Alternative to Kompyte
Graded briefs and switch-ready leads, not just automated alerts.
Kompyte (part of Semrush) automates competitor website, ad, and SEO tracking with battlecards and alerts, priced custom for mid-market and up. Linkeddit Compete is the small-team alternative: a graded weekly brief across review sites, Reddit, and blogs, with named switching-intent leads, at $99 a month.
Quick comparison
Kompyte
Mid-market and larger marketing teams, especially those already in the Semrush ecosystem, that want automated tracking of competitor websites, ads, and SEO with battlecards pushed into Slack, Teams, or the CRM.
Linkeddit
Founders and small teams that want a graded weekly competitor brief and named switching-intent leads, focused on user complaints and buying signals rather than website and ad automation.
TL;DR
Kompyte (part of Semrush) automates competitor website, ad, and SEO tracking with battlecards and alerts, priced custom for mid-market and up. Linkeddit Compete is the small-team alternative: a graded weekly brief across review sites, Reddit, and blogs, with named switching-intent leads, at $99 a month.
The Reddit-native pick
Founders and small teams that want a graded weekly competitor brief and named switching-intent leads, focused on user complaints and buying signals rather than website and ad automation.
Pricing: $49/mo Pro or $450 one-time Lifetime
Pros
Cons
Competitor intelligence
Mid-market and larger marketing teams, especially those already in the Semrush ecosystem, that want automated tracking of competitor websites, ads, and SEO with battlecards pushed into Slack, Teams, or the CRM.
Pricing: Custom, quote-based (part of Semrush)
Pros
Cons
| Feature | Linkeddit | Kompyte |
|---|---|---|
| Self-serve, no sales call | — | |
| Public, published pricing | $99/mo | Custom |
| Automated website and ad tracking | Limited | |
| Review-site complaint mining | Limited | |
| Reddit sentiment | Limited | |
| Graded, noise-filtered weekly brief | Alerts/battlecards | |
| Named switching-intent leads | — | |
| Semrush ecosystem | — | |
| Best fit | Founders and small teams | Mid-market marketing teams |
Kompyte is the automation-first option in this category. Now part of Semrush, it watches competitor websites, ads, SEO, and content, keeps battlecards current automatically, and pushes alerts into Slack, Teams, or the CRM. If your priority is never missing a competitor's marketing move, it does that job well.
It is also built for mid-market and larger marketing teams, with custom pricing and a sales cycle to match. For a founder or small team, that is more platform, and more procurement, than the problem usually needs.
Linkeddit Compete comes at competitor intelligence from the buyer's side rather than the marketing-automation side. It mines the sources where customers are candid, review sites like G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, and Trustpilot, plus Reddit and blogs, and grades what it finds into one weekly brief so you see the moves and the complaints that matter without wiring up alert rules.
And it adds the lead layer Kompyte does not: named buyers who are actively unhappy with a competitor or shopping for an alternative, with the quote to start the conversation. The honest trade-off is that Compete is not an automated website and ad tracker; if that specific capability is your priority, Kompyte fits better. For small teams that want graded competitor signal and switch-ready leads, Compete is the $99-a-month alternative.
Search Reddit for recommendation threads, alternatives, complaints, and workflow pain.
Track competitor names, category keywords, and switching language on a schedule.
Generate Reddit-native reply drafts from your product context and monitor knowledge base.
For a small team, Linkeddit Compete is a strong Kompyte alternative because it focuses on user complaints and switching intent rather than website and ad automation. It grades competitor signal across review sites, Reddit, and blogs into a weekly brief and attaches named switch-ready leads, at $99 per month, self-serve.
Yes. Kompyte is part of Semrush and fits naturally into that ecosystem, with automated competitor website, ad, and SEO tracking plus battlecards pushed into Slack, Teams, or the CRM. Pricing is custom and quote-based.
Kompyte automates tracking of competitor websites, ads, and SEO and pushes alerts and battlecards to your team. Linkeddit Compete mines user complaints and switching intent across review sites, Reddit, and blogs, grades them into one weekly brief, and attaches named leads, self-serve at $99 per month.
Not in the same automated way. Kompyte is built for automated website, ad, and SEO change tracking. Linkeddit Compete focuses on user sentiment and switching intent across review sites, Reddit, and blogs, plus competitor moves, delivered as a graded weekly brief with switch-ready leads.
Kompyte uses custom, quote-based pricing as part of Semrush, so expect a sales conversation. Linkeddit Compete is $99 per month, self-serve, cancel anytime.