Keyword Opportunity Score
Most keyword tools hand you a search volume and call it an opportunity. Volume alone is useless — a term with 50,000 searches and a 0.2% conversion is worse than one with 2,000 searches and a 12% conversion. This calculator multiplies the two and divides by how hard the top spot is to take.
The inputs are plain. Monthly search volume is the demand side — get it from a keyword tool and halve it in your head, because those numbers are routinely inflated. Your conversion rate is what that traffic actually does once it lands; if you don't know it, 8–12% is a sane private-label guess for a well-matched query. The top result's BSR is your difficulty proxy: a weak seller sitting at BSR 40,000 is easy to outrank, a BSR 200 monster is not.
The formula: opportunity = (volume × conversion rate) ÷ difficulty factor. The difficulty factor is derived from that BSR — low BSR (strong seller) pushes the factor up and crushes the score; high BSR (weak seller) keeps it near 1. What comes out is a rough estimate of monthly orders you could realistically win, not a ranking promise.
Read it as relative, never absolute. One keyword scoring 900 versus another at 120 tells you where to point your listing and your PPC. It does not tell you the keyword is worth $900.
The catch is the BSR proxy assumes the top result's sales strength reflects ranking difficulty, which holds loosely but breaks on unstable niches where BSR bounces hourly. Pair this with the competition analyzer and the BSR-to-sales tool so the difficulty number isn't standing alone. A high-opportunity keyword in a walled niche is still a wall.