One SEO campaign I worked on was for my own project, 99tools.net, a free online utilities website that now hosts 800+ tools (developer tools, text tools, calculators, converters, and image utilities).
Objective
My goal wasn’t just more traffic — it was high-intent traffic. I wanted users who were actively searching to complete a task, such as a JSON formatter, word counter, percentage calculator, or base64 encoder.
Utility websites are very different from blogs. A reader can skim an article, but a tool has only a few seconds to prove useful. If users can’t immediately use the feature, they leave. So my real KPI was task completion and consistent search traffic, not pageviews.
At launch the site had no authority, no backlinks, and no brand searches, and most competitors were large tool directories.
Strategy
I approached SEO as a product experience rather than a content project.
Each tool page targeted a specific query (for example, “JSON formatter online”). The tool appears instantly at the top of the page so users can use it without scrolling. I added short explanations and FAQs only to help relevance — not to slow users down.
Instead of publishing long blog posts, I created individual landing pages for each tool so every page could rank independently. I also prioritized technical SEO: clean HTML, minimal scripts, fast load times, and internal linking between related tools.
Results (first 6 months)
1,800+ monthly organic users
Traffic from the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.
Strong rankings on Bing and DuckDuckGo
Multiple tools ranking without relying on the homepage
We also started seeing repeat users and branded searches.
Key Factor Behind Success
The biggest factor was search intent + user experience. I upgraded the hosting to a higher-performance plan, which improved speed and engagement. I redesigned pages so the tool is visible immediately and simple to use, and I built a small number of quality backlinks from authority sites.
Rankings improved not because the content was longer, but because the page solved the user’s problem quickly. Treating SEO as usability — not just optimization — made the campaign successful.



