
– A basic Tumblr infographic stream that shares short descriptions and links as well.– A basic infographic aggregator that asks for an initial contact before submission, to hide the $350 fee.– Home of the Personalist, a feed of daily infographic submissions on a wide range of subjects.– An aggregator for UK-based culture and design, with an emphasis on décor.– An aggregator for home and domestic life infographics, ranging from travel to DIY.– The blog of the president of InfoNewt and a participant in many data visualization summits.Great if you can get on, but not real fixed source of submissions is available.
#NETWORK LINKS INFOGRAPHIC CREATOR FREE#
– An unbranded aggregator that has very few guidelines and offers free submission. Use the “ask me anything” option to submit. – A Tumblr account that curates high quality infographics. – A directory that understands the SEO value of graphics and doesn’t charge you for submission. – A simple graphic aggregator with no specific requirements or disallowed topics. – A paid directory that charges $10 per submission with a 48-hour response time. – A broad directory with virtually no submission requirements just about anything goes. – A general infographic aggregator that disallows gambling, forex, and overly promotional graphics. – A general humor image site that hosts funny content from around the web. I make no claims as to the SEO value, PageRank, MozRank or any other Rank of any of these sites. It’s up to you if you feel the fee is worth the exposure. Third, some of these will be paid graphic sites. Secondly, many of these sites are niche, so only specific types of graphics will do well. Submitting to all of them is hugely time consuming. Pick your favorite 10 or 20 or what have you. For one thing, you’re probably not going to want to submit to every one of these sites. I have a few warnings before you read the list, assuming you’ve stuck with me this far. In the process of compiling this list, I scanned a dozen other lists and found a ton of the sites listed have been removed or expired since publication of those lists.
That is, they are all functional, existing sites. There are over 150 locations you can share your post, and as of the publication date of this article, they all work. The more exposure your graphic gets, the more links and traffic it can generate. One aspect about marketing that I tend to gloss over, though, is the directory submission. We’ve talked about using StumbleUpon to grow graphics, among other things. One of the marketing techniques we’ve mentioned on this blog before is the idea of infographic marketing.