Business Magazine

Don’t Let One Customer Kill Your Online Reputation

Posted on the 24 January 2013 by Martin Zwilling @StartupPro

Internet-ReputationThese days, your online Internet reputation is your reputation. Of course, having no reputation is usually better than a bad one, but don’t wait for someone else to establish a good one for you. It’s time for every business and business person to proactively create a positive presence, before someone else puts you in a defensive mode that is hard to win.

The first step in the process is to claim your online identity. This is simple in concept, but requires real effort and can be time consuming, and even expensive, if someone gets there before you and tries to sell you the rights to your preferred business or personal domain name. See my previous article on “Get A Domain Name Without Bankrupting Your Startup ”

Michael Fertik and David Thompson bring this issue and many others together in their book “Wild West 2.0.” After you claim your identity with placeholder domain names, accounts in social networks, and common blogging platforms, your next challenge is to create enough positive content as a “Google wall” to keep negative info out of the top Google search results.

Positive content, such as information and pictures on your accomplishments, achievements, and friends, paints you in a good light. Neutral content, including your membership in business associations, and company affiliations, can at best balance false negative information, or at least make the negatives harder to find.

Here are some of the easiest methods Michael and I recommend for creating positive and neutral content:

  • Blogging. There are several major free blogging platforms you can use to claim your identity, including WordPress, Google Blogger, and LiveJournal. If you add new content periodically, it is likely to become a secure and important part of your online resume, and it will come out at the top of any Google searches on your identity.
  • Twittering. An even easier way of getting your positive messages to the top of Google rankings is “micro-blogging” through Twitter. This is especially useful in providing links to other positive and neutral content.
  • Profile sites. There are several free and paid services, such as LinkedIn and Naymz, that allow users to manage your professional profile and measure your social reputation. Simply engaging in forum discussions and exchanging comments establishes positive content.
  • Other user-created content sites. Sites like Flickr, Instagram, and YouTube allow users to create and share photos and videos, and create short profiles. You can use these sites to your advantage by uploading relevant and positive content and prominently including your name in the subject or description.
  • Professional directories. Many professions offer free online directories of members or similar sites for professional networking. These sites are often highly ranked in search engine results because they are heavily linked. If there is a directory relevant to your business or profession, use it.

If you have already been a victim of online reputation damage (accidentally or maliciously), proactively reach out to friends and co-workers to explain the problem. They can assist you by linking to positive and neutral content about you, thus displacing or minimizing the negative content.

In fact, damage to reputation and brand has moved up to #4 from #6 in the Top 10 risks identified in Aon's 2011 Global Risk Management Risk Ranking, moving ahead of business interruption and failure to innovate to meet customer needs. This intangible asset can represent more than 60% of a company's market value.


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