached to it.

2

Discover or import sources

Attach RSS feeds, Atom feeds, or sitemap XML files. Import URLs via CSV or paste. Use Google Alerts RSS as a compliant fallback when direct feeds are unavailable.

3

Monitor permitted sources

Content Radar works with structured, public, or user-provided sources. No browser automation, no proxy rotation, no fragile scraping.

4

Review candidate URLs

New content surfaces as candidates for your review. Accept, skip, or flag each URL before it enters your tracked library.

5

Map to topics and keywords

Connect discovered URLs to keyword demand, content gaps, topic priorities, funnel stages, and market signals using built-in workflows.

6

Build reports and briefs

Turn findings into weekly intelligence reports, content briefs, opportunity maps, and editorial priorities.

Capabilities

Everything your team needs to track competitor content

Source management, candidate review, keyword mapping, reporting, and connector-ready enrichment in one place.

Competitor source tracking

Add any organization and attach the publishing channels you want to monitor: blogs, resource hubs, newsrooms, and feeds.

Source health monitoring

See when each source was last fetched, whether it succeeded, and which sources need attention or a recovery workflow.

Candidate URL review

New pages surface as candidates for your review. A structured queue keeps your library clean and intentional.

RSS, Atom, and sitemap feeds

Paste a feed or sitemap URL. Content Radar auto-detects the format. Google Alerts RSS works as a compliant fallback discovery channel.

Manual CSV imports

Import competitor URLs, keywords, and content inventories via CSV or direct paste. Domain validation and duplicate detection run automatically.

Reports and snapshots

A live workspace view of competitor counts, source health, content status breakdown, and most recent discoveries.

Keyword and content mapping

Map competitor pages to target keywords, identify content gaps, and prioritize pages by search demand and intent.

Connector-ready enrichment

Built for workflows where keyword intelligence, competitor URLs, and content maps come together. Designed to support connectors like Ahrefs.

Keyword connector workflow

Enrich discovered URLs with search demand

1
Competitor URL discoveredvia RSS, sitemap, or import
2
Added to candidate queuepending review
3
Reviewed and acceptedenters tracked library
4
Enriched with keyword datavia Ahrefs-style connector or CSV import
5
Mapped to content gapbrief or content action created

Connector enrichment is designed to support tools like Ahrefs for keyword data and Google Search Console for owned-site performance signals. Manual CSV imports work today.

Keyword intelligence

Connect competitor content movement to keyword strategy

Content Radar is built to become the operating layer between competitor movement and keyword strategy. With connector-ready workflows, teams can enrich discovered URLs with keyword demand, ranking context, difficulty, and intent signals, then map those opportunities into briefs, reports, and content priorities.

Manual CSV imports for competitor URLs, keywords, and content inventories work today. Connector workflows for automated enrichment from tools like Ahrefs are on the roadmap.

Learn about connectors

Monitoring philosophy

Designed around compliant source workflows

Content Radar is designed around compliant source discovery and review workflows. It helps teams work with public, user-provided, structured, or permitted sources instead of relying on brittle scraping tactics.

Reliable workflows

Structured feeds and sitemaps provide consistent, predictable data. Less breakage, fewer maintenance surprises.

Cleaner source governance

Every source in your workspace is user-provided or explicitly approved. Your library reflects deliberate choices, not noisy crawl output.

Better review controls

The candidate URL queue keeps your library intentional. Nothing enters your tracked content without going through your review step.

Built by Youssef Al-Brawy for teams doing the hard work

Builder of Content Radar

“Content Radar is built by Youssef Al-Brawy. It was created from the recurring pain of tracking competitor content manually across scattered sources, spreadsheets, alerts, and SEO tools. The goal is to give teams a cleaner operating layer for competitive content intelligence: one workspace where sources are organized, candidates are reviewed, findings are mapped to keyword opportunities, and results become reports and briefs that actually drive decisions.”

Ready to turn competitor content into strategy?

Join early access to start tracking competitor sources, reviewing candidate URLs, and mapping content movement to keyword opportunity.