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Informative Articles

Stop Spinning Your Tires and Grow Your Business
Does operating your business these days remind you of spinning your tires? Are you generating a lot of activity but not moving forward? Believe it or not, this could be a good sign. It could mean that you are ready to move from one stage of business...

Website advice for small businesses
Why have a website for your business? Owning a website is seen as the thing to do these days. Why? "Every other small business has one" is the most common phrase I hear. There is an element of this and it's one of the main reasons people...

Let's Go Back To Photoshop's Beginning
Perhaps you may be wondering how Photoshop started? Or perhaps you do not care so long as it is there to bring life to images, photos and texts you will be fine? Whatever the reason may be, it is still better to look back in order to move...

Your Business At Stake
http://www.esvon.com/pg/consulting/c_articles/ads/ (c) by Daria Winkler We do believe in healthy sense of paranoia. Not the paranoia, which makes us feverishly try to distinguish ourselves from our competitors, but the paranoia, which...

Rethinking Linking - Link Exchange Back to Basics
In the old days of the internet, links were the primary communication path between web sites. Search engines were not as sophisticated as today, and search results rather crude. Actually, even today links are reported to be more used than search...

 
The Web's Secret Traffic Source - the Open Directory Project

The importance of having targeted traffic can't be understated, and search engines can be a great source of this traffic. The first search service covered in this series of articles is a directory known as the Open Directory Project, or ODP (http://www.dmoz.com/).

First, a little background on the Open Directory Project: The ODP is a Web directory, not a search engine, and the purpose of the ODP is to list and categorize web sites. But unlike Yahoo! or the several dozen other directories that maintain a paid staff of reviewers, "the ODP is an Open Source inspired, volunteer managed initiative." In a nutshell, this means that human volunteers review, add, and remove the listings of this directory. Potential editors can elect to review site submissions in categories related to their area of expertise or interest. In and of itself, this is a pretty remarkable method for reviewing sites, because it allows for those most knowledgeable in a given area to review sites submitted to that same area. From a Web site manager's perspective though, the Open Source nature of the search service itself is the main factor in its importance as a traffic source.

Because the ODP is an Open Source initiative, the listings and the search engine software are freely available for other portals and search sites to use. In fact, the ODP listings are used by over 200 other sites and directories, including AOL Search, AT&T WorldNet, Netscape.com, and to a certain extent, Google.com. This greatly extends the possible exposure of a Web site with a listing in the ODP, and makes it a must have listing for any site that's serious about building traffic.

About the Author
Alan is the lead developer for InfoServe Media, LLC (http://www.infoservemedia.com/), a Web development company that specializes in Web site design, hosting, domain name registration, and promotion for small businesses.