submitting subfolders

jimnoble

DMOZ Meta
Joined
Mar 26, 2002
Messages
18,915
Location
Southern England
Short answer - no.
Longer answer. Please just submit the root URL. Our editors will list any subpages that justify it, but be aware that this is pretty rare. Now if you were selling items as disparate as baby rabbits and concrete blocks, it might be a different story.
 

annrl

Member
Joined
Apr 15, 2004
Messages
16
submitting with subfolders

The reason I am asking is that it is very expensive to get 5 separate root URL's if you have 5 separate websites. It is fine if you are a major business, but if you are a small family business, it is very tough.

It also makes it easier for customers to be able to go directly to the brand they want, hence the subfolders, example, /Levis/index.htm, /Carhartt/index.htm etc.

If the root URL is very general, but the subfolders are the brand, shouldn't it be able to be submitted that way?

Just a thought.

Thanks for getting back to me.

Ann
 

hutcheson

Curlie Meta
Joined
Mar 23, 2002
Messages
19,136
We don't care whether you own Walmart, or sell used jeans out of your car trunk at flea markets. And we don't care whether you buy domain names at the ghastly price of $4.95 per year, or use subdomains, or subfolders. Multiple single-product-line listings for one company are explicitly and specifically forbidden by staff edict. And you could have told that, by asking yourself, "how many brands does Walmart offer? How many listings does it have?"

The rules are the same regardless of how you bifurcate your one website; and the answer is the same. The only difference between subfolders and separate domains is, if you used subdomains or separate domains, and you submitted them all, we'd not only know you were a spammer, we'd strongly suspect you were a malicious sneaky spammer -- we would take it personally, and we'd whack you with a bigger hammer.
 

giz

Member
Joined
May 26, 2002
Messages
3,112
>> "how many brands does Walmart offer? How many listings does it have?"

Answers in same order: tens of thousands, and, a single digit positive number that is fairly close to zero.
 
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