Why Showing Popular Tools Increases Tool Usage

Published: (March 13, 2026 at 04:09 AM EDT)
3 min read
Source: Dev.to

Source: Dev.to

The Problem: Too Many Choices

Tools websites usually have dozens — sometimes hundreds — of tools.
For a new visitor this creates a problem:

Decision fatigue.

Users start asking themselves:

  • Which tool should I use?
  • Which one is reliable?
  • Is this the right one?

When people hesitate, they often leave instead of choosing. This is where the Popular Tools section becomes powerful.

When users see a Popular Tools section, three things happen instantly.

1. It reduces decision effort

Instead of scanning the entire website, users think:
“Okay, these must be the useful ones.”
This shortcut helps users start faster.

2. It builds trust instantly

Popularity acts like social proof.
Even without reviews or ratings, users assume:
“If many people use this tool, it must work.”
That small psychological signal increases confidence.

3. It guides new users

Many visitors don’t know where to start.
Popular tools create a guided entry point.
Instead of exploring everything, they start with the tools most people use.
Once they use one tool successfully, they are much more likely to stay and explore more.

On AllInOneTools, I noticed a pattern:

  • Land on the homepage
  • Scroll quickly
  • Look for something familiar

When I added a Most Popular Tools section, engagement improved because users could instantly see:

  • Image Compressor
  • PDF Merge
  • Text Converter
  • SEO Tools

These are tools many people already recognize, so users feel safe clicking them.

Why This Section Matters for UX

The Popular Tools section acts like a shortcut. It tells users:

“If you’re not sure where to start, start here.”

This removes friction and speeds up the first interaction. The first interaction is everything. Once someone successfully uses one tool, they are far more likely to:

  • Explore more tools
  • Bookmark the website
  • Return later

The Mental Model I Follow Now

For tools websites, the homepage has a simple structure:

  1. Hero → gets attention
  2. Introduction → builds trust
  3. Categories → helps users locate tools
  4. Popular Tools → helps users start quickly

Without a Popular Tools section, users may hesitate. With it, they start faster. And starting is what turns visitors into users.

Your Turn

When you visit a tools website… what do you look at first?

  • Popular tools
  • Categories
  • Or scroll and explore

Curious how others approach this.

0 views
Back to Blog

Related posts

Read more »

Design Thinking : Define

Define Phase After understanding the user, the next step is to synthesize that knowledge into tools such as empathy maps and personas. Empathy Map An empathy m...