Irish SEO – Where to Submit Your Site

If people don’t know about your website they can’t visit it. Simple fact.

Of course there are mountains of content written on how best to optimise your website for search engines etc., but it cannot hurt to spend a couple of hours manually submitting your site to search engines and directories.
Some people will whine about non-Pr passing links ie. sites using redirectors etc., but I would recommend any serious webmaster to ignore them. Every visitor to your site could lead to a sale. Would you turn them away? I don’t think you would.

If you are running an Irish based / focussed website then you need to place some emphasis on the Irish market.
So let’s see:

Google – You probably won’t need to submit to it, but you could look at adding a sitemap and validating your ownership. If you do you’ll get access to crawl statistics and search query results, including clickthroughs.

Yahoo – Similar to Google, Yahoo’s spider seems to pick up on sites with little or no intervention. They also offer a sitemap style solution as well

Altavista – Now part of Yahoo.

Scrudu – Currently in development. Not sure when it will launch, but it might be worth looking at. Update
As of January 2008 it looks like it has been taken offline and is currently showing a default apache holding page

Update September 2012 – Deadpool.

WhoisIreland – Has been around for quite some time and crawls periodically.

BrowseIreland – One of the oldest directories of Irish websites. They recently launched a number of region specific sites and are also behind the Scrudu project. Commercial listings require an address and telephone number

Search.ie – Started life as Irelandculture.com before becoming IrishSearch.net and now Search.ie. Static PR passing links on all detailed pages

Browse.ie – Searchable directory of Irish sites originally seeded with DMOZ data but now accepting submissions as well as purging dead links (unlike DMOZ)

Armchair.ie – Directory of Irish shopping sites ie. ecommerce sites only.
All listing require tangible contact details to be displayed on their sites ie. no email only contact forms. SEO friendly

NiceOne – Another directory of sites that has been around for quite some time. They now seem to be pushing web development services.

Find It Ireland – Another directory

GuestHouses.ie – Directory of Irish bed and breakfasts /  guesthouses.  SEO friendly

HotelSearch.ie – Directory of Irish hotels. SEO friendly

GimmeDat – Directory of Irish sites with logos

WebSearch.ie – Another small directory
There are also a growing number of “made for adsense” sites or DMOZ clones. The problem with them is that they do not accept submissions and merely duplicate the listings (and the broken links) in the main DMOZ directory.

If you are going to submit a site to any of the directories mentioned above please bear in mind that they are human edited. That means that someone has to manually review each and every submission.

While the listing criteria may vary from directory to another certain things are probably true of all of them:

– avoid promotional language

– do not submit holding pages

– choose the correct category for your website

– provide a suscint and intelligible description NOT a list of keyphrases

If anyone knows of any other Irish directories I’ve missed out on please feel free to comment

EDIT: I’ve updated this entry to include some of the links included in comments etc.,

By Michele Neylon

Michele is founder and CEO of Irish hosting provider and domain name registrar Blacknight.

26 comments

  1. Hey, you’re lucky you got that far, given it’s connected by Telecom Internet! Still, it does say “Swift is bigger than any other Irish index”, *ahem*.

  2. SOme of the irish sites gives a nice 404 or cgi error after you spent the time to fill in all those fields (required).
    makes you feel like going over and bust their server.
    Anyhow this is a nice articole.

  3. I have done those ones few month back, so I can not really remember, but of the top of my head no. I could be wrong.

  4. “Some people will whine about non-Pr passing links ie. sites using redirectors etc., but I would recommend any serious webmaster to ignore them.”
    Presume you meant to say “wouldn’t” based on the rest of your argument.
    TBH it just comes down to applying resources where you think you will get the best return. At the moment Google is king IMHO so getting into the SERPs for good keywords has to be the priority.
    If you have the time to submit to these DIRs then yeah sure, but if your time is limited concentrate on the SERPs and building quality IBLs (that aren’t ‘NO-FOLLOW”s or scripted redirects).
    Just my €0.02

  5. Swift has been dead for years I think. The search function is deactivated/broken as well. It was built on far sounder technology than many other directories of its era (AOLserver). It like, Niceone and Doras was built on the “if you build it, they will come” fallacy. Also there are a few .ie sites that are being reregistered as the domain drops.
    I wonder which of them will be first with a new .eu directory? 😉

  6. John
    I can’t imagine why anyone would use a .eu for a site focussing primarily on tthe Irish market. I’ve got a few, but they are either for protecting an existing brand or are aimed at a EU / Global market..

  7. Michele,
    There will inevitably be a few who try to use it as a new marketing angle. Given the distribution of .eu on Irish hosters, I doubt if .eu even registers on the radar of Irish web users. The competition between the MFAs will get more intense in the next few months.

  8. I thought Google was cracking down on MFA’s anyway? DIdn’t they change the requirements for landing pages and also increase the keyword costs on MFA’s with low quality content to reduce click arbitrage?

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