+40 Commodity PressureThis is essentially a public event flyer — generic copyable language and a single title make it trivial to reproduce or subsume into any calendar, CMS, or AI feature.
Single-page site/title: 'Espoo Hobby Sports Cricket Tournament'Commodity language: 'Hobby Sports', 'Cricket Tournament'
+0 Model DependencyNo AI claims or model dependencies visible — not positioned as a model-driven product.
No AI positioning or claims visible on the site.
-0 Workflow OwnershipNo evidence of owning a repeatable workflow or habit — it's a one-off event listing.
No workflow depth markersCore product described as an event/tournament
-0 Distribution EmbeddednessNo channel, platform, or ecosystem signals; no embedded distribution or partnerships shown.
No platform or integration markersPrimary buyer: local hobbyist cricketers and spectators
-0 Integration DepthNo visible integrations, APIs, or technical hooks — just a single-page announcement.
No integration markersSingle-page content only
-0 Enterprise TrustNo enterprise confidence signals such as compliance, procurement, or customer testimonials.
No enterprise markersNo customer proof markers
-0 Switching CostNo data gravity, habits, collaboration features, or paywall — trivial to replace or ignore.
No historical data or collaboration featuresSingle-use event page
-0 Monetization MaturityNo pricing, revenue model, or customer evidence visible — looks non-commercial.
Pricing visibility: hiddenNo customer proof markers
+6 Category BaselineGeneric SaaS gets no category adjustment.
generic saas
-15 Relative PlacementLower vulnerability to align with peer parked/one‑page sites — extremely fragile but comparable to other generic/parked SaaS pages rather than uniquely catastrophic.
Single‑page event listing with only a title and commodity language — matches pattern of parked or one‑off sites in the peer set.No integrations, pricing, customers, or workflow depth; trivial switching cost and no enterprise trust.Peer anchors with similarly minimal signals are scored in the mid‑40s to low‑60s (examples: RECRD 49, Yebo Rewards 47/59, Stolz‑Merch 60, SaaSocalypse 65), suggesting 81 is an outlier.