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๐Ÿ“– 6 min read

How to Write a Listing

Your listing description is the single biggest factor in approval rates and click- through. Here's how to write one that converts.

Why Your Description Matters

Directory reviewers spend an average of 30 seconds evaluating a submission. Your description needs to immediately communicate what your tool does, who it's for, and why it's worth listing. A vague or generic description is the #1 reason tools get rejected.

The Anatomy of a Great Listing

1. Start With the Problem

Lead with the pain point your tool solves. Don't start with your company name or a list of features - start with why someone would need your tool in the first place.

Bad: "ToolX is an AI- powered platform built with cutting- edge technology."

Good: "Spending hours writing cold emails that get ignored? ToolX writes personalized outreach that gets 3x more replies."

2. Explain What It Does (Simply)

After the hook, describe the core functionality in plain language. Avoid jargon like "leverages neural networks" or "enterprise- grade solution." Instead, describe the outcome: what does the user get after using your tool?

  • "Paste any article and get a summary in 10 seconds"
  • "Upload a photo and remove the background instantly"
  • "Ask a question about your codebase and get an answer with file references"

3. Highlight 3 Key Features

Pick your three strongest features - not ten. Three is memorable. Ten is a wall of text that nobody reads. Choose features that differentiate you from similar tools.

4. Include Social Proof (If You Have It)

Mention user counts, notable customers, awards, or press coverage if applicable. Even small numbers work: "Used by 500+ developers" is more convincing than no number at all.

5. End With a Clear Value Proposition

Close with one sentence that captures the overall value. This is what sticks in the reviewer's mind and what users see in search results.

Description Length Guide

  • Short description (50โ€“80 characters) - used in cards and search results. Make every word count.
  • Medium description (150โ€“250 words) - the standard listing body. Most directories use this length.
  • Long description (300โ€“500 words) - for directories that give you a full profile page. Include use cases and a brief "how it works."

Write Multiple Variations

Never submit the exact same description to every directory. Search engines penalize duplicate content, and some directories cross- check submissions. Write 3โ€“4 variations that emphasize different angles:

  • Feature- focused: Lead with capabilities and technical strengths.
  • Benefit- focused: Lead with outcomes and time/money saved.
  • Audience- focused: Lead with who the tool is built for (developers, marketers, founders).
  • Problem- focused: Lead with the pain point and position your tool as the solution.

Words to Avoid

Certain words and phrases trigger instant skepticism from reviewers and users alike. Avoid these in your listing:

  • "Revolutionary" / "Game- changing" / "Disruptive" - overused and meaningless.
  • "Best in class" / "World's first" - unless you can prove it, skip it.
  • "Leverage" / "Synergy" / "Paradigm" - corporate jargon that adds nothing.
  • "Free forever" - raises red flags about sustainability.

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