Registering With Directories
Register
your site with the major directories and second-tier general directories. Try
to register with about a half-dozen to a dozen of the better general
directories if you are targeting Google. If you are targeting the other engines
first and can wait on Google, you may want to register with about twenty to
fifty general directories.
Register
with at least a couple local or niche-specific directories. Niche-specific
directories are findable via search engines and some are listed at http://www.isedb.com, but you should check to ensure
they provide static links before spending money registering your
sites, although directories that rank well may deliver quality traffic even if
they do not provide direct links.
Search
for things like “<my keywords> + <add URL>” to find other niche
directories.
Oftentimes
I do not mind spending hundreds of dollars getting links from different sites
(or directories) across many different IP ranges. Many of the second-tier
directories charge a one-time fee for listing, and some of them allow you to
add your sites free if you become an editor.
In
my directory of directories, I have 50-100 general directories listed in the
general directory categories. Most top ranking sites in mildly competitive fields
do not have text links from fifty different sites pointing to them, so if you
can afford it,
doing
this offers a huge advantage to you for your Yahoo! and MSN rankings, but you
need to choose directories carefully when considering how TrustRank (explained
in the Google section of this e-book) may effect Google.
If
you are in more competitive fields and rent some powerful links, these listings
in various directories can help stabilize your rankings when search engine
algorithms shift.
Some directories
I highly recommend are Yahoo!, DMOZ, Business.com, JoeAnt, Best of the Web, and
Gimpsy.
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