The fold was never relevant online. This is a legacy from print that was incorrectly applied to digital.
Should you put your most important content first? Of course! But you shouldn't be worried that users will not check out the stuff below the scroll line, especially if they feel that your site has the information that they need.
If anything, trying to force everything above this mythical fold makes for a WORSE user experience, as you will end up either having too much information competing against each other, or hiding it behind something like an accordion or carousel. In those cases, the information is actually less accessible than if a user has to scroll to get it.
On top of this, in today's multidevice world, WHERE IS THE FOLD?
On a desktop it is one place, but on a phone it is another. If a user browses with the window full screen it is here, and if not, it is there. Designing for content to be "above the fold" is impossible.
So ignore the fold. Structure your content properly, but don't worry if users have to scroll a bit to get to it, because they will.
Additional reading: uxmyths.com/post/654047943/myth-people-dont-scroll