See what your rivals are posting
Look at any competitor and see how often they post, what is working for them, and the gaps you can fill, so you can stay a step ahead.
- See a competitor’s posting pattern at a glance
- Spot the topics they are missing
- Turn gaps into your next posts
Competitor check
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Competitor check, explained
The competitor check lets you study any rival brand’s social strategy in one place. See how often they post, which content is working for them, and the topics they are ignoring, so you can spot openings to stand out. Instead of scrolling a competitor’s feed and guessing, you get a clear read on their pattern and the gaps you can fill. It turns "what should we post?" into "here is what our market is missing," which is a far easier question to answer.
How it works
Add a competitor
Point everyclik at any rival brand’s accounts.
See their pattern
Review how often they post and what performs.
Find your opening
Spot the gaps and turn them into your own posts.
What can I learn from a competitor check?
How often a rival posts, which formats and topics get the most response, and where they are quiet. That last part is the valuable one: the topics your competitors ignore are often the easiest places for you to own attention, and everyclik makes those gaps obvious.
How do I turn this into my own content?
Once you spot a gap or a format that is working in your market, everyclik helps you act on it: send the insight into the idea finder or the post writer and turn it into an on-brand post in a couple of clicks, rather than letting the research sit unused.
Frequently asked questions
Whose accounts can I check?
Any competitor or brand you want to learn from. Point everyclik at their public accounts to see their posting pattern.
What does it show me?
How often they post, what is performing for them, and the content gaps you can fill to stand out.
Can I act on what I find?
Yes. Turn any gap or winning format into your own on-brand post using the idea finder and post writer.
Is this just copying competitors?
No. The most useful insight is what they are missing, so you can do something different and better rather than blend in.
Last updated June 2026