Free Tool Strategy (Engineering as Marketing)
Purpose
Free tools are permanent acquisition assets. Build a calculator, checker, generator, or grader that your target audience actively searches for. It ranks in Google, gets shared, and funnels users to your paid product. One tool can drive more signups than months of content.
Reads
brand/audience.md— Personas, daily workflow, pain pointsbrand/keyword-plan.md— Search volume data for tool-related queriesbrand/positioning.md— Positioning angles to connect tool → productbrand/creative-kit.md— Brand colors, fonts for tool landing page
On Activation
- Read
brand/audience.md,brand/keyword-plan.md,brand/positioning.md,brand/creative-kit.md. - If any file is missing, note what's unavailable. The skill works at zero context — ask the user directly for missing info in Step 1.
- Pre-fill persona details, keyword data, and positioning angles from whatever brand/ files exist. Only ask for what's genuinely unknown.
Why these files matter: audience.md tells you whose pain to solve (without this, tools target the wrong users). keyword-plan.md gives search volume data so you don't build tools nobody searches for. positioning.md connects the free tool to the paid product (without this connection, traffic doesn't convert). creative-kit.md ensures the tool landing page matches the brand.
Workflow
Step 1: Identify Audience Workflow Pain Points
If brand/audience.md exists, extract the primary persona and their pain points — skip the interview below and go straight to Step 2 with that data. If not, map the target audience's daily workflow and find friction:
Persona: [Role/Title]
Daily workflow:
1. [Task] -> Pain: [what's annoying about this]
2. [Task] -> Pain: [what's tedious/manual]
3. [Task] -> Pain: [what requires expensive tools]
4. [Task] -> Pain: [what they currently use spreadsheets for]
5. [Task] -> Pain: [what they google repeatedly]
Best free tool candidates solve pains that are:
- Recurring (done weekly or more)
- Currently solved with manual effort or spreadsheets
- Searchable ("X calculator", "X generator", "X checker")
- Completable in one session (not ongoing SaaS)
- Adjacent to your paid product's value prop
Step 2: Match to Buildable Tools
Tool Type Matrix
| Tool Type | Best For | Search Pattern | Build Effort |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calculator | Quantifiable decisions | "[X] calculator" | Low |
| Generator | Content/creative tasks | "[X] generator" | Low-Medium |
| Checker/Auditor | Quality assessment | "[X] checker", "[X] audit" | Medium |
| Grader/Scorer | Benchmarking | "[X] grader", "[X] score" | Medium |
| Converter | Format transformations | "[X] to [Y] converter" | Low |
| Template library | Workflow shortcuts | "[X] templates" | Low |
| Comparison tool | Purchase decisions | "compare [X]" | Medium |
| Playground/Sandbox | Try-before-buy | "try [X] online" | High |
Idea Generation Framework
For each persona pain point, ask:
- Can we calculate something for them? -> Calculator
- Can we create something for them? -> Generator
- Can we evaluate something for them? -> Checker/Grader
- Can we simplify a conversion? -> Converter
- Can we give them a head start? -> Template
- Can we let them try before buying? -> Playground
Score each idea:
| Criteria | Weight | Score 1-5 |
|---|---|---|
| Search volume for "[tool] [type]" | 30% | |
| Relevance to paid product | 25% | |
| Build effort (inverse) | 20% | |
| Shareability | 15% | |
| Data capture opportunity | 10% |
Step 3: Validate Search Volume
For each tool candidate, check:
Primary keyword: "[tool name]" — Volume: [X], Difficulty: [Y]
Variations:
- "free [tool name]" — Volume: [X]
- "[tool name] online" — Volume: [X]
- "best [tool name]" — Volume: [X]
- "[specific use case] [tool type]" — Volume: [X]
Total addressable search volume: [sum]
Current top results: [list competitors and their quality]
Opportunity: [Can we build something meaningfully better?]
Kill the idea if:
- Total search volume < 1,000/month
- Top 3 results are high-authority sites with excellent tools
- Tool requires ongoing data maintenance you can't sustain
If Web Search Is Unavailable
Assess tool viability based on: (1) audience pain intensity from brand/audience.md, (2) user's direct knowledge of search intent, (3) competitive landscape from brand/competitors.md. Skip search volume validation but note: 'Tool concept is validated on strategic merit, not search data. Run keyword validation before investing in development.'
Step 4: Design Tool UX Flow
Page 1: Landing + Input
|- Headline: "[Verb] your [thing] in [time]"
|- Subheadline: "Free [tool type] — no signup required"
|- Input area: [minimal fields/inputs needed]
|- CTA: "[Action verb] — it's free"
|- Social proof: "[X] people used this tool this month"
Page 2: Results
|- Results display: [clear, visual, actionable output]
|- Shareable result: [unique URL or image for sharing]
|- Email gate (optional): "Get detailed results + recommendations"
|- Product tie-in: "Want to [do this automatically]? Try [Product]"
|- CTA: "[Start free trial]" (secondary, not aggressive)
Optional: Comparison/benchmark
|- "Your score: [X]. Average in your industry: [Y]"
|- "Top performers score [Z]. Here's how to get there."
|- Link to relevant content/product features
UX Principles for Free Tools
- No signup wall before results. Let them use the tool first. Gate the detailed report or saved results, not the core function.
- Instant results. No "we'll email you." Show results immediately.
- One input screen. If you need 10 fields, progressive disclosure or smart defaults.
- Shareable output. Unique URL, downloadable image, or embeddable widget.
- Mobile-first. Most discovery happens on phones.
Step 5: Plan SEO Strategy
On-page optimization for the tool landing page:
Title tag: "Free [Tool Name] — [Benefit] | [Brand]"
Meta description: "[Verb] your [thing] with our free [tool type]. No signup required. Used by [X]+ [personas]."
H1: "[Verb] Your [Thing] in [Time]"
URL: /tools/[tool-name]
Content sections (below the tool):
1. "How to use this [tool type]" — captures "how to" queries
2. "What is [concept]?" — captures informational queries
3. "Why [concept] matters" — builds authority
4. "[Tool type] methodology" — transparency + E-E-A-T
5. FAQ — captures long-tail questions
Internal links:
- From tool -> relevant blog posts
- From tool -> product features that automate this
- From blog posts -> tool (embed or link)
Link building angles:
- Pitch to roundup posts: "best [X] tools" articles
- Resource pages in your niche
- Social sharing of interesting results/benchmarks
Step 6: Define Conversion Hooks
The tool-to-product bridge. Never bait-and-switch — the connection must be genuine:
| Hook Type | When to Use | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Automation hook | Tool does manually what product automates | "Tired of running this manually? [Product] does it continuously." |
| Depth hook | Tool gives surface results, product goes deeper | "Want the full analysis? [Product] checks [X] more factors." |
| Save/history hook | Tool has no memory, product persists | "Save your results and track changes over time with [Product]." |
| Team hook | Tool is single-player, product is multiplayer | "Share results with your team. [Start free trial]" |
| Integration hook | Tool is standalone, product connects | "[Product] connects this to your [workflow/tools]." |
Step 7: Write Tool Landing Page Copy
# [Verb] Your [Thing] in [Time]
Free [tool type] for [audience]. No signup required.
[Tool input area]
[Primary CTA: "Analyze" / "Generate" / "Calculate"]
---
## How It Works
1. [Input step — what user provides]
2. [Process step — what the tool does]
3. [Output step — what user gets]
## Why [X,0