And some days, there's not much difference. I just stay away from any directory that requires any sort of payment. I don;t have the budget.
Seems to me that the thread is more about someone making a pointless post better suited to Twitter in an attempt to run up their post count.
I'd rather pay annual fee than for permanent link... why? simple... if you pay for a permanent link they can delete it anytime (or they sell directory and new owner will) whereas if you have an annual fee they will be more than happy to keep and promote your link. Just my point of view.
LOL! To the OP - thanks for sharing your thoughts for the benefit of the DP community. I am sure everyone wanted to know.
this might interest you I suspect some of the ones that you submit to as a one time payment wont be around in a year. And some of the ones that you wont submit to that charge yearly may still be around 5, maybe even 10 years from now.
That surprises you? But to make it more interesting: Whatever happens when you pay the money and you either don't get listed or it's for a category you don't want to be in? Any recourse? Do requests for fixing or resolving the issue help?
i charge a 1 time fee and i plan on my directories to be around for ever if possible.I promote just as hard with a 1 time fee as i would an annual fee
lol nice one I don't pay for directory listings either. The quality of links from directories is already very low, there isn't any point in paying for these low quality links.
I am sure that your sites will be around for a long time, but the quote above has me puzzled. How is it possible that you can promote just as hard as some body who has a yearly income over a one of income. so lets say you earn once (say$5) how can that be more powerful than investing $5 each year into promotion, simply not possible.
Its not always about whether the directory is paid or free. Its about the quality of sites it lists and the ways the owner uses to promote the directory. Its also about "value-add"; whether the directory waits for submitters to come to it or whether it also goes out looking for quality websites to improve its visitors' experience. As Matt Cutts mentioned, a quality directory will have some standards: it won't let you use just ANY anchor texts or descriptions. It will actually reject websites that don't adhere to their guidelines. The importance of a good directory will always be there, be it for SERPS, traffic, SEO or "web credibility in the long run. I have published a list of top 20 web directories (free and paid) on the internet in 2009. Have a look at it, visit the directories listed and you'll know what I'm talking about.