skills/directory-submissions/SKILL.md
When the user wants to submit their product to startup, SaaS, AI, agent, MCP, no-code, or review directories for backlinks, domain rating, and discovery. Also use when the user mentions "directory submissions," "submit to directories," "backlinks from directories," "list my product," "submit to Product Hunt," "BetaList," "TAAFT," "Futurepedia," "G2 listing," "Capterra listing," "AlternativeTo," "SaaSHub," "AI directories," "MCP registry," "agent directory," "dofollow backlinks," "launch directories," or "directory tracker." Use this whenever someone is planning the directory layer of a product launch or an ongoing backlink campaign. For the broader launch moment, see launch. For programmatic SEO pages that should live behind these backlinks, see programmatic-seo. For AI citation optimization, see ai-seo.
npx skillsauth add coreyhaines31/marketingskills directory-submissionsInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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You are an expert in directory-driven distribution for software products. Your goal is to help the user build a compounding backlink + discovery foundation by submitting to the right directories, in the right order, with the right positioning — and to make sure that foundation actually produces leads instead of vanity backlinks.
Check for product marketing context first:
If .agents/product-marketing.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing.md, or the legacy product-marketing-context.md filename, in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Directory submissions are the foundation layer of distribution — never the whole strategy. They do three things well:
But directories alone will not generate meaningful leads. They exist to pass link equity into the pages that DO generate leads — template galleries, comparison pages, alternative pages, blog posts. Build the destination pages first, then submit to directories so the link equity has somewhere useful to land.
The full directory catalog lives in references/directory-list.md. The positioning variant library lives in references/positioning-variations.md. The submission tracker template lives in references/submission-tracker-template.csv.
Never submit to a directory until the landing page it will link to is live, indexed, and has:
<h1> and sequential heading hierarchy — pages with clean hierarchy have 2.8× higher AI citation rates, and 87% of ChatGPT-cited pages use a single H1.FAQPage JSON-LD for answer extraction).Organization, Product, SoftwareApplication.Directories are the source of link equity. You need destinations that can convert the resulting traffic. Minimum destinations before submitting to anything:
/alternatives/[competitor]) targeting "[competitor] alternative" keywords. Comparison/alternative pages convert at 5–15% vs 0.5–2% for generic content./for/[audience] or /use-cases/[use-case]).Never copy-paste the same description everywhere. AI engines penalize duplicate content, and each directory audience responds to different framing. See references/positioning-variations.md for the full variant library. Short version:
| Surface | Lead with | Why | |---|---|---| | Startup directories | Outcome | Audience is other founders. They care what it does. | | SaaS directories | Alternative framing | People search "[competitor] alternative" — meet them there. | | AI directories | AI-first architecture | TAAFT/Futurepedia audiences explicitly want AI tools. | | Agent/MCP directories | Agent/MCP angle | Niche but high-intent. A real moat. | | No-code directories | Ease + power | Audience values speed-to-build over depth. | | Dev directories | Technical depth | Dev audiences reward technical substance. | | B2B review sites | ROI + use case | Buyers want outcomes and case studies. |
Ask the user these 9 questions. If any are "no", they're not ready — help them build the missing piece first.
A "no" on any of 1–7 is a hard block. A "no" on 8–9 is a soft block: you can launch but will lose Tier 2 review value and Typeform-style compounding.
Full catalog in references/directory-list.md. Summary:
| Tier | When | Examples | Typical count | |---|---|---|---| | Tier 1 — Flagship launch | Launch week only | Product Hunt (anchor), BetaList, HN Show HN, Fazier, DevHunt | ~15 | | Tier 2 — Startup/SaaS | Week 1 + rolling | AlternativeTo, SaaSHub, G2, Capterra, F6S, SourceForge, Slashdot | ~50 | | Tier 3 — AI directories | Week 1–3 | TAAFT, Futurepedia, Toolify, Future Tools, aitools.inc, AIStage | ~40 | | Tier 4 — Agent/MCP registries | Week 1–3 (if MCP) | Glama, APITracker, LF MCP Registry, AI Agents List | ~10 | | Tier 5 — No-code directories | Week 1–3 (if no-code) | NoCodeFinder, No Code MBA, We Are No Code, MakerPad | ~8 | | Tier 6 — "Best of" listicles | Rolling outreach | Cold outreach to DR 40+ blog posts | ~10 inclusions | | Tier 7 — Integration marketplaces | When integrations ship | Zapier, HubSpot, Slack, Airtable, Notion | ~5 | | Tier 8 — Profile & content platforms | Rolling | GitHub, WordPress.com, Substack, Dev.to, SlideShare, Behance | ~50 | | Tier 9 — Local business directories | Rolling (if applicable) | Manta, Hotfrog, Locanto, MerchantCircle | ~20 | | Tier 10 — Forums & communities | Rolling (participate first) | SitePoint, GrowthHackers, Warrior Forum, Designer News | ~13 | | Tier 11 — Press release & article sites | Launch + milestones | PRLog, PR.com, EzineArticles, Feedspot | ~25 | | Tier 12 — Social bookmarking | Rolling | Scoop.it, Diigo, Pearltrees | ~5 | | Tier 13 — Niche vertical directories | When vertical fits | Justia (legal), Porch (home), LandBook (design), etc. | ~20 |
Triage rule: Only submit where the product is a genuine fit. Forcing a listing into the wrong category burns the first-submission advantage and gets rejected by moderators.
For each tier, prep a distinct description variant (pulled from references/positioning-variations.md):
Critical: Don't copy-paste the same long description into every directory. Vary the opening sentence, the feature emphasis, and the audience framing per tier. AI engines cross-reference and down-weight duplicate content.
Set up the tracker spreadsheet (references/submission-tracker-template.csv). Work left-to-right through it. 2–3 hours per batch is realistic.
Per submission:
curl -sIL https://directory.com/your-listing | grep -i rel=. If absent, the link is dofollow.Product Hunt is the single highest-leverage submission but also the most easily wasted. The 2026 PH algorithm weights comment quality more than upvote count — a post with 50 upvotes + 30 genuine comments ranks above one with 200 upvotes + 5 comments. 80% of failed launches fail because they launched without a warm audience OR asked for upvotes instead of feedback.
G2 and Capterra (now owned by G2 as of Feb 2026) listings are worthless without reviews. 10 reviews is the magic threshold for Grid appearance. Run the 10-in-30 protocol during launch month.
Directories are useless if the backlinks land on a generic homepage. Build these destination pages before submitting:
Competitor alternative pages convert at 5–15%, often hitting 15–30% for bottom-of-funnel queries. One page per top competitor:
/alternatives/[competitor-1]/alternatives/[competitor-2]/alternatives/[competitor-3]/alternatives/[competitor-4]Each page needs: honest feature comparison table, "when to choose X over us," "when to choose us over X," pricing comparison, 3–5 use-case examples, strong FAQ with schema.
Critical: Be honest. AI engines cross-reference competitor feature claims and de-rank pages that lie.
Every ICP gets a dedicated landing page:
/for/[audience] — coaches, agencies, ecommerce, SaaS, consultants, etc./use-cases/[use-case] — lead qualification, onboarding, product recommendations, etc.Typeform's template library generated 30,000 non-branded organic signups and $3M/year LTV. The pattern:
/templates/[slug].Write honest roundups of your own category: /blog/best-[category]-tools-2026. Include yourself + 10 competitors with real reviews. These rank for category queries AND serve as canonical references AI engines cite.
Every integration = one landing page at /integrations/[partner]. Follows the Zapier playbook: Zapier gets ~2.6M monthly organic visits from programmatic integration pages (~15% of their total organic traffic).
In 2026, 30–50% of "research a tool" queries happen inside ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, or Google AI Overviews without ever touching a traditional search page. Directories matter here too — AI engines pull heavily from high-DR directories when generating answers. But the destination pages also need to be GEO-optimized.
FAQPage JSON-LD for answer extraction.Manually check monthly: ask ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity "what are the best [category] tools?" and log where the product appears. Free GEO tracking tools (GeoTracker, llmrefs) automate this.
Directories are one-shot. Community is ongoing. Both feed the same funnel.
90% of activity must be genuinely helpful; only 10% promotional. Violating this gets shadowbanned.
High-value subs (ranked):
What wins: real numbers (MRR, signups, churn), screenshots, "what I tried / what happened / what I'd do differently" structure, mini case studies with a clear lesson. What fails: hype, vague claims, "check out my new tool" posts, asking for upvotes.
80% of B2B social leads come from LinkedIn. Cadence: 3–5 posts/week — fewer loses momentum, more causes fatigue.
Content types ranked by 2026 engagement:
Build-in-public threads on architecture, revenue, decisions. Technical deep-dives get indexed by Google + Claude + Perplexity → indirect GEO.
Every substantial technical post = dofollow backlink + dev audience reach. Cross-post with canonical URL back to main blog.
Track weekly. If a number isn't moving, investigate — don't just submit more directories.
| Metric | Day 0 | Day 30 target | Day 90 target | |---|---|---|---| | Domain Rating (DR) | 0 | 20 | 30+ | | Referring domains | 0 | 30 | 80+ | | Indexed pages | — | 50 | 200+ | | Organic clicks/day | 0 | 30 | 200+ | | Directory listings live | 0 | 50 | 70+ | | G2 reviews | 0 | 10 | 25 | | Capterra reviews | 0 | 5 | 15 | | AI citations (manual check) | 0 | 3 | 15+ | | Signups from directory referrals | 0 | 50 | 300 | | Signups from alt/use-case pages | 0 | 20 | 300 |
When the user asks for a directory plan, return:
references/positioning-variations.md)references/submission-tracker-template.csvKeep the plan actionable. Every item should be something the user can do today.
/alternatives/[tool] page patterntesting
When the user wants help with public relations, earned media, press coverage, journalist outreach, or media strategy (not pull requests). Also use when the user mentions 'PR,' 'public relations,' 'press,' 'press release,' 'press coverage,' 'media outreach,' 'pitch a journalist,' 'get featured,' 'media list,' 'media kit,' 'press kit,' 'newsjacking,' 'news hijack,' 'HARO,' 'Qwoted,' 'Featured,' 'Help A Reporter,' 'reporter request,' 'tech press,' 'TechCrunch,' 'earned media,' 'thought leadership placement,' 'op-ed,' 'guest article,' 'press contacts,' or 'how do I get press.' Use this for earned media work — finding journalists, pitching stories, newsjacking, and responding to press requests. For startup/SaaS/AI directory submissions, see directory-submissions. For product launches, see launch. For social-media engagement, see social. For cold-email outreach to prospects, see cold-email.
testing
When the user wants help creating, scheduling, or optimizing social media content for LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, or other platforms, or wants to do social listening and engagement triage. Also use when the user mentions 'LinkedIn post,' 'Twitter thread,' 'social media,' 'content calendar,' 'social scheduling,' 'engagement,' 'viral content,' 'what should I post,' 'repurpose this content,' 'tweet ideas,' 'LinkedIn carousel,' 'social media strategy,' 'grow my following,' 'TikTok video,' 'Reels,' 'Shorts,' 'video script,' 'video hook,' 'short-form video,' 'create a reel,' 'social listening,' 'brand mentions,' 'competitor monitoring,' 'top posts to comment on,' or 'find people asking for.' Use this for social media content creation, repurposing, scheduling, short-form video scripting, and social listening. For broader content strategy, see content-strategy. For paid ads, see ad-creative. For earned media, see public-relations.
tools
When the user needs a comprehensive marketing plan for a client, a company they advise, or their own product. Also use when the user mentions "marketing plan," "growth plan," "GTM plan," "go-to-market plan," "AARRR plan," "90-day marketing plan," "12-month marketing roadmap," "fractional CMO plan," or "fCMO plan." Generates an exhaustive 13-section plan structured by AARRR (Acquisition, Activation, Retention, Referral, Revenue), customized to the client's current budget, team, and stage, mapped to future funding milestones, cross-referenced with the 139-idea marketing-ideas library and an embedded 17-section current-state audit rubric, with a full marketing operations stack showing which skills and MCP/API integrations execute each part. Outputs a Notion-paste-ready markdown document. For positioning and ICP context before planning, see product-marketing. For stage-specific deep work, see onboarding, signup, emails, referrals, pricing.
development
When the user wants to conduct, analyze, or synthesize customer research. Use when the user mentions "customer research," "ICP research," "talk to customers," "analyze transcripts," "customer interviews," "survey analysis," "support ticket analysis," "voice of customer," "VOC," "build personas," "customer personas," "jobs to be done," "JTBD," "what do customers say," "what are customers struggling with," "Reddit mining," "G2 reviews," "review mining," "digital watering holes," "community research," "forum research," "competitor reviews," "customer sentiment," or "find out why customers churn/convert/buy." Use for both analyzing existing research assets AND gathering new research from online sources. For writing copy informed by research, see copywriting. For acting on research to improve pages, see cro.