How to Map Your Competitors in the Swiss Market?
Public Swiss registries, commercial registers, and databases that Hungarian entrepreneurs can use lawfully and efficiently to analyze the Swiss market.
Why is competitor research particularly important in the Swiss market?
Switzerland is not a homogeneous market. It is characterized by four official language regions (German, French, Italian, Romansh), 26 cantons, and a highly decentralized regulatory environment. A business model that works in Zurich may face a completely different competitive landscape in Geneva.
The Swiss market is also extremely mature and consolidated in many sectors. Barriers to entry — not necessarily legal, but rather relational and reputational in nature — are high. A Hungarian entrepreneur entering without thorough preliminary analysis can easily find themselves facing competitors with decades of local networks and brand trust.
Competitor research is therefore not a luxury, but the foundation of a market entry decision. It shows whether there is a gap in the market, who the unavoidable players are, and what positioning makes sense for entry.
What public Swiss registers and databases are available?
Switzerland offers one of the most transparent business environments in Europe in terms of publicly accessible company information. The following sources are worth reviewing systematically.
Commercial register and SHAB: the basics
The Swiss commercial register (Handelsregister, abbreviated HRG) maintains registered companies at the cantonal level, but the data is uniformly accessible through the federal portal. The zefix.ch (Zentraler Firmenindex) is the consolidated search interface for all cantonal commercial registers — free to use without registration.
The following data can be found on zefix.ch for any company:
Data | Accessibility |
|---|---|
Company name, legal form | Free, public |
Registration date | Free, public |
Headquarters, address | Free, public |
Name of authorized signatories | Free, public |
Share capital (for AG and GmbH) | Free, public |
Changes, deletions | Free, public |
The Schweizerisches Handelsamtsblatt (SHAB) — the Federal Commercial Gazette — is the official journal in which all company registrations, modifications, and liquidation notices are published. The shab.ch portal is searchable, and archived entries are also accessible. It is a useful tool for tracking when a competitor founded a subsidiary, changed authorized signatories, or when liquidation proceedings began against them.
Financial statements and annual reports: what can you know, what can't you?
This is where the Swiss system is less transparent than, for example, the British or Scandinavian systems. In Switzerland, the obligation to disclose financial statements is size-dependent:
Small companies (GmbH, smaller AG): are not required to publish annual balance sheets publicly. Only the share capital is listed in the commercial register.
Medium and large companies (not listed on stock exchange, but subject to audit requirements under OR Article 727): are required to have audits performed, but the report is not automatically public.
Stock exchange-listed companies (SIX Swiss Exchange): full transparency; annual and semi-annual reports are available on six-group.com and on the company's own IR website.
Practical consequence: if your competitor is a Swiss SME (small and medium-sized enterprise), you will not obtain financial data directly from public sources. In such cases, indirect methods help: employee count (estimable from LinkedIn and jobs.ch job postings), office size, revenue estimates from industry databases.
The Dun & Bradstreet, the Orbis (Bureau van Dijk) and Credita are paid Swiss company information services that also include estimated turnover data and credit ratings — their accuracy varies, but they can be useful for market orientation.
Intellectual property: trademarks, patents, design patents
The registration of intellectual property in Switzerland is the responsibility of the Eidgenössisches Institut für Geistiges Eigentum (IGE/IPI) — the Federal Institute of Intellectual Property — and its database is freely searchable at ige.ch.
What can you find here?
Trademarks (Marken / marques): who registered what and when, in which product categories (according to the Nice Classification), and whether protection extends to a specific canton or federal level.
Patents: Swiss patent applications and granted patents. Important: a Swiss patent is valid only in Swiss territory; European patents can be searched in the EPO (European Patent Office) database at epo.org/en/searching-for-patents/technical/espacenet.
Design patents (Designs): protection of the external appearance of products.
For Hungarian entrepreneurs, this is particularly important: if you want to market a product or brand name in Switzerland, first check whether there is a conflicting trademark registered. A conflict is not just a legal risk — relative to the size of the Swiss market, litigation represents a disproportionate burden.
Other useful public data sources
Source | What it contains | Access |
|---|---|---|
moneyhouse.ch | Company data, related persons, credit rating indicators | Partially free |
jobs.ch, jobup.ch | Job postings → headcount, signs of expansion | Free |
Employee profiles, organizational structure | Free (limited) / Sales Navigator (paid) | |
Statista, GfK | Industry market data, market share estimates | Partially paid |
seco.admin.ch | Economic policy, industry statistics | Free |
bfs.admin.ch | Federal Statistical Office — sectoral data | Free |
How to analyze competitors' online presence and positioning?
Analyzing your digital footprint does not require special access — just methodical work.
Website analysis: Tools such as SimilarWeb (free basic plan) or SEMrush (paid) show a website's estimated traffic, keywords, and traffic sources. In Switzerland, the .ch domain dominates, but many companies operate .com and .de domains in parallel.
Price and quote analysis: In Swiss B2C markets, price comparison sites like toppreise.ch and comparis.ch publicly display competitor pricing by product category. In the B2B segment, the request for quotation (RFQ) process is typically more closed, but industry events and professional association publications can help.
Press monitoring: Archives from news.ch, nzz.ch, and letemps.ch are searchable — by searching a competitor's name, you can find past press mentions, acquisitions, awards, and scandals.
How much does competitor analysis cost and how long does it take?
Cost and time investment depend heavily on market complexity and analysis depth.
Basic research using free, publicly available sources:
Time investment: 15–25 working hours
Cost: 0 CHF (labour value only)
Result: identification of 5–10 main competitors, collection of basic data, mapping of their online presence
Deeper analysis supplemented with paid databases:
Time investment: 30–50 working hours
Cost: 200–800 CHF (Orbis, Dun & Bradstreet one-time queries, SimilarWeb Pro)
Result: estimated financial data, credit risk indicators, more detailed digital analysis
External market research commission (with a Swiss advisor):
Time investment: 2–6 weeks (your involvement is minimal)
Cost: 3,000–15,000 CHF, depending on sector and depth
Result: comprehensive market report with positioning recommendations
⚠️ The price estimates above are indicative, based on 2025 market experience. Actual quotes may vary significantly.
What are the risks and limitations — what should you avoid?
Competitor analysis is a lawful activity when based on publicly available data. However, there are boundaries worth understanding.
What to avoid:
Collecting personal data about natural persons is prohibited under Swiss data protection law (Datenschutzgesetz, DSG — updated as of 1 September 2023 to align more closely with GDPR) without consent from the person concerned. Company register data (e.g., executive names) is public, but profiling such data in combination with other information can enter risky territory.
Obtaining trade secrets in any form. The Swiss Bundesgesetz gegen den unlauteren Wettbewerb (UWG, Unfair Competition Act) prohibits the unauthorized acquisition, use, or disclosure of a competitor's trade secrets. This also applies to "poaching" employees for information-gathering purposes.
Using misleading identity during data collection (e.g., requesting a quote under a false name solely to learn prices) — a grey area that some legal interpretations consider challengeable under Swiss UWG.
Automated data collection (scraping) from websites that prohibit it in their terms of use.
What you can safely do:
Querying public registers
Analyzing competitor websites, price catalogs, and job postings
Attending industry events and networking
Reading press archives and professional publications
Analyzing publicly available customer reviews (Google, Trustpilot)
How to build a practical research plan?
The following step-by-step process outlines a 3–4 week independent research effort that a Hungarian entrepreneur can conduct without external assistance.
Step 1 — Define market segment and geographic focus (1–2 days) Decide which canton or region to focus on first. Zürich, Bern, Basel, and Genève each have different industry strengths. Without defining your focus, research becomes scattered.
Step 2 — Identify competitors (3–5 days)
zefix.ch: search by activity code (NOGA code) and region
Google search from a Swiss IP (or without VPN, using .ch search settings)
LinkedIn: industry filters, Swiss headquarters
Industry association membership lists (many associations publish these publicly)
Step 3 — Gather basic data (3–5 days) For each identified competitor, complete the following template:
Company name, legal form, year of registration
Headquarters, branch offices
Estimated headcount (based on LinkedIn)
Main products / services
Pricing model (if publicly available)
Strength of online presence (website, social media)
Recent press mentions
Step 4 — Check intellectual property (1–2 days) ige.ch: verify whether your planned brand names, logos, or product names conflict with registered trademarks.
Step 5 — Summary and positioning conclusions (2–3 days) Create a simple competitive positioning matrix: who offers what, at what price, to whom, and where are the white spaces. This will form the basis of your market entry strategy.
Sources
Federal Commercial Register (Zefix): https://www.zefix.ch
Swiss Official Gazette of Commerce (SHAB): https://www.shab.ch
Federal Institute of Intellectual Property (IGE/IPI): https://www.ige.ch
Business Identification Number portal (UID): https://www.uid.admin.ch
Federal Statistical Office (BFS): https://www.bfs.admin.ch
State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO): https://www.seco.admin.ch
Swiss government information portal: https://www.ch.ch/en/
European Patent Office — Espacenet: https://www.epo.org/en/searching-for-patents/technical/espacenet
SIX Swiss Exchange (stock exchange annual reports): https://www.six-group.com
In Brief
In Switzerland, competitor research is not a luxury but a fundamental prerequisite for market entry, since the market is decentralized, mature, and has high barriers to entry. The zefix.ch commercial register, the IGE intellectual property database, and public online sources are freely accessible, but SME financial data is not public — so indirect methods must be used. A Hungarian entrepreneur can conduct basic research independently in 15–25 working hours, or engage an external consultant for deeper analysis at a cost of 3,000–15,000 CHF.
Key Takeaways
- Define the geographic focus of your research (canton or region) — Zurich, Bern, Basel, and Geneva have different sectoral strengths, and targeted analysis is needed rather than scattered research.
- Check your planned brand names and product designations in the ige.ch intellectual property database before entering the market — conflicts create disproportionate legal burden relative to the Swiss market size.
- Systematically compile basic data on identified competitors using a template (company name, headquarters, estimated headcount, product range, pricing, online presence) — this will form the basis of your competitive map.
- Use public online sources (LinkedIn, job postings, press archives, price comparison sites) to compensate for the absence of SME financial data — these provide indirect but reliable signals.
- Stay within publicly available data — avoid unauthorized acquisition of trade secrets, employee poaching, and automated data collection that could violate Swiss UWG (Unfair Competition Act).
- Create a simple competitive matrix (who offers what, at what price, to whom) that identifies market white spaces and positioning opportunities.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where can I find basic data on Swiss companies for free?
zefix.ch (Central Company Index) is the aggregated federal commercial register search interface where you can search free of charge and without registration by company name, legal form, registration date, headquarters, share capital, and changes. The shab.ch portal allows you to search all company registration, modification, and liquidation notices in the archive.
Can I access financial data for Swiss SMEs?
Not directly. In Switzerland, small and medium-sized enterprises (GmbH, smaller AG) are not required to publish annual financial statements publicly. Instead, you must use indirect methods: employee count (based on LinkedIn and job postings), office size, industry estimates, or paid business information services (Orbis, Dun & Bradstreet).
How can I check if my brand name or logo conflicts with an existing trademark?
You can search free of charge in the ige.ch (Federal Institute of Intellectual Property) database for your planned brand names and logos. The database shows who registered what and when, in which product categories (Nice Classification), and whether protection extends to a specific canton or federal level. Checking for conflicts before market entry is mandatory.
What time and cost should I budget for competitor research?
With free public sources: 15–25 working hours, 0 CHF cost. With paid databases (Orbis, SimilarWeb Pro): 30–50 working hours, 200–800 CHF. Engaging an external Swiss consultant: 2–6 weeks, 3,000–15,000 CHF depending on sector.
What should I avoid during competitor research?
Avoid collecting personal data on natural persons without consent, unauthorized acquisition of trade secrets, using misleading identity for data collection, and automated data collection (scraping) from websites that prohibit it. Swiss UWG (Unfair Competition Act) sanctions these practices.
Which canton or region should I focus on in my research?
Zurich, Bern, Basel, and Geneva have different sectoral strengths. Before starting research, decide which canton or region to focus on first — unfocused research becomes scattered and yields no usable results.
Where can I find competitors' online pricing?
In the B2C market, price comparison sites like toppreise.ch and comparis.ch publicly display competitor price levels by product category. In B2B segments, the request-for-quotation (RFQ) process is typically more closed, but industry events and professional association publications can help you understand pricing models.
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