Forum Moderators: open
1) Why not? If you submit to the SE's now with a 1 page site, you may get into the DB which will put you in a good position to climb the SERP when your website is completed.
2) There is no point. If you submit your website when it is only a 1 page website, with no content and no links, then the SE's might not even index you.
I would probably go for it though.
Another thing that I would do is start your link pop campaign before the site is completed....it helps.
Generally people who find you via a search engine will be looking for a new service which they haven't used before.
If you want to keep them coming back then you have to make that good impression.
secondly if your site hasn't really been optimised then it probably won't be found anyway! So won't get the chance to make a bad first impression.
First, I choose my target phrases carefully. Then, I write a very compact directory description, targeting what I'm going after in 15 words, if I can get it down that far... something that's not going to get edited when I submit. This also gives me a feeling for my core focus and my prime targets.
Then, I optimize the site around my main targets. I try to pick up peripheral targets, as I call them, if I can.
Then, and only then, I submit to either ODP or Yahoo. It's important, I feel, that the site reflect the description I'm submitting, because otherwise the directories are likely to edit my submission.
Additionally, the directory description affects my ranking on some crawler-based engines. It used to be, and I'm not sure how much of a change there's been recently, that AOL results were a hybrid of my ODP description and AOL's spidering of my home page. It also used to be, and I don't know whether this has been changed, that once AOL spidered you, that info, like your directory description, was pretty much engraved in stone, so you had to get it right the first time.
Other crawler-based engines, like Google, might come back to look again. I feel it also makes sense not to submit to the engines that might take a long time... and, again... most important, stay out of the directories until you're optimized.
You can, of course, fine tune your site copy later. I've actually profited, when optimizing a site already in Google, from seeing how Google ranked a draft in process... almost like InfoSeek in the old days.
It's also helpful to have the site in good shape before requesting links from others.
This was my version of what Robert said, just worded a little different
[webmasterworld.com...]
One thing to enfore why you don't submit to the slow updating engines before you are 100% ready is you have no way of telling when their spider will hit you and you may not see it again for 6 months to whenever, do you want them to get 1/2 a page on the only shot you have for a long time?? Take that extra few weeks or month to finish your content, it will probably could save you half a year, at Excite anyway. I have a page in an engine right now that has 1/2 a page, what a waste.
With the faster ones it's a headstart to get the page in, and they'll be back again by the time it's done and the other site pages are linked. It's not just an "under construction" page - it's got graphics, headings, and enough text to describe the site, plus an email link. In one case the temporary page did well enough so that I left it as is rather than put the intended text on it and just linked to the rest of the site when it was ready. It's worked well, but these haven't been for what I'd call competetive categories. I've found it gives an extra month that would've been missed.