Twitter Followers Tools for Internet Centered Reputation Management

November 5, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

This article is being written in early June, 2009.

Why is that related to the topic?

Because if you’re reading this any later than six months post-publication, chances are half the information here is badly outdated, perhaps even completely inaccurate. The Internet is the embodiment of rapid change and innovation, and even a self-admitted geek like your author has a hard time keeping up with all of the communications tools available, only some of which are clearly useful for reputation management.

The potential roles online tools end up playing aren’t always obvious at first. Twitter started strictly as a social networking tool. But then people were using Twitter to communicate from the site of natural disasters. Soon, others were “Tweeting” breaking news of all sorts, while some Twitter users found it was a great way to instantly complain about…anything. Including you. Twitter had evolved, in months, into a way for those who intend you harm to start immediately blasting your reputation.

Even with well-established tools, such as Google search, most people aren’t aware that it’s possible not just to set up Google news alerts, but to set up a Google “comprehensive” search that will cover anything that is indexed by Google about your topic – blogs, images, video, groups, etc. There’s a well-written explanation of how to do that at http://www.alertrank.com/google-alerts-getting-started.html.

If there’s a topic, a company name, a person’s name, a brand name that you want to keep tabs on, this is a great (and free!) option.

Here, in alphabetical order, are some other tools I’m currently using:

CustomScoop (www.customscoop.com) – Still my preferred online media monitoring. There are some others with more robust features (and higher fees), but this one works for my needs.

Pipl (www.pipl.com) and Zabasearch (www.zabasearch) – Shockingly useful search engines for information about individuals. Some of the info is free, some is (usually low) fee-paid. I can pretty much guarantee you that this is where private investigators start looking for missing people without having to call in a favor at the local police department. I find Pipl’s initial results have more depth.

TweetBeep (www.tweetbeep.com) – The Twitter equivalent of Google Alerts.

TweetDeck (www.tweetdeck.com) – Allows me to track Tweets by individual or subject, with quick links for sending my own Tweets out.

TweetTag (www.tweettag.com) – Search what’s been on Twitter over the past 24 hours.

Twoogle (http://twoogle.browsys.com) – This is a very new service that lets you search Google and Twitter at the same time.

WhosTalkin.com (http://www.whostalkin.com) – A social media search engine that tracks a wide range of blogs, major news portals, social networking sites, even images and forums.

You don’t have to be a geek to take advantage of these tools, but you do need to employ one who has sufficient training and experience to collect accurate information about how your most important asset – your reputation – is being managed online. Technophobes have no place as corporate leaders in the 21st Century. Otherwise, you are allowing that asset to be managed by people who either don’t care about it or are actively hostile to your interests.

Finally, if readers find other tools they’d like to recommend to me for the specific purpose of online reputation management, please contact me

– I’m always eager to learn (and, perhaps, write a follow-up piece).

Jonathan Bernstein is president of Bernstein Crisis Management, Inc. (BCM), http://www.bernsteincrisismanagement.com, providing crisis prevention, response, planning and training services. The BCM website has more than 500 articles on crisis management available free to visitors.

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Reputation Management – Online Reputation Management | SEO Services | SEO Traffic Spider

October 25, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

It hardly needs to be mentioned that you succeed or fail in your marketing by the amount of trust you generate among your target audience in your brand name. A slight chink in the trust may tell adversely on your reputation as an honest businessman and your sales will start falling immediately.

Another reason for a fall in your reputation may be the smear campaign launched by your competitors against you. They may tarnish your name and your business without any valid reason or fault on your part.

This kind of injustice is a common phenomenon in the internet marketing. Your competitor writes just one article against you and submits it to hundreds of directories.

Alternately, your adversary sponsors AdWords ads against your site on the first page of some popular search engine. The ad may be somewhat like this: Be Careful Of This Fraud (keyword). This is sufficient to annul years of hard work put in by you to bring your business to its present level.

Taking steps to maintain and further boost your reputation as an honest businessman in such circumstances is called online reputation management.

One way to persuade your competitor is to request him politely to remove the offending comments and then threaten him with legal action if he still persists. If this tactic also fails, it would be better to fight him out at his own ground, that is, by playing the SEO game with him.

You can try to push the page/site with offensive comments to the second results page of search engine, for example, Google.  This can be achieved through several steps;

1. Push other sites that have lower rank than your competitor’s site above it on the Google research page. Assuming the site with the negative comments against you ranks fourth on Google page, you should try to boost the rank of the sites below it to supersede it to a higher rank.

You can do so by applying SEO techniques. You can, for example, add favorable comments on this site. Book mark it in as many social media sites such as Technocrati, Digg, Delicious etc as possible. You may even write positive reviews about it on the home page of your site by placing links at suitable places.

2. Ask someone you know who commands authority for his site to write a good review for your site and publish the same on your home page saying: What others are saying about us.

3. Create new content and syndicate it through articles, blogs, newsletters, etc for seoing your own site. You may also submit the content for syndication through RSS feeds. In this way you can indirectly persuade the audience to ignore the comments against your site.

4. Create new sub-domains or sister domains of your site. Google often considers the sub-domains as different sites, but they command the same authority as the primary domain. Post preferably new content on the sub-domain site. You need not fill it with hundreds of pages. Just 10-12 pages should suffice.

Reputation management basically involves delivering (sometimes over-delivering) what you promise in terms of quality and quantity. Once this trust is built up, it is difficult for your adversaries to shake it.

SEO Traffic Spider, is a global provider offering its customers a full suite of SEO Services ranging from Indexing, Optimization – On Page/Off Page, Linking, SEO Copywriting, Site Overhauling, Traffic Analytics, etc.

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