Why I built ScrapRival
I kept finding out about my competitors' moves too late. A pricing change I learned about from a churned customer. A feature launch I saw in a random tweet, three weeks after it shipped. Every time, the information had been sitting in public — on a pricing page, in a changelog, on a blog — and I just hadn't looked.
Not because I didn't care. Because checking a dozen pages by hand, every week, is a job nobody actually does. It quietly never happens. And then you negotiate a renewal, or plan a launch, or set a price, with a picture of your market that's a month old.
What ScrapRival does
You tell it who your competitors are. It watches their pricing pages, changelogs and blogs — plus the industry feeds you care about — every day.
Then, once a week, you get one email on Monday morning:
- What changed — pricing moves, feature launches, positioning shifts, hiring signals.
- Why it matters — each item summarized by AI in a sentence, ranked by importance.
- What to do about it — a concrete "so what" when there is one, not a wall of links.
Last week it read about a thousand articles and page changes to produce a briefing that takes five minutes to read. That ratio — a thousand to five — is the whole product.
See it, don't take my word for it
The fastest way to judge it is to look at a real briefing. There's a full sample digest on the site — the actual Monday email, rendered exactly as it lands in your inbox. No signup.
If your product has a clear competitive set — three or four companies you should be watching and aren't — that's exactly who I built this for.
The founding offer
I'm opening ScrapRival to a small group of founders first. The first 10 people to subscribe lock in the founding rate: 30% off, for life, with the code FOUNDING at checkout. Every plan starts with a 14-day free trial, no credit card.
What's next
I'm building this in public. Every week I'll publish a teardown here — real changes I caught across a niche's pricing pages and changelogs, and what they signal. If you want the next one, the sample is the best place to start.