Getting Started

First-time visitors should be able to understand QuickLink without guessing.

This onboarding page gives new readers a clear path through the QuickLink website so they can quickly understand what the project does, which tools matter first, and where to go if they want more detail.

Start with
The homepage, tool pages, and feature explanations.
Good next step
Visit the tool that matches your immediate need.
Helpful support
Use FAQs, blog content, and contact options for extra clarity.

What new users usually ask first

Most first-time visitors want to know what QuickLink actually includes. Is it just a shortener, or does it also handle QR codes, files, blogs, and account workflows? This page answers that early confusion by presenting the website as a connected platform rather than a single isolated utility.

That framing helps readers decide where they should start without needing to inspect every route individually.

A simple path through the site

Begin with the homepage for the broad overview. Visit the tool page that matches your need, such as shortener, QR generator, QR scanner, or API access. If you want more context, open the features area or this static page library. If you need trust and policy information, the footer provides direct routes to privacy, terms, cookies, and related pages.

This kind of path reduces the “where do I click first?” problem that many feature-rich websites create.

Useful first actions

  • Try the main tool most relevant to your goal.
  • Read one or two feature pages for product context.
  • Open the FAQ or contact page if a workflow is unclear.
  • Browse this static library to understand the broader project.

Why this page improves the website

Onboarding content makes a website more approachable, especially when the product has many public surfaces. By adding a dedicated starting guide, QuickLink becomes easier to evaluate for users who want a structured introduction rather than a fast jump into a tool.

Good onboarding reduces hesitation by showing people the first useful step instead of assuming they already know the product map.