Getting a website listed in DMOZ - www.SEO-Trix.com
Getting a website listed in DMOZ can be very frustrating. We know that being
listed will probably help our Google rankings, but getting in can take a
very long time. In this article I will explain why it often takes so long
and why what you do when submitting your site is sometimes the cause of the
delay. But first I will explain what DMOZ is and why it is worthwhile for
websites to be listed in it.
DMOZ, also known as The Open Directory Project (ODP), is a large,
categorized directory of websites and pages, which is staffed by volunteers.
Every website and page that is added to the directory has to be manually
reviewed before it is included. Being listed in the directory is free.
Not many people actually use DMOZ for searches in the same way that Yahoo!
is used, so the directory itself is of little value in generating traffic.
However, its data can be freely downloaded, and any website, however small,
can use it. One not so small website that downloads and uses DMOZ's data is
Google. In fact, Google's directory is nothing less than the downloaded DMOZ
directory.
This has some significant effects for websites that are listed in DMOZ.
PageRank is an integral part of Google's ranking algorithm, and higher
PageRank helps towards higher rankings. The PageRank within a website is
increased by pages from other sites linking to it, and the higher the
PageRank of the pages that link to it, the better it is for the receiving
site.
A listing in DMOZ creates two significant links into a website - one from
DMOZ (Google spiders DMOZ just like any other site) and one from the Google
directory. Both of these usually have decent PageRank. Then add the links
from the thousands of small sites that have downloaded and use the DMOZ
directory, and you can see why it is usually quite beneficial for a website
to be listed in DMOZ. Simply being listed in DMOZ can take a website from a
Toolbar PageRank value of 3 to 4, and even from 4 to 5.
Why does it take so long to get listed?
At the time of writing, the front page at DMOZ states "57,251 editors"
(volunteers who review and add websites to the directory), but this is
misleading. They don't in fact have that many editors, or anywhere near that
many. That number is the total number of editors that they have had since
the project started. Most of them are no longer editors. Of the ones that
are still editors, a significant proportion of them are not actually active
or are only slightly active. So the number of editors who are actively
reviewing and adding websites is relatively small.
On the other side of the equation, there is a massive backlog of sites
waiting to be reviewed. Each editor can only edit in his or her own
categories. Some editors have small categories with very few submissions to
deal with, and they can be dealt with very quickly. Others are simply
overwhelmed by the mountain of unreviewed sites, and there is little chance
of getting through them in the near future.
But the huge backlog, and the relatively low number of active editors, are
not the only reasons why websites seem to wait forever to get listed. Many
times, the delay is the fault of the person who submitted the website.
Imagine that someone submits a site to a category that is reasonably close
to what the site is about, but the site really belongs in a different
category. What happens? The submission waits in the unreviewed queue of the
category to which it was submitted. Sooner or later its turn comes and the
editor reviews it, but finds that it belongs in a different category. That
editor can't edit the other category, so the submission is passed along to
the other category, where it is added to the unreviewed queue. It doesn't
jump the queue just because it has already waited in a different queue.
Eventually its turn will come again and it will be reviewed - again.
That's the simple course of events when a site is submitted to the wrong
category. In practise, though, it is often significantly different. When the
first editor reviews the site, often quite a long time after it was
submitted, and finds that it doesn't belong in the category, what is s/he
likely to think? "If you can't be bothered finding the right category for
it, neither can I". And so the site is often sent to a category that is
closer to where it belongs but not necessarily to the exact one. The editor
there eventually gets to it, and sends it a bit further towards the right
one - maybe to the right one this time, and maybe not - and the delays mount
up just because the person who submitted the site didn't take enough time to
make sure that it was submitted to the right category in the first place. If
the submitter can't be bothered, why should anyone else be all that
bothered?
So, when submitting a site, always take time to find the right category for
it. Don't be tempted to submit it to a category that is higher up the tree
than it belongs, because it won't be accepted there and, doing so, could
cause unnecessary, self-induced delays.
Why are some sites rejected?
DMOZ's policy is to include sites that have unique content, which means that
many sites don't qualify for inclusion. Among the sites that are likely to
be rejected are those that have too much content of an affiliate nature.
Some affiliate content is acceptable but when it occupies too much of a
site, then the site will probably be rejected.
Another reason why a site may be rejected is because of the submission. If
the Title and Description provided in the submission don't follow DMOZ's
guidelines, then some editors will think, "If you can't be bothered to spend
a little time on it, why should I bother rewriting it for you?", and reject
the site. Personally, I find it hard to believe that editors would do that,
but I've heard of it happening. So, when submitting a site, read and follow
the guidelines. The description is intended to give people an objective
statement of what can be found in the site, and not to promote it.
People are not informed that their site has been rejected, and there must be
many people out there who think their submissions are still pending when, in
fact, they've already been rejected. There's only one way to know the status
of a submission and that's to get someone on the inside to tell you.
Fortunately, there's a place where you can do that. It's the Open Directory
Public Forum, which is run by some of the editors. They are very helpful in
that they will find out the state of play for a website's submission. If
it's been rejected, they will tell you, and they will usually give you the
reason. Sometimes they will even review a long-delayed submission, but only
if the particular category has no editor or the category's editor has shown
no signs of doing any editing in quite some time.
About the DMOZ editors
As I mentioned earlier, there are not many active editors when compared to
the number shown on DMOZ's front page, but most of those that are active are
keen. They are keen to add websites that have unique content, and keen to
improve the directory; in fact, they remind me of a colony of ants busying
themselves in and around their anthill (the directory), building it up, each
tiny bit by each tiny bit. Contrary to what some people think, they do care
about the directory and about adding new sites, but they have an uphill
struggle because there aren't enough of them.