Submit It!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Submit It!
TypeInternet advertising service
InventorScott Banister
Inception1995
ManufacturerSubmit It!
AvailableNo
Websitesubmit-it.com

Submit It! was a search-business internet advertising product that Scott Banister created in 1995, while he was a student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Co-founded by Bill Younker and Larry Gormley, it was acquired by LinkExchange in June 1998.

Description[edit]

The New York Times reported, "Scott Banister started Submit It, a free, automated resource for bringing your page to the attention of many Web-searching outfits at once."[1]

In 1996, Business Wire said, "Submit It!, Inc. is a privately held company headquartered in Bedford, Mass. The company's services today are used by Web site developers and marketers throughout the world who are responsible for promoting Web sites on the Internet. Submit It!'s mission is to develop and market services and products that allow anyone to easily submit and send information on the Internet."[2]

According to Ali Partovi, Banister created a search-business model, "a simple but elegant concept that turned out to be one of the best business ideas in history".[3] Partovi wrote that Banister created Submit It! as a service that

...helped website owners submit their URLs to multiple search engines and directories. Banister saw how badly his customers wanted to secure placement on search results. In 1996, he brilliantly conceived an idea he called Keywords: to sell search listings based on pay-for-placement bidding – more or less the same as today's AdWords. Banister began pitching the idea to anybody who would listen to him, including, among others, Bill Gross of IdeaLab, and the principals of LinkExchange: Tony Hsieh, Sanjay Madan, and me.

— Ali Partovi[3]

History[edit]

Banister was still a student at UIUC in 1995 when he created ListServe. Eventually he and his friends added a bot tool to manage lists, and they renamed the company SubmitIt/Listbot, the precursor of Submit It![3][4]

In 1996, LinkExchange became partners with Submit It! Business Wire described the resulting partnership as "the world's most popular service for registering web sites with search engines and directories. The two companies will join forces to provide web site owners with the most powerful, simple and effective solutions to promote their sites online."[2] In 1998, LinkExchange announced acquisition of Submit It! and its developers.[5]

Microsoft subsequently acquired LinkExchange, including integration of its employees, in December 1998.[6] According to Partovi, none of the former LinkExchange employees "...received a meaningful role at Microsoft. Not one stayed at Microsoft more than a few months."[3] According to UIUC's Department of Computer Science, Alumni News, "Both Submit It and ListBot and another Web service that Banister created called ClickTrade live on as part of MSN LinkExchange."[7]

See also[edit]


References[edit]

  1. ^ Gleick, James (1996-05-05). "FAST FORWARD; Hall of Mirrors". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on May 26, 2015. Retrieved 2022-04-13.
  2. ^ a b "LinkExchange announces partnership with Submit It!". Business Wire. December 12, 1996. Archived from the original on October 23, 2012 – via The Free Library by FARLEX, thefreelibrary.com.
  3. ^ a b c d Partovi, Ali (August 29, 2010). "Bubble Blinders: The Untold Story of the Search Business Model". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2022-04-13. Similarly, when Microsoft bought LinkExchange, they acquired a team with quite a few talented young individuals, including Scott Banister (subsequent founder of IronPort), Tony Hsieh (subsequent CEO of Zappos), Alfred Lin (subsequent COO of Zappos), and a contractor named Max Levchin (subsequent founder of PayPal and Slide). All were under 25 years old, and not one received a meaningful role at Microsoft. Not one stayed at Microsoft more than a few months. They walked away from (collectively) tens of millions of dollars of unvested stock, and went on to create (collectively) several billion dollars of value in their new ventures.
  4. ^ Radcliff, Deborah (May 8, 2000). "E-strategists: They are the brains behind successful e-commerce projects, the ultimate pitchmen. Consider the experiences of Scott Banister". Computerworld. 34: 92 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ "LinkExchange Acquires Submit It!". ClickZ. 1998-06-24. Retrieved 2022-04-13.
  6. ^ Wingfield, Nick (November 5, 1998). "Microsoft Buys LinkExchange For About $250 Million in Stock". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved April 13, 2022. LinkExchange and its 100 employees will be integrated into the Redmond, Wash., software giant's MSN network.
  7. ^ "Scott Banister and Jonathan Stark: ACMers reunited at idealab!". Department of Computer Science, Alumni News. 2 (4): 14–15. January 2001.