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How many of you are as frustrated as
I am with attempting to get listed in the Open Project Directory (OPD)? You submit and wait…and wait. But nothing happens. You try to find out
if there is any problem, but your communications (if you can find a way
to submit an inquiry) are never answered. Operating this way, the OPD
would be out of business if it were a real company. In fact, the OPD
would already be irrelevant if it weren't for the fact that Google and
others draw upon its entries for their directories.
The OPD may have started out as a
good idea, but it is floundering and hurting the Internet community.
Its key weakness is the dependence upon volunteer editors to review
submissions. Apparently there are not enough volunteers. Hence, some
submissions wait years to achieve an OPD listing, if ever. Some OPD
insiders hint at a million or more sites in the queue! I suspect it is
a lot more, as in several million.
The OPD Website states "it
may take several weeks or more before your submission is reviewed." Who
wouldn't be happy if that were only the case? In reality, OPD advises
to wait six months before making an inquiry about the status of a URL
submission. But since they received so many inquiries and were unable
to give meaningful answers, the inquiry service was discontinued (see
Announcements at
http://resource-zone.com/forum/). Now, when you submit your
Website, you have no means of knowing if it is sitting somewhere in a
OPD queue or was rejected (and if so, why?). Yet, they have a whole
page dedicated to reporting suspected OPD editor malfeasance.
When one
person on the OPD Resource Zone forum begged to have someone review his
site after patiently waiting for two years, an OPD editor answered,
"There is no editing tool that looks at the directory as a whole and
determines which sites have been waiting the longest. The entire concept
is irrelevant, as the length of time since submission is completely
meaningless to us." Later in the thread, the editor exclaims, " It is
really quite simple: there is no queue, there is no line, begging won't
help. We make no promises as to how long it will take to look at a given
suggestion. You've done your part in suggesting the site, at some point
an editor will either: discover the site on his/her own, or come across
it in the pool of unreviewed sites. When either of those two conditions
occurs, it will either be added to the directory or declined -- or, the
editor may choose to defer making a decision for an infinite period of
time." Folks, this is no longer a customer friendly organization.
But the OPD
doesn't consider Webmasters as their customers. In fact, they exhibit a
disdain for today's entrepreneur and tend to ignore the reality of the
exploding Internet market. Instead of promoting the Internet,
the OPD has now become a detriment to its progress. Their antiquated
methods are clearly compounded by a reluctance to take advantage of
technology to assist in scrutinizing submissions, or to charge a small
fee to pay for full-time editors. By embracing a purist attitude that
ignores the exponential growth in the number of Websites, the OPD is
fast becoming the "blacksmiths" of the Internet age.
I have no argument with the concept
of the OPD. It is a good one. But it is time for the OPD to fess up
and admit that its operations are broken. The wheels have come off. It
cannot handle the volume of website submissions and the situation
continues to deteriorate. They can no longer claim to be a "directory
of web sites that contain useful content for the users" when millions of
quality Websites never show up in the Open Project Directory. Yet the
OPD leadership fails to take obvious steps to turn it around.
The OPD dilemma would not matter were
it not in the position of being the gatekeeper to several important
directories and portals, including the Google directory. Otherwise,
everyone would be content to let OPD editors wrap themselves in their
priestly robes, take their secret scrolls and ride off into obscurity.
The question is, "What is Google
doing about this?" Apparently nothing. This is strange, considering
that it would be to Google's advantage to capture the entire
inventory of worthy sites in its directory. Certainly, there is an
enormous profit opportunity for Google that is being missed because of
its dependence on the OPD. Surely Google could allow direct submissions
and accept those that have passed its own muster, say with a minimum
page rank, and then present them in that order. Why Google and other
entities that rely on the OPD haven't taken any action is one of the
industry's eternal mysteries.
I know I speak for thousands –
probably millions - of frustrated Web marketers when I urge Google to
step in and either assist the OPD in cleaning up its mess or else
abandon it as the sole gateway to its coveted directory. Maybe if we
create a flood of emails to Google, it would have an impact. Altogether
now, everyone shout "GOOGLE – IT IS TIME TO FIRE THE OPEN PROJECT
DIRECTORY!"
About
the Author
Al Kernek is a real estate broker and author of "Creating
E-Mail Newsletters – A Practical Guide for the Real Estate Community"
and "Put Your Business Online." To learn more about increasing real
estate sales using low-cost Internet marketing techniques, visit
http://www.renewsletter.com
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