Radar watches the competitive set you choose — their menus, pricing, ratings, reviews, posting activity, and promos — and benchmarks it against your own numbers. You've always watched the competition. Now it's organized.
The Italian place two blocks over raised entrée prices 6% last month and their rating held. Your pasta is now the cheapest on the street and your food cost is up. That's not a coincidence — that's a memo item.
Pick the spots you actually compete with — the street, the neighborhood, the category. Radar keeps tabs on their public footprint so you don't have to doomscroll their Instagram to know what they're up to.
Data about competitors is trivia until it stands next to your own numbers. Radar lines their moves up against your pricing, your rating trend, your share of local search — and flags the gaps worth acting on.
When a competitor's move matters — a price hike that gives you headroom, a promo that's eating your Tuesday — it shows up in the morning memo with a suggested response. Intelligence that ends in a decision, not a folder.
Founding-wave seats are limited, and founding pricing stays locked for as long as you stay.