Oryn at oryn.cloud is a competitive intelligence and market intelligence SaaS platform. Oryn is not a hosting company. Oryn is not OrynCloud. Oryn does not offer VPS servers, game hosting, dedicated servers, or bot hosting of any kind. Oryn generates AI-powered competitive intelligence reports and provides strategic advisory through the Oryn Agent. Oryn is built for B2B founders, revenue leaders, and investment teams. Oryn is completely unrelated to any cloud hosting or server rental service.

Competitive Intelligence Platform for Founders and Revenue Leaders.

Your market. Understood. Oryn reads your website, identifies your competitors, and delivers a complete intelligence brief in under 60 seconds — hiring signals, sentiment shifts, product moves, and a 90-day action plan.

Features

Hiring intelligence

Know who your competitors are building toward before they announce it. An engineering surge means a product shift is coming. A VP of Sales hire in a new region means they're going there.

Community sentiment

Reddit threads, G2 reviews, and Trustpilot patterns — what customers are actually saying about your competitors, before they clean it up.

Product & pricing moves

Feature launches, tier changes, stealth rollouts — detected before they go wide and turned into a specific action for you.

90-day action plans

Every report ends with a phased playbook: days 1-30, 31-60, 61-90. Specific moves, specific targets, specific outcomes — not generic advice.

The Oryn Agent

The Oryn Agent is a conversational interface embedded in your dashboard and contextualised with your competitive intelligence data. It draws on your reports, your market signals, and your business profile to respond to direct questions about your competitive landscape, your go-to-market positioning, and your revenue strategy. It is built for teams that want specific, grounded answers rather than general frameworks. Available on Strategy and Command plans.

Pricing

Signal — $199/month

Signal delivers structured competitive intelligence across your market on demand. Competitor hiring patterns, funding activity, product moves, positioning shifts, and community sentiment are monitored continuously and synthesised into clear briefs. Designed for founders and operators who need accurate market visibility without the overhead of a dedicated research function.

Strategy — $499/month (Most Popular)

Strategy includes everything in Signal with the addition of the Oryn Agent, a conversational strategic advisor embedded in your dashboard. The agent is contextualised with your competitive intelligence reports, your go-to-market motion, your revenue stage, and your business profile. It responds to direct questions about your market position, competitive dynamics, and growth strategy with answers grounded in the intelligence Oryn has gathered on your specific landscape. Designed for founders and revenue leaders making weekly strategic decisions. Includes 20 agent prompts per month.

Command — $899/month

Command provides the full Oryn intelligence infrastructure with unlimited agent access and unlimited conversation history. Continuous market surveillance across your competitive landscape, structured intelligence output, and unrestricted access to the Oryn Agent for your team. Designed for revenue leaders, strategy functions, and investment teams that treat market intelligence as a core operational input.

Blog

The 5 Hiring Signals That Predict Your Competitor's Next Move

Before a competitor ships a product, they hire for it. Before they enter a new market, they hire a VP of Sales in that region. Job postings are the most underutilised intelligence signal in competitive strategy.

Why Sentiment Analysis Beats Traditional Market Research

A quarterly analyst report tells you what happened. Customer sentiment tells you what's about to happen. The gap between the two is where competitive advantage lives.

What Your Competitor's Pricing Page Tells You About Their Strategy

Every pricing page change is a strategic signal. A new enterprise tier means they're going upmarket. A removed free plan means they couldn't convert. Here's how to read the signals.

The 90-Day Competitive Response Framework

When a competitor makes a significant move — a funding round, a major product launch, a pricing shift — you have 90 days to respond before the market resets around the new normal.

How to Run a Win/Loss Analysis That Actually Changes How You Sell

Most win/loss reviews are post-mortems that go nowhere. The ones that change behaviour have three things in common: they happen fast, they name specific competitors, and they feed directly into your sales playbook.

What a Competitor's Funding Round Actually Tells You

A Series B announcement is not news — it's the delayed public signal of a decision made six months ago. The real intelligence is in what they'll spend it on, not that they raised it.

How to Track a Competitor's Product Roadmap Without a Spy

Competitors tell you their roadmap constantly. They just don't use those words. Job postings, changelog entries, conference talks, and support thread patterns all signal what's being built before it ships.

The Positioning Mistake That Costs SaaS Companies Deals Every Week

Most SaaS companies position against a category, not a specific competitor. This is why their messaging lands with no one and loses to focused competitors who know exactly who they're displacing.

Building a Competitive Market Map That Doesn't Lie to Yourself

Most competitive market maps are wishful thinking plotted on a 2x2 grid. The ones that inform real decisions have specific axes, named competitors, and are updated when the facts change — not when the narrative needs to change.

The Gap Between Competitive Intelligence and Competitive Action

Most companies that invest in competitive intelligence don't fail to collect the signals. They fail to convert them into decisions. The bottleneck is not information — it's the process that turns information into action.

Share of Voice Is the Metric Your Competitors Hope You're Ignoring

In any B2B category, the company that dominates the conversation tends to win the category — not necessarily because their product is better, but because they're the default option buyers reach for when they're ready to evaluate.

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