Open Directory Project Guide
The Open Directory Project (ODP) is perhaps the most important directory any webmaster can submit a site to these days. Even more important than Yahoo?
David Callen
Open Directory Project Guide
URL
In the URL field type the
full address of your website. This may seem obvious but always spell
check your address, this means not just the domain name part but also
the http:// and the TLD. Numerous sites have been rejected by the
ODP for not bothering to fix mistakes like using http:/// instead
of http:// and similar mistakes. This is downright unprofessional
and in my opinion editors are right to reject sites based on URL field
mistakes.
ODP title tips
During your submittal the
ODP will ask you to enter a title and description for your websites
listing, these are the most important elements of your submittal,
do them right and you could be in for some good traffic courtesy of
the Pagerank boost Google usually assigns sites listed within ODP,
however do it wrong and you could be rejected immediately.
Regarding the title you
submit ODP stats you should "Always opt for the official name
of the site". This backups another ODP quote from its official
editor guidelines page located at http://dmoz.org/guidelines/describing.html
"The title should identify the site, not describe it. It should
be both informative and concise."
Using your official business
name or website name will indeed identify the site and hence it'll
be informative and concise. Always do use your official business or
website name (often the two are the same) instead of including some
keyword filled promotional hype with a junk of alphabetically high
characters located at the start in a bid to get near the top of the
listings as if you do this the editor reviewing your submission will
reject your site.
Don't forget that the primary
benefit of a listing with the ODP is not traffic from dmoz.org itself
but from third party sites which use ODP data. One of the most prominent
sites using this data is the Google Directory and by default Google
directory displays listings arranged by Pagerank so there really isn't
much point to including characters like AAA at the beginning of your
title anyway.
Having included your official
business or website name in your title, you may be tempted to add
something like 'Welcome to', 'Homepage of', 'Website of' and other
similar phrases, however don't do this as editors are advised to remove
phrases like these so it's just a waste of time.
Nearly all titles I have
looked at in the ODP have all the first letters of all noun words
capitalized, this is obviously the way Open Directory Project editors
like it so if your title is a couple of words long I would suggest
you do this. Be careful here not to capitalize everything, but just
the beginning of noun words, don't capitalize words like 'and', 'at',
'of', 'on' and the like. This tactic will make life easier for the
reviewing editor which helps greatly towards a final acceptance of
your site. I'm about to move onto discussing the description but first
here's a page I recommend http://dmoz.org/erz/sites/title.html
it gives examples of good and bad titles and explains why they are
so.
ODP description tips
Writing a description for
your submittal to ODP is much more tricky than writing your title.
Descriptions are regularly changed by editors often with many of your
important keywords and keyphrases removed and since it's next to impossible
to have an original description changed it's vital that you write
your description correctly the first time. Correctly in this case
means that you follow the guidelines exactly but in such a way that
your important keywords and keyphrases are included by the editor.
The important thing is
to follow the guidelines that ODP themselves publish.
"Descriptions of
sites should describe the content of the site concisely and accurately.
They should not be promotional in nature. Submitting a promotional
description rather than an objective, well written description may
significantly delay your site from being listed or prevent your site
from being listed at all."
"Good descriptions
....
Are concise, informative, and objective, to let end-users know what
they will find when they visit a web site."
These two quotes taken
from http://dmoz.org/add.html and http://dmoz.org/guidelines/describing.html
respectively provide a great insight into what the ODP wants.
Based
on these guidelines your description should be clear, concise and
should accurately describe your website on an objective basis. If
you describe your site and or products as being 'the best', 'the greatest',
'the cheapest' you're not being objective at all, in fact you're being
subjective meaning that your using your opinion which is obviously
biased because you own the business/website and all the profits are
going to you. ODP editors don't want biased descriptions, they want
hard facts about the services and products your website offers so
leave all the promotional advertisement like sentences to your sales
copy as you'll stand a much better chance of getting in if you do.
Include your services and
primary functions of your products and website as your keywords but
make sure your description sounds natural, also include your state
or province your business operates from, if you are in fact a regional
specific operation. Remember that the Open Directory Project will
not search the content of your site for keywords so including them
in your description is vital. Never include pricing details in your
description, that is the function of your site not the directory.
Don't repeat your title
in the description, remember the title is for identifying a site and
the description field is for describing a site, the two are different
and shouldn't overlap. As with the title, don't include any phrases
like 'Welcome to', 'Homepage of' as these provide no benefit to end-users
who determine relevancy by looking for specific terms, not meaningless
phrases like the ones above.
Try to keep your description
brief and to the point as although ODP claims on its submission page
to allow descriptions of 25-30 words, in practice a description of
this length would nearly always get edited with many of your important
keywords omitted. Check all your grammar and spelling is right.
Email address?
The ODP submittal form
also has an optional email address field. Although optional according
to the ODP you should always, always include an email address in my
opinion anyhow. The reason for this is that even though editors are
usually really busy, many of them will contact you letting you know
your accepted. What's more useful however is the information they
could send you if your site gets rejected, this could include reasons
why your site was rejected which you could immediately act upon and
then resubmit. If you don't leave an email address an editor doesn't
even have the capability of emailing you, never mind the time.
Finally press submit and
there you have it, you have just applied to the ODP. Note and store
the date, as you may need this for reference purposes if you have
to write to an editor in the future.
Wait & if needed respond
After submitting wait a
few days and then check regularly if your site becomes listed over
the next few weeks from the ODP search box. Do this by typing in your
company or website name (the title you submitted) and viewing the
results. I suggest searching rather than browsing to your chosen category
as often editors will locate your site in a category different to
the one you asked to be listed in as this was an inappropriate category
considering your sites content, searching will enable you to determine
if your listed in the directory as a whole.
If after a month your site
is still not present in the ODP and you're sure your site meets all
the pre-requirements outlined above it's time to submit your information
again. After this resubmittal wait another month, when this time relapses
you should write to the editor of the category you are trying to submit
to, sometimes a category will have no editor in this case you should
write to the editor of your chosen categories parent category. Links
to editor profiles are found beneath a categories listings.
Write the editor an email
detailing your plight, tell him or her the date you submitted on and
also include the details of your submittal such as URL, title and
description. Ask for the reasons your site was rejected, do this in
a polite way stating that you'd like to bring your site up to standard
and then resubmit to the directory. Tell him or her you appreciate
their time and hope to hear from them soon.
You will hear from some
editors soon, but the simple fact is that many will never write back
and your aim to be listed might appear to be stuck in limbo, however
this is not the case, I would suggest you simply find the next most
appropriate category for your site and submit there. Make sure however
that this category is not edited by the same editor that edits the
category you originally submitted to as he or she will most likely
reject you again.
Multiple listings?
Multiple listings, deep-linking
whatever the editors are calling it these days doesn't matter. What
matters is that multiple listings are very valuable to webmasters.
A listing of one or more of your websites sub pages as well as your
homepage could do wonders for your Pagerank and hence your Google
ranking for your chosen keywords and keyphrases.
The important thing to
remember when applying for another listing is that the page your submitting
must be of very high quality, it must be unique and fit into your
chosen category very well. If this describes your page well then you
should try to get an additional listing for it. Keep in mind however
that the ODP will in most cases list only one page per site, so don't
hold your breath waiting for this extra listing to appear.
If you can try to submit
to a category which has a different editor than the category your
home page is listed from. Try also to find a category in which multiple
listings of sites are present, do this by searching for the titles
of sites listed within a category from the main dmoz search box, if
more than one result comes up then obviously the editor of the category
does in some cases give multiple listings. This is important an many
editors simply refuse to give additional listings straight out.
Follow the title and description
tips given above, however since you will be submitting internal pages
you do not need to use your official company or website name as the
title, this allows you to include related keywords instead. I read
elsewhere that putting the page your submitting into a different sub
directory on your server will lend more credibility to the idea that
the page contains material different than the rest of your site and
hence merits its own listing, this is an interesting approach and
I suggest you give it a try. Translating your site into a different
language will give you the opportunity to list your site in both the
English directory and the directory of the language of your translation.
If after a while you notice
that you haven't got your additional listing move on to something
else, don't resubmit or contact editors regarding a second or subsequent
listing as this may be pursued as spamming the directory.
There you have it, a complete
and very comprehensive guide to submitting to the Open Directory Project.
Hopefully you can now get your site listed and if your lucky get a
couple of sub pages listed too.
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