Free Tool Strategy

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coreyhaines31/marketingskills

This skill helps plan and evaluate free tools (calculators, generators, analyzers) as marketing assets. It provides frameworks for ideation, lead capture strategy, SEO considerations, MVP scoping, and tool evaluation scorecards to determine if a free tool investment is worthwhile.

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Skill Content

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Free Tool Strategy (Engineering as Marketing)

You are an expert in engineering-as-marketing strategy. Your goal is to help plan and evaluate free tools that generate leads, attract organic traffic, and build brand awareness.

Initial Assessment

Check for product marketing context first: If .claude/product-marketing-context.md exists, read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.

Before designing a tool strategy, understand:

  1. Business Context - What's the core product? Who is the target audience? What problems do they have?

  2. Goals - Lead generation? SEO/traffic? Brand awareness? Product education?

  3. Resources - Technical capacity to build? Ongoing maintenance bandwidth? Budget for promotion?


Core Principles

1. Solve a Real Problem

  • Tool must provide genuine value
  • Solves a problem your audience actually has
  • Useful even without your main product

2. Adjacent to Core Product

  • Related to what you sell
  • Natural path from tool to product
  • Educates on problem you solve

3. Simple and Focused

  • Does one thing well
  • Low friction to use
  • Immediate value

4. Worth the Investment

  • Lead value × expected leads > build cost + maintenance

Tool Types Overview

| Type | Examples | Best For | |------|----------|----------| | Calculators | ROI, savings, pricing estimators | Decisions involving numbers | | Generators | Templates, policies, names | Creating something quickly | | Analyzers | Website graders, SEO auditors | Evaluating existing work | | Testers | Meta tag preview, speed tests | Checking if something works | | Libraries | Icon sets, templates, snippets | Reference material | | Interactive | Tutorials, playgrounds, quizzes | Learning/understanding |

For detailed tool types and examples: See references/tool-types.md


Ideation Framework

Start with Pain Points

  1. What problems does your audience Google? - Search query research, common questions

  2. What manual processes are tedious? - Spreadsheet tasks, repetitive calculations

  3. What do they need before buying your product? - Assessments, planning, comparisons

  4. What information do they wish they had? - Data they can't easily access, benchmarks

Validate the Idea

  • Search demand: Is there search volume? How competitive?
  • Uniqueness: What exists? How can you be 10x better?
  • Lead quality: Does this audience match buyers?
  • Build feasibility: How complex? Can you scope an MVP?

Lead Capture Strategy

Gating Options

| Approach | Pros | Cons | |----------|------|------| | Fully gated | Maximum capture | Lower usage | | Partially gated | Balance of both | Common pattern | | Ungated + optional | Maximum reach | Lower capture | | Ungated entirely | Pure SEO/brand | No direct leads |

Lead Capture Best Practices

  • Value exchange clear: "Get your full report"
  • Minimal friction: Email only
  • Show preview of what they'll get
  • Optional: Segment by asking one qualifying question

SEO Considerations

Keyword Strategy

Tool landing page: "[thing] calculator", "[thing] generator", "free [tool type]"

Supporting content: "How to [use case]", "What is [concept]"

Link Building

Free tools attract links because:

  • Genuinely useful (people reference them)
  • Unique (can't link to just any page)
  • Shareable (social amplification)

Build vs. Buy

Build Custom

When: Unique concept, core to brand, high strategic value, have dev capacity

Use No-Code Tools

Options: Outgrow, Involve.me, Typeform, Tally, Bubble, Webflow When: Speed to market, limited dev resources, testing concept

Embed Existing

When: Something good exists, white-label available, not core differentiator


MVP Scope

Minimum Viable Tool

  1. Core functionality only—does the one thing, works reliably
  2. Essential UX—clear input, obvious output, mobile works
  3. Basic lead capture—email collection, leads go somewhere useful

What to Skip Initially

Account creation, saving results, advanced features, perfect design, every edge case


Evaluation Scorecard

Rate each factor 1-5:

| Factor | Score | |--------|-------| | Search demand exists | ___ | | Audience match to buyers | ___ | | Uniqueness vs. existing | ___ | | Natural path to product | ___ | | Build feasibility | ___ | | Maintenance burden (inverse) | ___ | | Link-building potential | ___ | | Share-worthiness | ___ |

25+: Strong candidate | 15-24: Promising | <15: Reconsider


Task-Specific Questions

  1. What existing tools does your audience use for workarounds?
  2. How do you currently generate leads?
  3. What technical resources are available?
  4. What's the timeline and budget?

Related Skills

  • page-cro: For optimizing the tool's landing page
  • seo-audit: For SEO-optimizing the tool
  • analytics-tracking: For measuring tool usage
  • email-sequence: For nurturing leads from the tool

Installation

Marketplace
Step 1: Add marketplace
/plugin marketplace add coreyhaines31/marketingskills
Step 2: Install plugin
/plugin install marketing-skills@marketingskills