My company had less work last month and gave the entire dev team WFH. Most of my colleagues took it easy. I decided to build something that could earn money while I sleep.
One month later — thequickutils.com is live with 50+ free web tools, deployed on Vercel, indexed on Google, and AdSense application submitted.
Here is the full story, the tech decisions, and everything I learned.
The Idea
I have always been annoyed by tool sites. You search "age calculator", click the first result, and get hit by 6 popup ads, a cookie banner, a newsletter signup, and a page that takes 8 seconds to load.
I thought — what if someone just built clean, fast, no-nonsense tools? No popups. No signups. Just tools that work.
The business model is simple:
- Free tools attract massive search traffic
- Google AdSense on each page earns money per visitor
- More tools = more pages = more traffic = more money
The Tech Stack
I chose tools I already knew well so I could move fast:
- Next.js 16 (App Router) — file-based routing makes adding new tools trivial
- TypeScript — strict mode, catches bugs before they go live
- Tailwind CSS 4 — utility-first, no time wasted on CSS files
- Vercel — free hosting, auto-deploys on every git push
Total infrastructure cost: ₹0 per month.
The Folder Structure
Every tool follows the exact same pattern:
tools/
age-calculator/
AgeCalculator.tsx ← "use client" UI component
meta.ts ← SEO title, description, keywords
utils.ts ← pure calculation functions
app/(tools)/
age-calculator/
page.tsx ← Server component, metadata export
This pattern meant adding a new tool took 2–3 hours maximum once I had the structure figured out.
The Tools I Built (Top 10)
1. Age Calculator
The most searched calculator on Google. Calculates exact age in years, months, days — plus total weeks, total days, and a birthday countdown. Simple logic but millions of daily searches.
2. BMI Calculator
Health niche tools have the highest AdSense CPC rates. Added a visual BMI bar with colour-coded health zones and ideal weight range suggestion.
3. Unit Converter
120+ units across 14 categories — length, weight, temperature, area, volume, speed, time, pressure, energy, power, data, angle, frequency, and fuel economy. The temperature and fuel conversions needed special handling since they are not simple multiplication.
4. Word & Character Counter
Writers, students, and social media managers use this constantly. Counts words, characters, sentences, paragraphs, and reading time. Updates instantly as you type.
5. Password Generator
Simple logic — random character selection from configurable character sets. Added strength indicator and one-click copy.
6. QR Code Generator
Used the qrcode npm library. Generates downloadable QR codes for any URL or text in seconds.
7. Color Picker
HEX, RGB, and HSL conversion with a live palette generator. Designers Google this daily.
8. JSON Formatter
Paste messy JSON, get beautifully formatted output. Added minify, validate, and copy buttons. Developer tools get shared in communities — free backlinks.
9. Resume Builder
Most complex tool on the site. Multi-step form with PDF download using react-to-print. Highest CPC category in AdSense.
10. Invoice Generator
Business users = premium ad rates. PDF download with logo upload support.
The SEO Strategy
Every tool page follows the same SEO structure:
// Each page exports metadata — Next.js App Router pattern
export const metadata: Metadata = {
title: 'Age Calculator – Find Your Exact Age Free | QuickUtils',
description: 'Free online age calculator. Enter date of birth...',
alternates: { canonical: '/age-calculator' },
}
Below every tool I wrote 200–300 words of original content:
- How to use the tool
- What the tool calculates
- FAQ section (2–3 questions)
- Links to related tools
This is the content Google actually reads and ranks. Without it, your page is invisible.
I also added:
-
app/sitemap.ts— auto-generates sitemap for all tools -
app/robots.ts— tells Google which pages to crawl - Schema markup on every page —
WebApplicationtype
The Biggest Mistake I Made
I built 30 tools before writing any content below them.
Big mistake. Google needs words to understand what your page is about. A page with just a tool component and no text is almost invisible in search results.
Lesson: write the SEO content section before shipping the tool page.
What Happened After Launch
Within the first week:
- Submitted sitemap to Google Search Console
- Submitted to Bing Webmaster Tools
- Posted on Reddit r/webdev and r/InternetIsBeautiful
- Shared on LinkedIn
Within two weeks:
- 40+ pages indexed by Google
- 150–300 organic visits per day
- First Quora answers driving consistent traffic
The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Tools built | 50+ |
| Time taken | ~10 days |
| Pages indexed | 45+ |
| Daily traffic (week 3) | ~200 visits |
| AdSense status | Applied |
What I Would Do Differently
- Write content first, build tool second — SEO content takes as long as the tool itself
- Start with the highest-traffic tools — age calculator and BMI calculator rank faster than niche tools
- Submit to Search Console on Day 1 — don't wait until you have 50 tools
- Add internal links from day one — every tool page should link to 3 related tools
Key Technical Lessons
Server vs Client Components
Tool UI components need "use client" because they use useState. But the page wrapper, H1, meta description, and SEO content are Server Components — zero JavaScript sent to the browser for static content.
This keeps PageSpeed scores above 90.
TypeScript Strict Mode
Every calculation function is fully typed. Caught several edge cases at compile time that would have been silent bugs in JavaScript — for example, negative BMI values, division by zero in fuel conversion, and invalid date comparisons in the age calculator.
Pure Calculation Functions
All math logic lives in utils.ts files — no React, no side effects. This makes them easy to test and easy to reuse across multiple tool variations.
What's Next
- Apply for Google AdSense (done — waiting for approval)
- Write blog posts targeting long-tail keywords
- Add 20 more tools based on traffic data
- Launch on ProductHunt
- Optimise ad placements after approval
Final Thoughts
A slow month at work felt like a problem. It turned out to be the best opportunity I have had in years.
50 tools. One month. Zero cost to run. Potential for passive income for years.
If you are a developer with free time — build something. Not a tutorial project. Something real, something live, something that solves a problem people actually search for.
The internet rewards consistency and patience. I am two months in and just getting started.
Live site: thequickutils.com
Happy to answer any questions about the tech stack, SEO approach, or tool-building process in the comments.
If this helped you — drop a ❤️ and follow for updates as the traffic and earnings grow.



























