These plugins score 7+ on our opportunity index, which factors in abandonment level, install base size, rating gaps, and review engagement. Higher scores indicate stronger signals that users need a better alternative.
10 plugins match these criteria
| Plugin | Score |
|---|---|
|
My-Plugins
Displays all the plugins you use - just insert [my plugins]...
|
7.4 |
|
Announcement Bar
A fixed position (header) HTML with jQuery drop-down announc...
|
7.3 |
|
MW WP Form reCAPTCHA
Adds reCAPTCHA field to MW WP Form.
|
7.2 |
|
Storefront Add Slider
Lets you add any slider shortcode to your Storefront theme F...
|
7.1 |
|
Authentication by LoginRadius
The Authentication by LoginRadius WordPress plugin allow you...
|
7.1 |
|
WP Mailgun SMTP
An SMTP service is must in order to resolve the deliverabili...
|
7.1 |
|
Twitter for WordPress
Twitter for WordPress displays yours latest tweets in your W...
|
7.1 |
|
Hotlink Protection
The WordPress Automatic Image Hotlink Protection plugin is a...
|
7.1 |
|
ATP Call Now
Show button Call Now on your website (support desktop and mo...
|
7.1 |
|
Fancy Product Designer REST API
This plugin registers all required routes and methods for th...
|
7.0 |
Actionable strategies for turning these insights into a WordPress plugin business.
High scores indicate strong signals, but always validate. Check the plugin's support forum, search for user complaints, and see if alternatives already exist. Score is a starting point, not a guarantee.
Search the WordPress.org repository for similar plugins. If there are already good alternatives, the opportunity may be smaller than the score suggests. If not \u2014 you've found a gap.
Don't try to replicate every feature of the original plugin. Identify the core use case, build a minimal version that does it well, and iterate based on user feedback.
A free plugin captures users; premium features generate revenue. Plan your pricing strategy before you build \u2014 freemium, one-time purchase, or subscription.