Directories can be quite beneficial for those trying to increase the number of backlinks. If PageRank is important, directory listings can help improve your score. Perhaps the most popular directory is DMOZ, an open directory project that employs human editors for the submission/approval procedure.
The use of human editors is founded on furthering the quality of the directory content.
Any DMOZ stories to share? Discuss at SitePoint forums offered by Pavel Nedved: "I know this is largely dependant on who the admin is for your particular category, but approximately how long is the average Submit -> Listing delay? I submitted in early June... should I check back at Christmas?" Pavel's statement was a humorous look at the wait for DMOZ acceptance. But it begs the question: How long should someone have to wait before they are approved, denied, or contacted about either?Depending on the amount of submissions a DMOZ category gets, users should expect to hear SOMETHING back from the human editors at some point. Because of the slow response times and rejections for unknown reasons, there has been an increasing amount of vocal displeasure aimed at
If editors allow personal feelings and competitiveness to affect their judgment, obviously they shouldn't be part of the approval process.
This particular discussion led to one of the more damning posts about DMOZ I've read. JakeCop has had some negative experiences with the open directory and lets his frustration out on SitePoint:
Again, this is a case of personal prejudices and overlapping business interests interfering with a simple approval process; something that doesn't have to be considered when an automated spider crawls your site. To be fair, every editor that volunteers to DMOZ isn't going to mistreat your submission, although it may be awhile before it gets approved.
At the
A thread on the
The thing I'm left wondering is if all it took was an email to get the approval going, what was going on the 3 months beforehand? Was the editor that busy? Or were they being negligent to their submission queue? Such are the risks when relying on human intervention. Chris Richardson is a search engine writer and editor for latest search news





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