MCP HubMCP Hub
Retour aux compétences

dev-tool-directory-listings

jonathimer
Mis à jour Yesterday
4 vues
76
4
76
Voir sur GitHub
Développementai

À propos

Cette compétence fournit des conseils pour faire figurer des outils de développement dans des répertoires organisés, des listes "awesome" GitHub et des plateformes de découverte. Elle couvre les bonnes pratiques de soumission, la maintenance des inscriptions et le suivi du trafic de référence provenant de ces sources. Utilisez-la lorsqu'il est question de stratégie de soumission à des annuaires ou de contribution à des ressources organisées pour développeurs.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add jonathimer/devmarketing-skills -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/jonathimer/devmarketing-skills
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/jonathimer/devmarketing-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/dev-tool-directory-listings

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Developer Tool Directory Listings

Overview

Developers discover tools through curated directories, GitHub awesome-lists, and recommendation threads. Unlike general business directories, developer directories are often community-maintained, have genuine editorial standards, and drive qualified traffic. Getting listed requires meeting quality bars and contributing authentically to these communities.

This skill covers identifying valuable directories, submitting effectively, and maintaining your presence over time.

Understanding the Directory Landscape

Types of Developer Directories

GitHub Awesome Lists Community-curated lists organized by technology or category. Examples:

  • awesome-python
  • awesome-react
  • awesome-selfhosted
  • awesome-developer-tools

These have high credibility because they're community-vetted and contributions are public.

Curated Directories Editorially maintained directories with submission processes:

  • AlternativeTo
  • Product Hunt (for launches)
  • StackShare
  • LibHunt
  • ToolsForCreators

Category-Specific Directories Niche directories for specific developer needs:

  • NoCodeDevs (no-code tools)
  • RemoteTools (remote work tools)
  • DevHunt (dev tool launches)
  • APIList (API directories)

Package Registries If you have libraries, these are essential:

  • npm (JavaScript)
  • PyPI (Python)
  • crates.io (Rust)
  • Go packages
  • Maven Central (Java)

Which Directories Actually Matter

Not all directories drive value. Prioritize based on:

  1. Traffic quality: Do developers you want actually use this?
  2. Domain authority: Does a backlink help SEO?
  3. Maintenance: Is the directory actively maintained?
  4. Competition: Are similar tools listed?
  5. Referral tracking: Can you measure actual visits?

High-value directories to prioritize:

  • GitHub awesome-lists in your category
  • StackShare
  • AlternativeTo
  • Product Hunt (for major launches)
  • Category-specific directories with engaged communities

Often low-value:

  • Generic "software directories"
  • Abandoned lists with no recent updates
  • Directories that accept anything
  • Link farms disguised as directories

GitHub Awesome-List Strategy

Finding Relevant Awesome Lists

  1. Search GitHub for "awesome-[your-category]"
  2. Check the awesome-list curated directory: https://github.com/sindresorhus/awesome
  3. Look for lists your competitors appear on
  4. Find niche lists for specific use cases

Submission Best Practices

Awesome lists have contribution guidelines. Follow them exactly.

Before submitting:

  • Read the entire CONTRIBUTING.md
  • Review recent accepted PRs for patterns
  • Ensure your tool meets stated criteria
  • Check if similar tools are already listed

Submission PR structure:

Title: Add [Tool Name]

## Description
[Brief description of what your tool does]

## Why it belongs
[How it fits the list's criteria]

## Checklist
- [ ] Read the contribution guidelines
- [ ] Tool is actively maintained
- [ ] Description follows list format
- [ ] Placed in correct alphabetical order

Common rejection reasons:

  • Not following contribution guidelines
  • Tool doesn't fit list scope
  • Description too promotional
  • Tool not mature/stable enough
  • Missing required features for the category

Contributing Beyond Self-Promotion

Build credibility by contributing value, not just listing your own tool:

  • Fix broken links you notice
  • Suggest improvements to list organization
  • Add other quality tools you've used (not your own)
  • Improve documentation

This builds reputation before you submit your own tool.

Directory Submission Strategy

Preparation Before Submitting

Ensure your presence is submission-ready:

  1. Clear value proposition: Can someone understand what you do in one sentence?
  2. Screenshots/demos: Visual proof of your tool working
  3. Documentation: Enough to evaluate without signing up
  4. Pricing clarity: Transparent about costs
  5. Social proof: GitHub stars, user count, notable users

Asset preparation:

  • Logo in multiple formats (SVG, PNG, various sizes)
  • Screenshots at common dimensions
  • Short description (50-100 words)
  • Long description (200-300 words)
  • Category keywords
  • Comparison positioning

Writing Directory Descriptions

Different approach than marketing copy:

Do:

  • Lead with what the tool does, not why it's great
  • Be specific about functionality
  • Mention key technical differentiators
  • Include primary use cases
  • Note programming language/platform compatibility

Don't:

  • Use superlatives ("best," "revolutionary")
  • Focus on company story
  • Bury functionality under benefits
  • Use jargon unexplained
  • Copy-paste same description everywhere (duplicate content hurts SEO)

Example transformation:

Marketing copy:

"The revolutionary platform that transforms how teams collaborate on code. Trusted by 10,000+ developers."

Directory description:

"Real-time collaborative code editor supporting JavaScript, Python, and Go. Features include shared debugging sessions, integrated terminal, and Git sync. Self-hosted or cloud options available."

Submission Timing

For curated directories:

  • Submit when you have meaningful traction
  • Wait until core features are stable
  • Consider submitting after notable milestone (funding, major release)

For Product Hunt:

  • Prepare launch thoroughly (separate skill)
  • Coordinate with community building
  • Time for when team can engage

Maintaining Directory Presence

Regular Maintenance

Directories require ongoing attention:

Quarterly review:

  • Check all listings are accurate
  • Update screenshots if UI changed
  • Refresh descriptions for new features
  • Ensure links work
  • Update pricing if changed

Monitoring:

  • Set up alerts for brand mentions in directories
  • Track referral traffic from each source
  • Note which directories drive signups

Responding to Reviews

Many directories allow reviews or comments:

  • Respond professionally to criticism
  • Thank positive reviewers
  • Use feedback to improve product
  • Don't argue or get defensive
  • Address legitimate concerns publicly

Handling Outdated Listings

Over time, some listings become outdated:

  • Update information when possible
  • Request removal from abandoned directories (avoid bad SEO signals)
  • Correct misinformation proactively
  • Keep screenshots current

Tracking Referral Value

Setting Up Tracking

Track which directories actually drive value:

  1. UTM parameters: Add tracking to directory URLs
  2. Referral reports: Monitor Google Analytics referrers
  3. Signup attribution: Ask "how did you hear about us"
  4. Backlink monitoring: Track SEO value

Metrics to Track

Traffic metrics:

  • Visits from each directory
  • Bounce rate from directory traffic
  • Time on site from referrals

Conversion metrics:

  • Signups attributed to directories
  • Trial-to-paid conversion from directory traffic
  • Revenue attributed to directory presence

SEO metrics:

  • Domain authority of linking directories
  • Referral traffic trends over time

Evaluating Directory ROI

Not all directories warrant ongoing attention:

Keep maintaining if:

  • Drives consistent qualified traffic
  • High conversion rates
  • Strong backlink value
  • Community engagement

Deprioritize if:

  • No measurable traffic
  • Low-quality visits
  • Directory appears abandoned
  • No SEO value

Budget and Resources

Minimum Viable Approach

  • Time investment: 2-4 hours for initial submissions
  • Ongoing: 1-2 hours/quarter for maintenance
  • Cost: Free (most directories don't charge)

Scaled Approach

  • Dedicated tracking for attribution
  • Regular auditing of directory presence
  • Proactive updates with product changes
  • Contributing to community directories

Tools

  • Google Analytics: Referral traffic tracking
  • Ahrefs/Semrush: Backlink monitoring and discovery
  • Notion/Spreadsheet: Track all directory listings
  • Brand monitoring tools: Alerts for new mentions
  • Octolens: Discover where developers discuss and recommend tools in your category

Common Mistakes

  1. Spamming low-quality directories: Focus on quality over quantity
  2. Set and forget: Listings need maintenance
  3. Identical descriptions everywhere: Write unique descriptions
  4. Ignoring contribution guidelines: Leads to rejection
  5. Self-promotion only: Build reputation through genuine contributions
  6. Missing tracking: Can't measure what matters

Related Skills

  • developer-seo: Directory listings support overall SEO strategy
  • github-community-engagement: Contributing to awesome-lists fits broader GitHub strategy
  • product-hunt-launch: Special considerations for Product Hunt specifically

Dépôt GitHub

jonathimer/devmarketing-skills
Chemin: skills/dev-tool-directory-listings
0

Compétences associées

qmd

Développement

qmd est un outil CLI de recherche et d'indexation locale qui permet aux développeurs d'indexer et de rechercher dans des fichiers locaux en utilisant une recherche hybride combinant BM25, des embeddings vectoriels et du reranking. Il prend en charge à la fois une utilisation en ligne de commande et un mode MCP (Model Context Protocol) pour l'intégration avec Claude. L'outil utilise Ollama pour les embeddings et stocke les index localement, ce qui le rend idéal pour rechercher dans de la documentation ou des bases de code directement depuis le terminal.

Voir la compétence

subagent-driven-development

Développement

Cette compétence exécute des plans de mise en œuvre en déployant un nouveau sous-agent pour chaque tâche indépendante, avec une revue de code entre les tâches. Elle permet une itération rapide tout en maintenant des contrôles de qualité grâce à ce processus de revue. Utilisez-la lorsque vous travaillez sur des tâches principalement indépendantes au sein d'une même session pour assurer une progression continue avec des vérifications de qualité intégrées.

Voir la compétence

mcporter

Développement

La compétence mcporter permet aux développeurs de gérer et d'appeler des serveurs Model Context Protocol (MCP) directement depuis Claude. Elle fournit des commandes pour lister les serveurs disponibles, appeler leurs outils avec des arguments, et gérer l'authentification ainsi que le cycle de vie du démon. Utilisez cette compétence pour intégrer et tester les fonctionnalités des serveurs MCP dans votre flux de travail de développement.

Voir la compétence

adk-deployment-specialist

Développement

Cette compétence déploie et orchestre des agents Vertex AI ADK en utilisant le protocole A2A, gérant la découverte d'AgentCard, la soumission de tâches, et prenant en charge des outils tels que le bac à sable d'exécution de code et la banque de mémoire. Elle permet de construire des systèmes multi-agents avec des modèles d'orchestration séquentiels, parallèles ou en boucle en Python, Java ou Go. Utilisez-la lorsqu'on vous demande de déployer des agents ADK ou d'orchestrer des flux de travail d'agents sur Google Cloud.

Voir la compétence