Fellow directory owners, It's well known that most good directories contain editorial listings aside from paid submissions. But if someone contacts you asking if you could list a site because he doesnt have a budget for SEO or directory inclusion, would you do it for content-rich sites with a couple of adsense blocks? (Granted some do make money from AdSense) I am convinced it should depend on the site in question but in general, would you accept such request, reject it, ask for partial payment or keep it aside for future consideration? Feedbacks appreciated
Would listing it add value to your directory? If so, it might be worth considering. You could also offer a trial period if you prefer to not list it permanently. I will not consider a commercial site or one whose purpose is to generate revenue for the site owner. If they're in it for the buck then they can pay the current fee as others do.
Totally agree with you. But, should AdSense or other forms of 'ad-serving' apps or banner ads be considered "in it for the buck"?
Adsense is there to pull revenue so yes - that is a revenue generating site not an altruistic one. I do consider free submits for non-profits, charities and govt type sites which is right on the submit page. However they must be legitimate.
I personally list quality sites myself on categories. But if someone really submit an NGO/ or 80% non-commercial like www.linux.org -- I don't hesitate to list them for FREE.
I think it's a bad precedent to set. Oh just email XYZ directory, tell them you have no money and they'll list you for free. The no money excuse is the same one so many Adsense kings use to not pay for writers. Why is it your fault their site is either not making money yet or doesn't make enough? As far as whether or not a site with Adsense is commercial or altruistic, if the site is not specifically selling an e-book or other product(s), I see it as "informational" - not truly commercial, not fully altruistic. When the content is of good quality and is worth reading, I tend to treat it as non-commercial.