The job of a directory listing changed. It used to be a backlink. Now it's a citation — a source an AI assistant reads before it recommends a product to your buyer. Here's how to submit for the answer, not the link.
Measured across 5 AI engines from 297 sampled answers. These are the products AI assistants recommend most in ai tools for graphic designers right now — the sources buyers see before they ever reach your site.
For a decade, directory submission was an SEO move — list everywhere, collect backlinks, nudge your domain authority. In 2026 your buyers start with an AI assistant. They ask "what should I use for X" and take the recommendation. AI assistants build those recommendations by reading sources — review sites, communities, and directories. A listing is now valuable only if it's one of the sources AI reads and cites.
Most directories are never cited by any AI engine. Submitting to them produces backlinks no buyer and no model will ever see. The high-leverage move is to identify the sources AI actually cites in your category and make sure you're present and accurate on those. Fewer, better placements — the ones that change an answer.
When you do submit to a cited source, write the listing the way an AI engine reads it: clear category, who it's for, what makes it different, pricing. The model is extracting facts to compose a recommendation. A vague listing earns a citation that doesn't help you; a precise one earns a citation that names you for the right buyer query.
You can't improve what you can't see. Run a free AI-visibility scan to find out whether AI recommends you today and which sources it read to decide. That turns "directory submission" from a guess into a loop: see the gap, submit to the cited sources you're missing, re-scan, repeat.
Run one real query and see whether AI recommends you — and exactly which sources it read to decide. That's the gap Orbator closes.
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