Time to say goodbye to submission software?
Well, someone did tell me. I recently exchanged a series of
emails with Michael Kovnick of Cyberspace HQ, the company behind
Addwe
b, and it provided me with the ideal opportunity to discuss
the submission software debate. The latest version of Addweb
claims to "Submit your website to thousands of search engines
instantly". Now any SEM professional will know that many of
these "search engines" will be nothing more than link farms, and
the automated submission of websites to should be viewed as an
attempt to spam genuine search engines.
To my surprise, Michael agreed. Apparently the team at
Cyberspace HQ are well aware of current consensus, but there is
a bigger force at play. Like any product, Addweb is a slave to
its customers. A couple of years ago Cyberspace HQ decided to
move with the times and cut out the 330,000 search engines that
it offered automated submission to. The response was instant.
Thousands of email complaints and plummeting sales prompted them
to restore the submission feature with haste. Since then they
have continued to modify the submission module of Addweb, but
with much more care than before.
Most of the submission software titles currently available have
diversified from simple submission programs. Addweb now boasts
of a suite of 19 software modules from link trader to domain
manager. They have also bulked out their submission modules by
including paid link submission, and enable engine selection to
try and avoid being labelled as a spam promoter. Other titles
have taken similar action. Dynam
ic Submission, for instance, has beefed up its paid
submission and is now really just part of the Dyna
mic Promotion Suite.
So what is the future for submission software? I would wager
that the submission components of the major products will
gradually disappear - at least for search engines submission.
Despite customer resistance, eventually the message will get
through that submission is not necessary. Directory submission
will prove more durable, although the modules will be much
simpler because of the one-time name of directory submission.
However a new breed of submission software titles are beginning
to emerge. In these content sensitive times, article and blog
comment submitters are rapidly being developed. They pose
similar ethical questions to search engine submitters, and we
will watch with interest at the reception they receive.
About the author:
Paul Fisher is a professional in the search arena and is editor
of SEO Software - a
website dedicated to the independent comparison of SEO marketing
software programs.