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DMOZ, ODP and the Open Directory Project
The ODP, short for "The
Open Directory Project" (also known as DMOZ) uses
volunteer editors to catalog the web. Formerly known as NewHoo,
it was launched in June 1998, was acquired by Netscape
in November 1998, and the company pledged that anyone would
be able to use information from the directory through an open
license arrangement... with Netscape itself being the first
licensee.
DMOZ, Netscape and AOL
Since then, AOL
has acquired Netscape and thus now owes DMOZ. Many search
engines have devoted their directory results to DMOZ's listings.
Included in those who use the DMOZ directory for their search
results are TerraLycos,
AOL,
AltaVista,
Google,
MSN,
and Netscape.
Although the influence of the Open Directory Project is dwindling,
it's considered essential to be listed and the ODP is still
an important component in any search engine marketing strategy.
ODP data is used by hundreds of portals and sites, but only
a handful are considered to be major players. Among them,
only AOL
and Google use ODP prominently any
more. Others such as Lycos,
and even ODP's parent, Netscape, offer ODP data on
their sites, but do not use them as default.
The Bigger
Picture... Objectives of The Open Directory Project.
DMOZ Submission and the Human Editor
All sites submitted to DMOZ, are reviewed by human editors.
These editors have no control over individual category rankings,
they simply let you in or turn down your submission. No one
knows how they rank your website.
DMOZ, like Yahoo,
uses human editors, but there are a much greater number of
them, and they are all volunteers. Editing and inclusion can
take up to 8 weeks, then once your actually there, it takes
even more time for your listing to be used by other sites
partnered with the ODP.
DMOZ Submission Rejection
If you find yourself rejected by the category editor without
explanation, it could be because you’re not offering
unique enough content, or you have not submitted to the appropriate
category. DMOZ likes to have quality sites listed in their
directory, so they will not list sites that are affiliate
sites or sites that are loaded with spammy optimization techniques.
DMOZ Catagory Listings
Getting listed in DMOZ isn’t always easy. Before you
can try and submit your site, you need to find which category(s)
your site fits into. Now, don’t go rushing through the
categories available and pick anyone that sounds somewhat
relevant. If you pick a category that is not completely relevant,
you risk not being listed at all.
Often, DMOZ editors will just decline the site. The easiest
way to find the right category for you is to find your competitors
in the DMOZ directory. If you find a category that looks quite
relevant, and some of your competitors are also listed in
this category, it’s a good bet that it is a good category
for your site as well.
If the category to which you want to submit has a description,
FAQ, or guidelines section available, read them.
Make every effort to submit to the right category or sub-category,
and don’t hesitate to submit it to more than one if
appropriate, it won’t be considered spam.
If you provide more than one service (i.e. design, promotion,
hosting, and graphics), the URL submitted to the Design category
should be directed to the design services page of your site.
If your website is all-inclusive, or provides free design
with a web hosting package, you might submit to the Web Presence
Provider sub-category.
DMOZ Open Directory Project Category Tips...
Adult... Submit adult oriented sites to
the Adult Category. It’s
buried, but people who are looking for such sites will find
them.
Kids and Teens... Sites specifically for
kids should have a PICS tags and be submitted to the Kids and Teens
category. This category is not for sites about kids, but rather
for kids. If your kids’ site contains chat rooms, forums,
or other interactive features, you want to be sure that they
be moderated. There are no Shopping sites allowed in Kids
and Teens, and you’ll want to display COPPA (Children’s
Online Privacy Protection Act 1998) compliance on your site
(available at the COPPA site). How to comply with COPPA.
Other Languages... Sites in languages other
than English should be submitted to the World Category in the appropriate language subcategory.
If you have a site that is written in, say, Swedish, French,
and German, then you can submit the appropriate URLs to each
of those categories.
Local Businesses... If you want local business
exposure, submit to the appropriate Regional category. The
most appropriate category would be the lowest (deepest) in
the directory that is applicable.
A real estate agent gets one listing only, and that listing
is to be in the locality in which the office of that agent
exists. Your description, then, should include the names of
the towns or states you service.
Multi-Level Marketing... If your site is
part of a Multi-Level Marketing plan, such as Hand Technology,
Metabolife, or Mary Kay, you will want to submit to the MLM
Category.
Now, if you have a site about how to apply makeup, what is
and is not good for the skin, and how to determine if you
have a “summer” or “winter” complexion,
and that site has a link to your Mary Kay site, that would
possibly be eligible for a listing in Health
and Beauty. If you have a site that has reviews on various
cosmetics and has a link to your Mary Kay site, perhaps you
are eligible for a listing in Consumers Information: Health and Beauty.
Always remember, to be listed in DMOZ you must have lots
of quality content on your site. Make your
site useful to the user and not just for the search engines,
and don’t spam your site.
DMOZ and Deeplinking... There are many websites
out there that should be submitted to multiple categories
so long as each category submitted to is appropriate. For
instance, if your main page and most of the site are about
antique cars, then you would naturally submit the site to
Recreation: Autos: Antique.
If you have one page on the site that is about restaurants
and cafes in Albuquerque where antique auto fans and dealers
are known to hang out, you would also submit that page to
Regional: North America: United States: New Mexico: Localities:
A: Albuquerque: Business and Economy: Restaurants and Bars.
Each of the more than 35,000 volunteer editors has their
own way of looking at the guidelines. Some may be more restrictive
than others when it comes to “deeplinking” a website.
So take a good hard look at the category you want to submit
to so you get a feel for what is acceptable to the editor
of that category.
Learn if it is appropriate for you To Deeplink
or Not To Deeplink.
Submitter’s Information... Always
leave an e-mail address. Some editors notify you when your
website has been approved, if you have problems with website
functionality, or if you've been declined. Some even give
useful feedback as to why.
Always provide a name that accurately represents your website,
and don’t use characters in an attempt to push your
listing to the top of the page, it simply won’t work.
Most Commercial categories require that you use the name of
your company as a title. When in doubt, check out the other
listings in a category and follow suit.
Use the actual Title of the website, not an advertisement.
Type the URL correctly and in the proper location.
Don't try to get listed twice by submitting the base URL
http://www.nameofsite.com and the URL for the index page http://www.nameofsite.com.
You will eventually be caught and may lose both listings.
Do not use redirects or aliases that lead to the same site.
The ODP editors communicate extensively, and you’ll
get busted.
DMOZ and the Description Meta Tag... Use
the description Meta tag on your site so the editors don't
have to dig trying to figure out what you are trying to convey.
While you are not guaranteed to have the description used,
clearly those who spend time crafting descriptions that are
relevant and follow the guidelines for ODP, are more likely
to be added as written. If a DMOZ editor does like your site,
but not the description you have written for it, it is quite
likely that they will re-write your description for you.
This is why it is so important to make sure you take time
to make a relevant description, because if an editor re-writes
your description, it could turn out to be not how you want
it.
When writing your DMOZ description, keep these things in
mind...
- Do not submit a list of keywords, but include a 1-2 sentence
description that is both clear, and conveys what the site
is about.
- Don't repeat the site title in the description, and never
use superlatives.
- Phrases like 'Come on in and see our website' have no
value in a description, and editors will delete them. 'Welcome
to' and 'Kumquat's Home Page' are similarly deleted as titles.
- Most editors will not leave your pricing in the description.
That is the function of the site, not the directory.
- Don’t use all caps or exclamation points, and always
use grammatically correct, spell-checked descriptions.
- Limit your descriptions to a reasonable length. Remember
that ODP editors edit for brevity as well as clarity.
- Write descriptions in 3rd person.
- Identify clearly who and what you do. “Record store
specializing in vinyl LPs' is preferable to 'your one-stop
music site.”
- If your website is very specialized, describe how the
subject fits into a category.
- Sites should have site descriptions in the same language
used on the website.
Before you press the submit button...
- Don’t waste your time submitting a website that
is simply an affiliate banner farm.
- You have to have unique content with helpful information
or don’t bother.
- Don’t submit a website without a working URL or
one that is under construction.
- If confidential information is being requested, make
certain it is a secure site. Most editors will not approve
any site asking for confidential information without it
being encrypted.
- Using tricks that will get your website listed first
in search engines will not work here and may keep you from
being listed at all.
About
the Open Directory Project. The Definitive Catalogue of
the Web.
The official ODP Add URL link gives only limited information as to how
to submit. Click on any "Description" links from the category
you think you should be listed in. These links tell you what
does and does not belong in the category as well as what the
specific category guidelines are.
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