Co-occurring Competitors in AI

How AI systems define your real competitors through co-occurrence patterns


What are co-occurring competitors in AI?

Co-occurring competitors in AI are:

Brands that frequently appear together with your brand in AI-generated answers


In simple terms:

If AI often says:

“X, Y, and Z are good options…”

Then:

  • X, Y, Z are co-occurring competitors

The key shift

Your competitors in AI are not who you think they are

They are:

Who AI groups you with


Why this matters

In traditional business:

  • You define competitors

In AI systems:

  • AI defines your competitors

The new reality

Competitive landscape is now AI-generated


The Co-occurrence Model

Competitors = Brands that appear together across contexts


This is based on:

  • Co-mentions
  • Shared contexts
  • Similar positioning

How LLMs determine competitors

LLMs do not:

  • Use market reports
  • Use official competitor lists

They rely on:

Patterns of co-occurrence in data


This includes:


1. Context overlap

  • Appearing in the same use cases

2. Category similarity

  • Belonging to the same category

3. Association patterns

  • Frequently mentioned together

4. Comparative usage

  • Compared in similar queries

Key insight

If AI frequently mentions you with another brand → you are competitors in AI


Why co-occurring competitors matter


1. Defines your category

Who appears with you determines:

  • What category AI thinks you belong to


2. Shapes positioning

If you appear with:

  • Enterprise tools → you look enterprise
  • Simple tools → you look basic


3. Influences perception

Users see:

  • Groups of brands
  • Not isolated mentions


4. Determines visibility

If you are not in the group:

You are not considered


Key insight

You don’t compete individually — you compete as part of a group


Types of co-occurring competitors


1. Core competitors

  • Always appear together
  • Strong category overlap


2. Contextual competitors

  • Appear in specific use cases


3. Emerging competitors

  • Appear occasionally
  • Growing presence


4. Misaligned competitors

  • Incorrect grouping
  • Category confusion

The biggest misconception

“Our competitors are who we think they are”

Not in AI.


Because:

AI defines competitors based on patterns, not strategy


Example scenario

A company thinks competitors are:

  • A
  • B

But in AI answers:

It appears with:

  • C
  • D
  • E

Result:

  • Wrong competitive strategy
  • Misaligned positioning

Key insight

Your real competitors in AI may be invisible to you


Co-occurrence vs traditional competition

TraditionalAI-based
Market-definedPattern-defined
StaticDynamic
Known competitorsEmergent competitors
Strategy-drivenData-driven

Why co-occurrence is powerful

Because it reveals:

  • Hidden competitors
  • Category shifts
  • Positioning gaps

The hidden risk

You may:

  • Optimize against wrong competitors
  • Miss real threats

While AI users see:

  • A completely different landscape

How to analyze co-occurring competitors


1. Frequency analysis

  • Who appears most often with you?

2. Context mapping

  • In which queries do they appear?

3. Position comparison

  • Who is listed first?
  • Who is described better?

4. Sentiment comparison

  • Who is framed positively?

Key insight

Competition in AI is relative, not absolute


How to influence co-occurring competitors


1. Strengthen category positioning

  • Define your space clearly
  • Align with the right group


2. Increase association with desired competitors

  • Be mentioned alongside them
  • Reinforce category relevance


3. Expand contextual coverage

  • Appear in more use cases
  • Enter new competitive sets


4. Avoid misclassification

  • Prevent being grouped incorrectly
  • Fix positioning signals

A realistic scenario

A company:

  • Strong product
  • Clear positioning internally

But in AI:

  • Grouped with low-end tools
  • Compared with wrong competitors

Result:

  • Perceived as lower value

Where SpyderBot fits

SpyderBot helps analyze:

  • Who your real competitors are in AI
  • Co-occurrence patterns
  • Competitive positioning
  • Hidden threats

It answers:

  • Who appears with you
  • Who dominates
  • Where you lose
  • How to reposition

The honest conclusion

Co-occurring competitors are not:

  • Obvious
  • Fixed
  • Controlled

They are:

Emergent from AI behavior


Final insight

You are not competing against who you think

You are competing against:

Who AI places next to you


The shift

We are moving from:

  • Defined competition

To:

  • AI-discovered competition