| Last Updated: 8 October 1996
The purpose of this FAQ is to help show you how to publicize
your new Web site. Although there are many sites listed here, the purpose
is not to show you where. If you follow the hints and guidelines
below you will certainly increase you readership.
If you have comments, additions, suggestions, subtractions, please mailto
faq@epage.com
The authors of this FAQ will provide every effort to verify the accuracy
of this document. No guarantee is made that any of the sites listed below
will list your new Web site, even if you follow every instruction exactly.
This is an html version of the FAQ posted regularly to the newsgroup
comp.infosystems.www.announce. All html links are spelled out so you can
easily print this document.
Table of Contents
- What's New Web Pages
- Web Directory Pages
- Web Search Engines
- Newsgroups
- Newsletters & Mailing Lists
- Books that have Web sites listed
- Magazines that have Web sites listed
- Miscellaneous, List of Lists
- What's New Web Pages. A "What's New" page lists
sites that have only recently come online. This used to be the only
way to advertise your new Web site, and it is still quite popular. Check
out the following locations:
- Netscape
What's New. Netscape has a what's new page but only publishes
sites that are "unique" or that represent a good example of Web
Page. [http://www.netscape.com/home/whats-new.html]
- Open Market. This
site provides a daily listing of new commercial sites on the Web.
They turn around their new submissions in about a day. [http://www.directory.net/]
- EPage Classifieds. Under the
category "announcements", there is a "web announcement" listing
where you can take out a classified advertisement for free. They
can also create a FREE classified service for your
site. [http://epage.com/]
- Web Directories. Web Directories are indexes
to various places on the Web, listed alphabetically, by region, or by
subject. The most effective sites list by subject or category. Since
you want the most people to see your site listing it is very important
to carefully choose the category for your site. We strongly recommend
that you be totally familiar with each directory service and how it
works before you submit your site. This will help you choose the best
category for your site, and might mean the difference between 10 hits/day
and a 100 hits/day.
- Yahoo. A very popular
site, this is a must location for listing your new Web page. Yahoo
will place your site in their directory as well as on their "What's
New" page. Suggestion: have your link start with a letter low in
the alphabet. [http://www.yahoo.com/]
- Infoseek. Infoseek,
similar to Yahoo, contains listings of sites by categories. A good
place to have your site listed.
- Internet Mall.
If you sell a service or product over the Internet, they will list
your site for free. [http://www.mecklerweb.com/imall/]
- Galaxy.
A must for any Web site. As with Yahoo, choose your category carefully.
[http://galaxy.einet.net/galaxy.html]
- W3.
A very comprehensive "by subject" directory of many Web sites. [http://www.w3.org/hypertext/DataSources/bySubject/Overview.html]
- Starting Point. A great
place to have your site listed. [http://www.stpt.com/]
- TheYellowpages.
You can submit your site only by E-Mail to
admin@theyellowpages.com Include category, URL, and a 2-4 sentence
description. [http://theyellowpages.com/]
- The Virtual Tourist.
This site lists what is on the Web by subject or region (graphical).
[http://www.virtualtourist.com/]
- ISP Internet YellowPages
[http://www.index.org]
- WWLib A comprehensive
catalogue of WWW pages at sites in the United Kingdom [http://www.scit.wlv.ac.uk/wwlib]
- Web411
A combination listing and search engine.
- Web Search Engines. Web search engines are
quickly becomming the most popular way to find sites on the Web. Users
type in what they are looking for, and the search engine lists all the
sites that it thinks you might be interested in. If a user types "used
Mustangs for sale" they might get 100 possible places to look!
There are two important techniques to incorporate on your page before
you list your site. First, make sure the "Title" of your html document
is descriptive. It should stand on its own. Example, instead of "Pete's
Page" use "Pete's Mustang's for Sale".
The second trick is to think of the keywords you want people to
type to find your site, and make sure that they are included near
the top of your Web page (easier said than done). If you want people
to find you if they type "used Mustang's for sale" you should make
sure some or all of these words appear on your page (near the top
but not necessarily in any order).
- Lycos. Lycos get's
its listings by automatically searching the Web. The entire Web.
Do nothing and it may find you anyway! But you can "ask" the Lycos
program to search/list your site ASAP. Lycos has 11,000,000 listings,
so ASAP may be 3 weeks... [http://www.lycos.com/]
- Alta Vista.Up
to 21,000,000 sites indexed, Alta Vista is another "must" for your
site. They used to be accessible internal to DEC only, but since
they have allowed public access their popularity is increasing quickly.
If you go to this site, there is a link to "add" your url. Pay close
attention to the instructions: you only need to add your "top" page
and Alta Vista will find the rest! [http://www.altavista.digital.com/]
- WebCrawler. A robot
search of the Web. [http://webcrawler.com/]
- Newsgroups
- comp.infosystems.www.announce
A moderated Newsgroup. The place in the Usenet Community
to announce your new Web site. A must. Please read the charter
completely before posting (It will save you time) [http://boutell.com/%7Egrant/charter.html]
- Newsletters
- Net-Happenings.
This is a newsletter sent out to a mailing list, also archived on
the Web. You can announce anything about the net here; all postings
are moderated. To subscribe, E-Mail to
majordomo@is.internic.net, with the phrase "subscribe net-happenings"
in the body. [http://www.mid.net:80/NET/]
- Net Surfer
Digest. Promises an overview of new and interesting Web
sites. [http://www.netsurf.com/nsd/index.html]
- Scout
Report. Mailed to about 20,000 people weekly, with an additional
Web site, the Scout Report welcomes suggestions for their newsletter.
E-Mail to scout@internic.net
[http://rs.internic.net/scout_report-index.html]
- New Product News.
Daily newswire on AOL and Delphi that can include Web Site Announcements.
Write to Robert Baker for details and guidelines for submission.
[rbakerpc@delphi.com]
- Books that have Web sites listed
- Magazines that have Web sites listed
- Netguide by CMP Publications. Bills itself as "The guide
to online services on the Internet". Write to the Webmaster at rsantale@pipeline.com
[http://techweb/cmp.com/ng]
- Internet User by L'Agora Srl. A bimonthly
magazine published in Italy and dedicated to the Internet and the
World Wide Web. [vertigo@well.com]
- Miscellaneous, List of Lists
- Banister's Submit-It.
One Stop Shopping to submit your site to MANY places on the Web.
Excellent time saver; however you can't tailor your listing for
each site. Great for those that want a lot to happen fast. [http://www.submit-it.com]
- Qwik Launch. Similar
to Submit It, this site is a good quick way to get listed (or at
least see where you can be listed)
- Add It.
Another site that will list your site for you on many other sites.
- Nexor
List of Web Robots. An up to date list of all the Web Robots
out there. [http://web.nexor.co.uk/mak/doc/robots/active.html]
- A1 Index of over
650 Free WWW URL Submission & Search Sites Here is a list
of Web sites that will take your announcement. Very comprehensive
list, no descriptions (so you have to search aroundto see what is
appropriate). Great for ideas. [http://www.vir.com/~wyatt/index.html]
- onLine Business
Over 650 sites to promote your Web site for free. [http://online-biz.com/links/freelnks.htm]
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