When the user wants to submit a product or app to directories, curated lists, launch platforms, or app stores—and needs ready-to-paste copy per platform. Reads project-context.md when present. Also use when the user mentions "directory submission," "get listed," "app store listing," "submit to directories," "curated list," "best tools list," "Taaft," "Product Hunt," "directory ads," "newsletter feature," "directory campaign," "tailor description per platform," "Shopify App Store," "Chrome Web Store," "navigation site," or "product directory." For Product Hunt launch day tactics (hunter, first comment, timing), use product-hunt-launch. For full 0→1 channel planning, use cold-start-strategy.
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@skills/directory-submission/SKILL.md
Channels: Directory Submission
Guides submitting products, tools, or apps to directories and launch platforms.
On each invocation: On first use in the conversation, output the complete response (Introduction, Importance, Methods, Collaboration Channels, Rules, Avoid, Action). On subsequent use or when the user asks to skip (e.g., "just do it", "skip intro", "I already know"), go directly to Action.
Directory submission is a core channel for cold start—see cold-start-strategy for full launch planning. Directories offer more than listings: free/paid listings, ad placements, newsletter features, social promotion, and marketing campaigns. Platform types: AI tools (e.g. Taaft), product launch (e.g. Product Hunt), review platforms (e.g. G2), app stores, niche directories.
Why Directory Submission Matters
Platform examples are illustrative only. No affiliation, partnership, or endorsement implied.
Benefit
Description
Backlinks
Quality directories pass link equity; improve domain authority and rankings. Focus on high-authority directories (DA 50+); avoid low-quality link farms.
Real traffic & conversion
Referral traffic from directories converts. ~42% of businesses report increased referral traffic after submission; referral conversion ~1.8% (B2C), 1.1% (B2B), 1.3% (SaaS). Use UTM to track; proper attribution can improve measured conversion by ~23%.
Social proof for brand search
When users search your brand name, directory listings (e.g. Product Hunt, G2, Taaft) often dominate SERP. Third-party presence signals legitimacy; consumers check 5-7 sources before deciding. Verified badges and consistent NAP across directories boost trust. See serp-features for SERP feature types.
Current Best Practices
Quality over quantity. Mass submission to hundreds of low-quality directories can harm rankings; strategic placement in 10-15 high-quality directories typically yields 15-25% improvement in indexing speed and branded search visibility.
Practice
Why
Prioritize DA/DR 50+
High-authority directories pass link equity; low-quality link farms risk penalties
Industry-specific directories deliver faster results (30-60 days) and better topical relevance than generic sites (60-120 days)
NAP consistency
Name, Address, Phone identical across all listings--critical for local SEO
Track submissions
Document where you submitted, approval status, canonical topics
Budget reference: Small businesses $300-500/mo; enterprises $1,500-3,000/mo for comprehensive programs. Results typically 30-60 days from high-authority directories.
Initial Assessment
Read project context first: If .claude/project-context.md or .cursor/project-context.md exists, read it. Use sections 1-4, 5, 6, 8, 9 to generate submission content directly--no need to ask the user for info already in the context.
Context section
Maps to directory fields
1. Product Overview
Name, one-line, category, pricing model
2. Positioning Statement
Tagline, long description
3. Value Proposition
Key messages, proof points -> Pros
4. Target Audience
Description tone, use cases
5. Existing Website
URL, key pages
6. Keywords
Tags, negative keywords, Primary Task
8. Brand & Voice
Tone, avoid terms, preferred wording — see branding for full brand strategy
9. Product Documentation
Features, capabilities -> Other features
When context exists: Generate ready-to-paste submission copy (tagline, short/long description, pros/cons, tags) tailored per platform. Output copy the user can paste into Taaft, Product Hunt, etc.
When context is missing: Gather from user's site; search the web for pricing, features, competitors, reviews, and any gaps. Then generate.
Identify:
Product type: AI tool, SaaS, app, Chrome extension, Shopify app
Target directories: AI tools, product launch, app stores, niche
Readiness: Landing page, screenshots, description, media kit
Product / Website Info Required
Source: Project context (preferred) or user's site. Each directory needs different fields; prepare a base set, then adapt per platform.
Standard Fields (Most Directories)
Field
Typical Spec
Notes
Product name
60-80 chars
Consistent spelling across all listings
URL
Working product/landing page
No redirect chains
Tagline / one-liner
<=60 chars (Taaft: max 12 words)
Catchy, benefit-focused
Short description
150-300 chars
Used by many directories
Long description
400-600 chars
For platforms that allow more
Category / Task
Platform-specific
Match taxonomy (Taaft: Primary + Secondary Tasks)
Keywords / Tags
5-10 terms, comma-separated
Natural, no stuffing
Contact
Email, optional NAP
For verification
Company name
Legal entity
Some directories require
Promo code
If applicable
Product Hunt, deal platforms
Other URLs
Blog, Affiliate Program, FAQ
Optional but useful
API availability
Yes/No
AI/SaaS directories
Demo video
URL or file
Many platforms support
Platform-specific: Taaft requires many more fields (icon, main image, demo video, features, models, built-with tools, modalities, pricing, legal URLs, pros/cons, socials, tracking links)--see Taaft section.
Prepare Asset Tiers
Create multiple versions so you can match each directory's format without rewriting from scratch:
Short (150-300 chars): Core value + one differentiator
Long (400-600 chars): Problem -> solution story; features + benefits
Rich Content Base (Build First, Use Everywhere)
Even if a directory form does not require it, build a full reference so you can tailor per platform and for SEO/GEO. Search the web when info is missing.
Section
Content
Use For
Definition
What the product is; category; one-sentence positioning
Intro text, GEO-friendly summaries
Importance
Why it matters for the target audience; key differentiator
Long descriptions, first comments
Features
Core capabilities; technical specs; integrations
Taaft, G2, comparison sites
Use cases
Who uses it; workflows; outcomes
Taaft tasks, niche directories
Solutions
Problems solved; before/after
Product Hunt, curated lists
Competitors
Alternatives (e.g. Competitor A, B); how this differs
Comparison sites, G2
Pricing
Plans, credits, free tier
G2, Capterra, budget-focused lists
Rules / Avoid
What to emphasize; what to avoid per platform
Quality control
Multiple Versions for Differentiation (SEO & GEO)
Do not submit identical copy to every directory. Duplicate content hurts SEO and reduces GEO citation diversity. Generate at least 2-3 distinct versions per field (tagline, short, long) so:
Different directories show different angles
AI tools and search engines see varied, non-duplicate signals
Users can pick the best fit per platform or A/B test
Version
Angle
Best For
A
Feature-led (capabilities, specs)
Taaft, technical directories
B
Benefit-led (outcomes, use cases)
Product Hunt, creator-focused
C
Comparison-led (vs. competitors)
AlternativeTo, G2 alternatives
D
Audience-led (who, workflow)
Niche directories, vertical lists
Tailor Per Platform (Different Expression, Different Emphasis)
Do not copy-paste identical descriptions. Each directory has a different audience and format; customizing per platform improves approval, visibility, and conversion.
Platform Type
Audience
Emphasis
Tone
Product Hunt
Indie makers, founders, early adopters
See product-hunt-launch for full workflow
Community, authentic, maker-friendly
Taaft
AI tool seekers, task/job-oriented
Tasks and jobs your tool solves; keyword-rich for AI use cases; "what can I do with this"
Functional, searchable, use-case driven
G2 / Capterra
Enterprise buyers, comparison shoppers
Features, integrations, pricing; review-oriented; social proof
Professional, comparison-ready
AlternativeTo
Users switching from competitors
"Alternative to X"; migration ease; differentiation
Comparison, migration, alternatives
Niche directories
Vertical (e.g., e-commerce, healthcare)
Industry keywords; vertical pain points; compliance if relevant
Vertical-specific, jargon-appropriate
App stores (Shopify, Chrome)
Merchants / extension users
Merchant value (Shopify); use case (Chrome); screenshots show workflow
Benefit-first, feature-clear
Consistency to Keep
While tailoring, keep consistent across all listings:
Product name spelling and formatting
Core positioning (who it's for, main benefit)
Contact info format (NAP if applicable)
Inconsistent NAP or product names can hurt SEO and trust.
Directory Offerings (Beyond Listing)
Directories typically offer multiple touchpoints--not just inclusion in the catalog:
Offering
Description
Use When
Listing
Free or paid inclusion in directory catalog
Baseline visibility, backlinks, evergreen traffic
Ad placements
Sponsored slots, banners, featured placement
Need boosted visibility; budget for paid promotion
Newsletter
Featured in directory's email to subscribers
Product Hunt, Taaft; high-intent audience
Social promotion
Directory shares your product on X, LinkedIn, etc.
Launch day amplification; viral potential
Marketing campaigns
Bundled packages: listing + newsletter + ads + social
Full-funnel campaign; product launch or relaunch
Strategy: Start with free listing for backlinks and baseline traffic. Layer paid options (ads, newsletter features, campaigns) when ROI justifies--especially for launches or when organic listing underperforms.
dofollow vs nofollow: dofollow passes link equity for SEO; nofollow does not. But the goal is conversion--if users click through and convert, the shorter path (direct traffic) can outweigh SEO benefit. Small, unknown directories have driven three-figure annual subscriptions from a single 10-minute submission.
Use UTM (e.g. utm_medium=paid); test after organic listing. See directory-listing-ads for Taaft, Shopify App Store, G2, Capterra paid campaign setup
Social promotion
Taaft, Product Hunt share on X, LinkedIn
Launch-day amplification; @ platform accounts when posting
Marketing campaigns
Taaft: listing + newsletter + ads + social
Full-funnel; product launch or relaunch; budget-dependent
Phased approach: (1) Free listing first. (2) Newsletter features when launching. (3) Ads if organic underperforms. (4) Campaign packages for major launches.
Budget reference: Small teams $0-500/mo (listing + occasional newsletter); growth $300-500/mo; enterprise $1,500-3,000+/mo for full programs.
Directory Types
Type
Examples
Best For
Traffic / Benefit
AI tools
Taaft (There's An AI For That)
AI products, SaaS
4M+ monthly visitors; 700-10K+ visitors per listing
Developer tools
DevHunt
OSS, dev tools, APIs
Dev-focused; GitHub-verified; free; see open-source-strategy
Editorial backlinks; outreach to list authors; same prep as directories
Dimension diversity: Your product has multiple dimensions--AI tool, productivity tool, SaaS, industry-specific. After AI directories, submit to vertical niches (e.g., e-commerce tools, marketing tools, cross-border commerce tools). Smaller traffic but higher intent and conversion.
Feature vs solution directories: Feature directories (text, image, video, audio by modality) suit AI enthusiasts who compare tools. Solution directories (workflow-oriented: SEO tools, EDM marketing, TikTok analytics) suit users seeking 10x productivity in a workflow--often higher conversion for B2B.
Directory Lists (Curated Lists)
Same principles as directories--backlinks, traffic, discovery. Curated lists are editorial roundups (e.g., "Best AI tools 2025," "Top 10 SaaS for marketing") published on blogs, newsletters, or dedicated list sites.
Type
Examples
How to get listed
Best-of / Top N
"Best SEO tools," "Top 10 AI writing tools"
Outreach to list authors; provide product info, use case, differentiator
Awesome lists
GitHub Awesome-*, Awesome Tools
Submit PR or contact maintainer; follow list format. See github for creating or optimizing awesome-style curated lists.
Comparison / alternatives
AlternativeTo, G2 alternatives
Submit as alternative to X; comparison-focused copy
Niche roundups
Industry blogs, newsletters
Pitch for inclusion; offer quote, case study, or exclusive angle
Preparation: Same as directory submission--product info, tagline, short/long description, screenshots. Tailor pitch to list theme (e.g., "best for startups," "budget-friendly," "enterprise-ready").
Tip: One solid backlink from a curated list often beats many low-quality directory links. Prioritize lists with editorial oversight and real traffic.
Tip: Pros and cons help users compare; be honest--negative keywords and cons improve relevance and trust.
Product Hunt
See product-hunt-launch for full preparation, launch day strategy, and post-launch. Product Hunt: producthunt.com/launch; free listing; community upvotes; Product Hunt Daily newsletter; paid featured placement. Use when launching new product or major feature.
Category selected correctly per directory taxonomy
URL correct and working
Media kit (for Product Hunt, press outreach) —see media-kit-page-generator
Platform-specific copy drafted (do not reuse identical text across directories)
Taaft (if applicable): Full field set--icon, main image, demo video, Primary/Secondary Tasks, features, models, built-with, modalities, pricing, legal URLs, pros/cons, socials, tracking links
Best Practices
Practice
Purpose
Gather product info first
Extract from user's site; prepare asset tiers before submitting
Tailor per platform
Different expression/emphasis per directory; no copy-paste identical text
Prioritize quality
Rejected or low-quality listings waste effort
Match category
Wrong category = poor visibility
Unique descriptions
Avoid duplicate content; improves approval and conversion
Track with UTM
analytics-tracking for attribution
Batch submissions
Prepare once, adapt copy per platform, submit to multiple directories
Update listings
Keep descriptions and screenshots current
Submit small directories too
Major directories get crawled by smaller ones; but small directories can still drive high-value conversions (e.g., three-figure annual subscription from one 10-min submission)
Output Format
On each invocation: On first use, output the complete response (Introduction, Importance, Methods, Collaboration Channels, Rules, Avoid, Action). On subsequent use or when the user asks to skip, go directly to Action. Search the web for missing product info.
Required Output Structure (in order)
Introduction --What directory submission is: Taaft, Product Hunt, G2, curated lists, app stores; listings, ads, newsletter features, campaigns. Part of cold-start strategy—see cold-start-strategy for full launch plan.
Importance --Why directory submission matters: backlinks and domain authority; referral traffic and conversion (~42% report increased traffic); social proof for brand search (directory listings dominate SERP); third-party presence signals legitimacy.
Methods --How to submit:
Taaft: Full field set; Primary/Secondary Tasks; tailor for AI tool seekers
Product Hunt: See product-hunt-launch for full workflow
Phased approach: Listing first -> Newsletter -> Ads -> Campaigns
Budget reference: Small $0-500/mo; growth $300-500/mo; enterprise $1,500-3,000+/mo
Rules --Tailor per platform; different expression per directory; multiple versions (A/B/C/D) to avoid duplicate content (SEO/GEO friendly); match category; prepare asset tiers (one-liner, short, long).
Avoid --Copy-paste identical copy across directories; generic descriptions; missing legal URLs; wrong category; low-quality link farms.
Action --Ready-to-paste submission content for the user's product:
Rich content base (features, use cases, solutions, competitors, pricing)--search web if missing
Multiple versions for tagline, short, long--each directory gets distinct copy
Manual: Prepare info once; submit to directories in priority order. Major directories first--smaller ones often crawl or republish.
Outsourced: Freelance platforms; use when budget allows and speed matters.
Related Resources
project-context (.cursor/project-context.md or .claude/project-context.md): Read when present; use to generate submission content directly. Template: templates/project-context.md in this repo.
media-kit-page-generator: Press kit, screenshots, assets for launch; required for Product Hunt and directory submissions
link-building: Directory and curated list backlinks contribute to link profile; this skill handles the submission workflow—see link-building for broader outreach, guest posting, broken link building
github: GitHub awesome lists as curated lists; create or submit to awesome-* repos
open-source-strategy: Open source commercialization; DevHunt, GitHub, Awesome lists for OSS projects
grokipedia-recommendations: Same output pattern--platform context first (Introduction, Importance, Methods, Rules, Avoid), then Action; high-authority placement for GEO; directories for human discovery--complementary
generative-engine-optimization: GEO strategy; varied directory copy improves AI citation diversity; directory submission complements AI search visibility
affiliate-marketing: Different channel; directories complement affiliate