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Bhavin Sheth
Bhavin Sheth

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The section that actually makes users use your website (not the hero)

When I first launched AllInOneTools, I believed something simple:

If the hero section is good, users will use the website.

I was wrong.

The hero gets attention.

But attention is not usage.

Usage starts somewhere else.

It starts in the tools categories section.

This is the section where users make their first real decision:

Stay and use the tool…

or leave forever.

This realization completely changed how I design homepages.


What users actually do after landing on your homepage

Most builders imagine this flow:

User lands → reads hero → reads introduction → understands platform → explores tools

But real users don’t behave like this.

They scan.

They scroll.

And then they search visually for one thing:

Where is my tool?

They don’t want explanation.

They want location.

They want confirmation.

They want action.

And the categories section is where that happens.


The moment I realized this (watching real behavior)

When I shared AllInOneTools with early users, I observed something interesting.

Almost nobody read the introduction fully.

They scrolled past it.

And stopped at the tools categories.

They weren’t curious.

They were task-focused.

They were looking for:

Image tools
PDF tools
SEO tools
Converters

Not brand story.

Not positioning.

Just tools.

This is when I understood:

Categories are not a design section.

They are the action section.


The real job of the tools categories section

This section has one job:

Help users find their tool instantly.

Not impress them.

Not explain everything.

Just help them locate their task.

If users can find their tool in seconds, they stay.

If they can’t, they leave.

Even if your tools are great.


How I structured the AllInOneTools categories

Currently, AllInOneTools has 12 main categories:


1. Calculators Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Financial Calculators
  • Academic & Marks Calculators
  • Personal & Health Calculators
  • Other Utilities

These tools solve quick daily problems.

Users recognize them instantly.


2. Conversion Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • File Converters
  • Text Converters
  • Unit Converters
  • Other Converters

Conversion tools are high-intent tools.

Users come with specific tasks.

Clarity is critical.


3. Construction Cost Estimation Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Residential Calculators
  • Commercial Calculators
  • Material Calculators
  • Labor Calculators
  • Other Calculators

These serve specific professional users.

Clear labeling helps the right audience find them.


4. Content Writing & SEO Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • SEO & Optimization
  • Writing & Editing
  • Social Content Tools
  • Development & Formatting

This category attracts creators and bloggers.

One of the most valuable user groups.


5. Image Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Convert & Compress
  • Resize & Crop
  • Transform & Adjust
  • Enhance & Effects
  • Edit & Annotate
  • Other Utilities

Very high demand category.

Users scan for this quickly.


6. PDF Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Convert PDF
  • Organize PDF
  • Compress & Optimize
  • Edit & Customize
  • Secure PDF
  • Advanced Tools

PDF tools are one of the most searched categories online.

Clear access improves engagement.


7. Text & Language Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Text Conversion & Formatting
  • Voice & Speech
  • Language & Code
  • Text Cleaning & Correction
  • Typing & Testing
  • Content & Creativity

Useful for writers and students.


8. Security & Privacy Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Password Tools
  • Email & Identity Protection
  • Notes & Messaging Security
  • Website & Network Security
  • Cyber Threat & Privacy Checkers
  • Encryption & Hashing Tools
  • Policy & Legal Pages Generator
  • Miscellaneous Tools

Trust is critical here.

Clear labeling builds confidence.


9. Invoice & Billing Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Document Generators
  • Delivery & Stock
  • Financial Documents

These attract freelancers and businesses.


10. Web & Tech Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • SEO
  • Security
  • Generators
  • Testing
  • Finder
  • Analytics
  • Content
  • Development
  • Website Analyzer
  • SEO Analyzer

Important for developers.


11. Social Media Tools

Sub-categories include:

  • Content Creation
  • Bio & Profile
  • Design & Visual
  • Trend & Hashtag
  • Wishing Tools

High engagement category.


12. Games

Sub-categories include:

  • Puzzle Games
  • Board & Classic Games
  • Action or Arcade Games
  • Strategy Games
  • Luck & Guessing These increase session time and engagement.

The most important lesson I learned

Category names must be obvious.

Not creative.

Not clever.

Clear.

Users should recognize their category instantly.

If they need to think, you lose them.

Clarity beats creativity.

Every time.


Showing tools inside categories changed everything

Initially, I only showed category names.

But users hesitated.

They weren’t sure what was inside.

After adding visible tools inside each category, engagement improved.

Because users could immediately confirm:

Yes, my tool is here.

Confidence increases usage.


Why this section matters for SEO

This section doesn’t just help users.

It helps search engines.

Search engines use this section to understand:

Your site structure
Your topical coverage
Your internal linking

This improves:

Indexing
Ranking
Discoverability

Categories help search engines trust your website.


The hidden psychological effect of categories

Categories reduce uncertainty.

Uncertainty creates hesitation.

Hesitation creates exits.

Categories create clarity.

Clarity creates action.

Action creates retention.

This section quietly controls everything.


The homepage mental model I follow now

Hero → Gets attention
Introduction → Builds trust
Categories → Creates usage

Without categories, your homepage is just a promise.

Categories turn promise into action.


If you build tools, SaaS, or any product — this matters

Your categories section is not secondary.

It is the bridge between interest and usage.

This is where users decide:

Is this useful for me…

or not?


My biggest mistake

I optimized the hero first.

But I should have optimized categories first.

Because tools are the product.

And categories are the entry points.


Your turn

How do you design your categories section?

Do you focus on:

Design
Structure
Or clarity?

Curious to hear how others approach this.

Top comments (1)

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bhavin-allinonetools profile image
Bhavin Sheth

For me, categories became the most important section of AllInOneTools.

Because this is where users stop exploring…

and start using.

When users can find their tool in seconds, everything changes.

Hero creates interest.

Categories create usage.