ToolGuyd

Tool Reviews, New Tool Previews, Best Tool Guides, Tool Deals, and More!

  • New Tools
  • Reviews
  • Guides
    • Best Cordless Power Tool Brand
    • Tool Brands: Who Owns What?
    • Best Cordless Drills (2021)
    • Dewalt UWO Explained
    • Where to Buy Tools
    • Best Tool Kit Upgrades
    • Best Extension Cord Size
    • Best Tape Measure
    • Best Safety Gear
    • Best Precision Screwdrivers
    • Best Tool Brands in Every Category
    • Ultimate Tool Gift Guide
    • More Buying Guides
  • Hand Tools
    • Bit Holders & Drivers
    • EDC, Pocket, & Multitools
    • Electrical Tools
    • Flashlights & Worklights
    • Knives
    • Mechanics’ Tools
    • Pliers
    • Screwdrivers
    • Sockets & Drive Tools
    • Wrenches
    • All Hand Tools
  • Power Tools
    • Accessories
    • Cordless
    • Drills & Drivers
    • Oscillating Tools
    • Saws
    • Woodworking Tools
    • All Power Tools
  • Brands
    • Bosch
    • Dewalt
    • Makita
    • Milwaukee
    • Ryobi
    • All Brands
  • USA-Made
  • Deals
ToolGuyd > Announcements & Updates > Let’s Talk About Recent ToolGuyd Posts

Let’s Talk About Recent ToolGuyd Posts

Oct 26, 2025 Stuart 18 Comments

If you buy something through our links, ToolGuyd might earn an affiliate commission.
ToolGuyd Button Logo 2021 300px

A reader noticed some changes to ToolGuyd content, let’s talk about it.

Weekends?

I typically put work in on the weekends anyway, and switch to a 7-day posting schedule over the holiday season. This year a lot of regulars are checking in on weekends, so why wait until Monday?

Post Count?

Post count also tends to go up over the holiday season. By this much? Not usually in October. I’ve been avoiding a backlog, and there are other reasons, discussed below.

Advertisement

Post Titles?

I’m testing more pragmatic titles after observing industry trends, and it’s more of an experiment.

A reader purchased a 4-pack of penlight flashlights for $9. That’s super cheap. Are they any good? I’m not buying any tools right now, at least nothing that isn’t a high priority, until I can clear my backlog.

So the title becomes “Are these Ultra-Cheap Pocket Flashlights any Good?” It’s a genuine question I’m asking, and I don’t have to think too hard about it. I can always update titles later.

The main thought, question, or feature could go into the title. That way there’s no confusion about the point, and regulars know what they’re getting into before they click.

Search and news feed engines today tend to value “news,” timeliness, and freshness.

This is one of ToolGuyd’s highest performing posts of all time: A Completely Unexpected Ryobi Tool Deal at Home Depot. That post had 100X the pageviews of a typical medium-interest post.

Advertisement

A lot of websites have moved to super-shady title tactics. Let’s say a mechanics tool price was discounted from $49 to $45. One group of sites will say stores are “selling it for pennies.”

Buy something get something for free cordless power tool promos? “Home Depot is giving away free tools, claim one now.”

With tool discovery posts, I’m experimenting with being more conversational without being clickbaity.

Have I seen a change in attention from regular readers, good or bad? Not that I can discern, so there’s no apparent gain or detriment there. So the experiment is more to see if that pulls in more new visitors.

If I order one for review later, the title can be more searchable, such as “[Brand] [Type of Tool] Review.”

There’s More

I’m experimenting with a more agile posting structure.

Laser Finger Ratchet Tool Set

This is a unique finger ratchet set that’s available on Amazon. There was another listing, but it’s not available right now. It looks to be made by Infar, a hand tool company based in Taiwan.

I’ve never seen palm/finger ratchets like that before. It’s available in 10mm and 13mm sizes, and square drive adapters let you turn them into palm ratchets that can work with other socket sizes.

Seems pretty interesting if you ask me. So why haven’t I posted about it yet? Time. Priorities.

At one point I moved to a “just one post per tool or topic if possible” approach. Now, it seems more beneficial to not worry about that.

Last week I discovered an interesting Halloween-themed folding knife. Was it post-worthy? I was interested enough to read up on it, so yes – I proceeded with a quick post.

When researching that post I came across another of a very different style. I ordinarily would have added it to my queue, for posting another time. When? So I proceeded with a quick post rather than risk rediscovering it 4 months from now.

Greater agility, fewer obstacles – that’s the goal.

What About Recent Tool News Posts?

A tool brand sponsored and prioritized influencers and provided a dearth of media resources. We’ve had 2 years of conversations about this. It was still appreciated.

So, I published posts using whatever images, information, and details were made available.

Why not just one post? Smaller product-specific posts are easier to work on one at a time, and provide ToolGuyd with greater benefits.

And if they provided nothing as they did last time? I would have posted using whatever I could scrape together from public sources – as I had did last time. Last time, they came to me afterwards with updated images and information, and it wasted so much of my time rewriting posts.

Would you rather learn about a product today in any capacity, or wait 6 months? Something is better than nothing, and allows me to keep moving forward.

This Time of Year

Q4 is always a good time for experimentation, as I tend to do is keep a closer eye on post performance and indicators of reader and visitor interest. I typically try out new post formats.

What works or doesn’t work carries over into the new year. Or doesn’t.

This year, there’s just a lot going on at once. Plus, keep in mind what I said in this post: Cool Tools, Deals, and Gift Ideas . Some readers always say that a lot of the holiday deals don’t interest them. So, I’m working on some posts about tools that I think will, and the results will help determine what I prioritize in November and December.

Once I pick up the pace for the holiday season, it gets really hard to slow down until the first or second week of December. ToolGuyd has been like that for as long as I can remember.

Related posts:

ToolGuyd Button Logo 2021 300pxLet’s Talk About Reader Comments (8/31/22) ToolGuyd Logo Question Mark 300pxMid-November 2022 Deals Coverage Feedback? RSS Icon with BordersRSS Subscription Glitch

Sections: Announcements & Updates

« These USA-Made Mini Cutters are a DIY Must-Have
New Hoto PixelDrive Cordless Screwdriver – Price Update »

18 Comments

  1. bob

    5 hours ago

    keep up the good work!

    Reply
  2. Rob H

    5 hours ago

    Thank you for the effort you put into this site. It’s a daily stop-in for me.

    Reply
  3. Cory

    5 hours ago

    This flashlight post also helps explain the Hilti Posts. You type up what you know, and then go back and update it later. Of course, the old hey Hilti, I did a post on all your new tools… well what you shared. And If I can paraphrase Rod Tidwell from the movie Jerry Maguire, “Show me the details.”

    Enjoy all the posts… and all you commenters. A few commenters have moved me from pass to sold.

    Reply
    • Stuart

      4 hours ago

      Hilti makes some good tools, and my primary USA contact is fantastic. I wish they were able to explain why the new flash battery charges faster, how they achieve unquantified power gains in the new higher capacity batteries, and other things in a timely manner.

      My options were to i) complete exclude them, ii) nag for more details and answers, which might take months to trickle in and consume an exhaustive amount of everyone’s time, or iii) make do with what they were willing to provide.

      I prefer comprehensive reporting, but can work with little and even no support.

      Reply
  4. fred

    5 hours ago

    What you say makes sense. I spend most of my tool-buying dollars on gifts. I’ve become the “dad-grandfather-uncle- great uncle” that you get tools from at Christmas. If others are like me – it makes sense that they are paying more attention to finding new stuff and sales in Q4. So. Q4 is logically a time of opportunity for TG.

    BTW – those thumbwheel ratchets do seem a bit unique. But I’m noting a trend for what some (like Vim) are calling dual-drive sockets – or others (like Astro Pneumatic) calling nano sockets – that have both external and internal drives.

    Reply
    • ToolGuyDan

      3 hours ago

      Not sure if I missed it, but where’s the signup page to be part of your extended family, Fred? 🤣

      You have some lucky people in your life. I hope they recognize your effort, and don’t just dismiss you as the “uncle who gave us bit-ratchets when we asked for an espresso machine”. It’s the one downside of being an aficionado of something broadly useful: it’s hard to spot the line between “here’s [an upgraded version of] something they wanted” vs. “here’s an obscure specialty tool”.

      Reply
      • Stuart

        3 hours ago

        Speaking for myself, at some point I recognize what someone could use or might like. What would they buy with a gift card vs. what might they buy with cash? Combine that with strong familiarity of the product category, and gifting gets a little easier. Asking also helps. Sometimes random is good too.

        Reply
        • fred

          1 hour ago

          I like to buy gifts that the recipients may have expressed interest in (or not) – will make their jobs or life easier and are perhaps too pricey for them to purchase themselves. My descendants will soon enough get my money – but while I live, I’d like to think that they find use of and enjoy my gifts. For my children – at their stage of life – I’ve found that giving experiences (concerts, theater tickets, tours etc.) is now of more value to them than material goods. For the next generation down – earning a living in trades or pursuing hobbies – tools often make sense.

          Reply
      • S

        43 minutes ago

        I had this last year, where I gifted the men in my family all a Rovyvon A3 flashlight. I’m the families lighting addict, so as expected, it was a typical lukewarm reception.

        Most of them have now approached me during events later on in the year to tell me how great/amazing/handy it unexpectedly is.

        And that really is the point in some of this. To find a device/tool that the people we’re buying them for really need it, but don’t know they need it.

        Reply
  5. zchris87v

    5 hours ago

    In the era of “we asked 5 mechanics what their favorite tool was, and they all agreed” articles (funny how not one single person ever disagrees), it’s refreshing to see honest titles. I don’t even bother finding these posts in the following/feed of my browser, I just keep this page’s tab open and refresh it.

    Reply
  6. Matt_T

    4 hours ago

    “Would you rather learn about a product today in any capacity, or wait 6 months?”

    For news publish with what have when the story breaks.

    “Last time, they came to me afterwards with updated images and information, and it wasted so much of my time rewriting posts.”

    Set a hard cut-off for updating news articles. I’m thinking a few hours at most. Nobody expects news articles to be updated beyond then and I doubt many go back to re-read them. You could also look at your post article update page views, and maybe affiliate revenue if it’s page specific, to see if the extra effort was worth it.

    Reply
    • Joseph

      3 hours ago

      It’s fascinating to understand the determining factors for your articles and how you prioritize them. Thank you for both the transparency and effort you put into all of this.

      Reply
      • Stuart

        2 hours ago

        The reason I’ve been stomping my feet about influencer marketing is because I don’t want “what do I get out of it?” to be a determining factor. That would mark a strategy shift I don’t want to have to make.

        Content strategy is far more complex than I let on. But sometimes it’s simple.

        Consider this post – https://toolguyd.com/epic-milwaukee-packout-workshop/

        Where did that come from? Why did I post about when I did?

        https://toolguyd.com/dewalt-multi-charger-dcb1404-power-controller-dcbpc1615/#comment-1631193

        A reader commented about paying high prices for multi-chargers at home. I thought “the example might be a home garage setup, but looks can be deceiving.” And that prompted me to write about the cargo box workshop.

        The post doesn’t have any product links. It might not have positive impact to my bottom line. But it’s interesting, or at least I thought so.

        Reply
  7. Greg H

    3 hours ago

    I hate to say it but I’m not sure you can avoid titles sounding click-baity. While your logic is sound about a title like “is this flashlight any good,” there are far too many sites that do use it as clickbait. But in most cases, I’ll see what the site is first before judging too hard, and I’ll often read your articles regardless of how the title is phrased if it’s something I think I’ll be interested in.

    I certainly appreciate your honesty about things; you don’t see that much. I do appreciate your approach to things and tend to read your posts ahead of other tool posts that appear in my news feed

    Reply
    • Stuart

      2 hours ago

      Clickbait vs conversational pragmatism, for lack of a better way of putting it (could be technically inaccurate) is like the difference between a gimmick and an innovation. Is it practical, or deceptively useless?

      I don’t want to waste a reader’s time. If you’re on the front page, you get an image connected to the topic, and a title, with neither decided upon haphazardly. You should know what the post is about before you click, and you should know what you’re in for within seconds of reading the first paragraphs.

      If the title is terrible, regular readers will usually let me know.

      Reply
  8. Roger

    1 hour ago

    I too check in at least twice a day Love the new content and constant updates. I read every new post whether it’s something I’m interested in or not. I always learn something.
    Thank you for what you do.

    Reply
    • S

      41 minutes ago

      I do as well, in many cases because other products related to the original post are buried within that better relate to my needs

      Reply
  9. Eric Glass

    30 minutes ago

    Ever since I was late on the deep Lowe’s discounts of the Craftsman V series tools last year, I’ve been a frequent visitor here. No complaints about the post frequency!

    Reply

Leave a Reply to bob Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Newsletter

Sign up to receive the latest tool news.

Recent Comments

  • Jim Felt on New Hoto PixelDrive Cordless Screwdriver – Price Update: “Pardon my ignorance but if this particular tool itself is so nicely outfitted why doesn’t it show a useful bit…”
  • S on These Lead-Catching Cutting Pliers Work Differently: “Many of the Japanese tool brands are as unique as the culture. It’s quite common for their brands to specialize…”
  • Eric Glass on Let’s Talk About Recent ToolGuyd Posts: “Ever since I was late on the deep Lowe’s discounts of the Craftsman V series tools last year, I’ve been…”
  • Matt Perry on These USA-Made Mini Cutters are a DIY Must-Have: “The Harbor Freight version is $5 and works great. I have lots of sets laying around at work, the garage,…”
  • S on Let’s Talk About Recent ToolGuyd Posts: “I do as well, in many cases because other products related to the original post are buried within that better…”
  • S on Let’s Talk About Recent ToolGuyd Posts: “I had this last year, where I gifted the men in my family all a Rovyvon A3 flashlight. I’m the…”
ToolGuyd New Tool Reviews Image

New Tool Reviews

Buying Guides

  • Best Cordless Drills
  • Best Euro Hand Tool Brands
  • Best Tool Brands
  • Best Cordless Power Tool Brands
  • Tools for New Parents
  • Ultimate Tool Gift & Upgrade Guide
ToolGuyd Knife Reviews Image

Knife Reviews

ToolGuyd Multi-Tool Reviews Image

Multi-Tool Reviews

ToolGuyd LED Flashlight and Worklight Reviews Image

LED Light Reviews

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Stores
  • Videos
  • AMZN Deal Finder
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Disclosure