Tag Archives: digital assets

How to hire a reputation management firm

We hear it too often. “My friend paid an online reputation management firm $10,000 and it didn’t work. He feels burned by the experience.”

Online reputation management (ORM) is a young industry. It promises a multitude of results, many tied to the creation of “digital assets” and the “whitewashing of negative information.” As a consequence, consumers are often confused when seeking a solution appropriate for their goals.

Replacing information on Google is not a quick fix. Removing it may not be possible because of U.S. internet laws. Unwanted content must be replaced with new, high-ranking material…and lots of it. That takes time to rise high on online searches — three to six months in most cases, and up to a year in others.  Then, the new information must be consistently refreshed to stay in place.

Buyer Beware

Online reputation firms that promise quick fixes can use methods that focus on quantity rather than quality. One method is to create as much information associated with a client’s name, “throw it online” using fake blogs, Facebook pages and other platforms created for that purpose, and hope a lot of it sticks. This approach often incorporates poorly-written information that contributes little to your brand. An example is a series of blog posts that use your name in each title and repeat your name several times within a paragraph. Or, a firm you speak with claims to have created a secretive system they have created that “runs circles around” Google’s algorithm. The details are a little murky, though.

The use of “fake news” sites is also a tool of the trade. In that system, an article or press release about you is posted dozens of times on sites that have been designed to look like news websites. Or, they may be actual blogs and websites used by various groups. (We have seen an article about a male CEO stuffed on the back page on a blog for new mothers, for example.) Such tactics can work until search engines lower the page rank of such content in favor of higher-quality, more credible material.

A better and more effective method is to develop a strategic content plan appropriate for you …not just a plethora of junk. High-quality content adds value to your brand while addressing your top concern: taking more control over what appears about you online. Here are tips to keep in mind when considering a reputation management firm:

Top Tips

When selecting a reputation management firm, check if they are experienced at servicing your sector. Review the design and content of their website and consider: Is it an appropriate fit? Would you trust them to create and publish online content about you or your organization?

Do they promise specific results? If so, are they transparent about how they will attain those results? Or is their language laden with so much technical jargon you don’t understand what they will be doing on your behalf?

Once you select a firm, ensure you have the right to review and approve all that will be published online about you before embarking on a campaign. Enter a contract that protects your privacy and gives you ownership of all material created on your behalf, including access to all platforms established for you during the entire period of your engagement once it is over.

Be wary of contracts that allow firms to penalize late payments with removal of all online content created so far about you. If their services include publishing a profile or website about you that is linked to their brand, consider the impact to your image of having such an association that may last for years.

Most important, educate yourself about this industry. Our You(Online) resources were created to contribute to the public body of knowledge that educates consumers, including our own client niche.  Join readers worldwide who benefit from our articles, blog and expert commentary. It is the most comprehensive in the industry. Start with The Essentials: Online Reputation Management FAQs, our most widely-read article. This interview with our founder and CEO provides insight into our expertise.

 
 
Reputation Communications' online reputation management glossary

Algorithm

The formula search engines use to rank websites and determine whether they merit appearing on page 1 or elsewhere in search results.

Authenticity

The quality of being genuine; a valued quality among bloggers and the larger online community.

Astroturfing

Writing fake comments and reviews.

Branded Content

Content that promotes and cultivates a rapport between a targeted audience and a brand’s products and/or services.

Black Hat SEO

Using unethical methods to attempt to raise the ranking of websites in search engine results.

Content

Information delivered in any medium, whether text, videos, podcasts or images. (When two or more media are juxtaposed it is described as “multimedia content.”)

Content Aggregator

A software or web application which collects, combines and publishes a range of syndicated web content (such as news headlines, blogs, podcasts and video blogs).

Content Farms

Companies which create low-quality Internet content with the goal of having their content rank highly in online searches.

Digital Assets

Online images, multimedia and textual content files.

Domain Squatting (also known as cyber squatting)

Registering or using a domain name with the intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else. The cyber squatter then offers to sell the domain to the person or company who owns the trademark contained at an inflated price.

Doxxing

Tracing someone or gathering information about an individual using sources on the Internet, then publishing their private information with malicious intent.

Forum

An online discussion site.

Link

A URL name or description providing an instant connection to a different Web site or section of a Web site. A Web site’s page rank on Google (and other) searches is influenced by the number of links pointing to it (“inbound links”), and the quality of the sites they are linking from.

Linkbait

A marketing technique to increase a website’s popularity by providing content that entices visitors to include a link to the website at their own sites.

Link farms

A website created solely for the purpose of increasing the page rank of other sites with indiscriminate outbound links. Most search engines penalize sites connected to link farms.

Name space

A person or company’s name online.

Online audit

An assessment of a subject’s online image: typically a person, business or organization.

Online communities

Social networks where people communicate online. Also called “virtual communities.”

Online image

A subject’s online reputation. Mainly determined by the content appearing in top results in a Google (or other search engine) search of the subject’s name.

Online monitoring

Real-time monitoring of the information available about a person, business, organization or other topic on the Internet, including on social media.

Online reputation management

Establishing, improving and monitoring the publicly available online information about a business or individual.

Page rank

A continually changing value based on a complex algorithm assigned to a Web site or page to determines its position in a search engines’ results – the higher the page rank, the more likely people will find the web site or page.

Search engine optimization (SEO)

Strategically designing a Web site so it gains a higher page rank and consequently attract more new visitors.

SEO-optimized

Website or page that has been designed to be accessible to search engines and improve the chance that the website will be found and ranked by search engines.

Social media

Online communication between people using a variety of platforms, including blogs, forums and Twitter.

Social network

A network of individuals connected through a social media platform such as Facebook.

Sock puppet

An email or social media account set up to publish fake online content.

Transparency

Openness and sincerity in online communications.

Troll

A person who sows discord on the Internet by posting inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages in an online community.

White Hat SEO

Search engine optimization techniques that involve no deception.

Viral Media

Content that attracts new viewers mainly through word-of-mouth in social networks and possibly result in significant and rapid visibility.

For more in-depth information, read The Essentials: Online Reputation Management FAQ.