Archive for Reputation

An Infographic Guide To Monitoring Your Online Reputation

61 percent of businesses are monitoring their online reputation on a regular basis.  Are you?  Trackur and Avalaunch Media have put together the ultimate guide to monitoring your online reputation, in infographic form, so you no longer have an excuse to let your online rep fall by the wayside.

The infographic breaks online reputation monitoring down into several steps.  For starters, you’ll want to identify your reputations—for instance, if you are a business you should be monitoring your brand and product names, as well as the names of your executives and top employees.  If you are an individual, you’ll want to monitor your name and any variations on your name.

Once you’ve got that down, put some thought into who your audience is or, in other words, “who has a stake in your reputation?”  Do you want to look good to journalists?  Investors?  Competitors?  Thinking about this will help you realize the importance of keeping up your reputation online.

You should also think about your goals, and how your online reputation plays into them.  For instance, having a good online rep will help you build your networks, learn from and respond to customer feedback, cut down on reputation attacks and more.

Now it’s time to think about how you are going to monitor your reputation—will you do it manually?  Will you put a social media monitoring platform to use?  Which team member is going to be in charge of this project?  And once you begin monitoring your reputation, how are you going to react to the conversation and feedback around yourself or your brand?

Check out the full infographic below for the rundown and let us know what you think in the comments.  Are you currently monitoring your online reputation or your business’ online reputation?  If not, are you planning to start?

The Ultimate Guide To Monitoring Your Online Reputation

Megan O’Neill is the resident web video expert here at Social Times.  Megan covers everything from the latest viral videos to online video news and tips, and has a passion for bizarre, original and revolutionary content and ideas.

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Prevent Social Media Catastrophes

[Sponsored] Kenneth Cole’s Cairo catastrophe. Hollister’s model misadventure. Marc Jacobs’ “tyrant” trouble. How would your company handle them?

Will a Bad Online Reputation Leave Coal in Your Stocking?

With the holiday shopping season right around the corner, now is the perfect time to practice reputation management. Here are three reputation management tips that every business should use so that it does not wind up on Santa's naughty list.

Business Reputation Doesn’t Come Cheap

Recent controversy over Facebook adjusting its EdgeRank algorithm to allegedly minimize organic reach and increase sales of promoted posts prompted me to write this post. While the rumors, in my opinion, have beenput to rest, the concept of companies like Facebook charging brands to access the audiences they have invested in building is unfair.

Social Media Catastrophes and How They Should Have Been Dealt With

As a company, each and every post should be carefully thought through. These questions should be asked- ‘Why am I posting this?’ and ‘What reaction am I hoping to receive?’ To post blindly and rashly is social media suicide.

Social Media "Worst Practices": Making People Laugh

Humor in Social Media is a tricky thing. If you want to try to be funny in social media - go for it (carefully) - the world needs more laughter. The world needs more laughter - but don't let it be at your (or your company's) expense!

How to Win Friends and Influence People… in Social Media (Exclusive Summary)

If Dale Carnegie were to take a community manager job today, we’re pretty sure he would have had no problem mastering his ‘new’ role. "How to Win Friends and Influence People… in Social Media" will show you the top 10 principles of effective community management based on the world's leading book on persuasive communication.

3 Tips to Manage Your Social Media Reputation

social media how toAre you managing your online reputation?

Reputation can affect purchase decisions and influence the growth or decline of a business.

Many businesses are using social media to develop online reputations, manage and respond during a crisis and monitor the conversation to prevent future crises.

Try searching your company and product names to make an assessment of your online reputation. What do you see in the top 10 search results?

What follows are three tips to help you manage your reputation with social media.

#1: Establish Your Online Reputation

When someone Googles your brand name, your business should be sitting right there on the first page waiting for the user. And yourbrandname.com shouldn’t be the only branded search result.

Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and other social brand pages should assist in owning the first search engine results page. Especially if you have a common name, owning your brand name search queries is important for users to find the right information.

Social media can help you create a stronger online presence, so old news doesn’t turn up at the top of search results. If you don’t control your brand, someone else may post inaccurate or derogatory information that could tarnish your reputation.

Take a look at the search results from Lululemon. The first result is for their website, but the next four listings are all social media channels that they own or have the ability to edit and monitor.

lululemon search

These owned channels help push down search results that misrepresent your brand.

According to a click-through rate study published by Slingshot at the end of last year, the number-one ranking on Google gets about an 18% click-through rate and the number-two organic listing gets about 10%. Regardless of the actual percentage, the data proves that the first search engine results page is the most important for your brand’s reputation.

The reason you want to control several of your first page search results is if a crisis strikes and you have set up several social channels, your brand will have plenty of platforms ranking well to disseminate your message.

These branded channels help push down negative or competitor results that you don’t want representing your brand.

Creating social media profiles has given people the channels to voice their joys and complaints about your company. Owning your social media profiles can help you better control and manage the conversation, so you can respond in a timely manner.

If you aren’t marketing with social media, those conversations are going to happen on other channels that may prohibit you from getting involved in the conversation.

#2: Control Responses During a Crisis

A crisis for a company can range from unexpected website issues to a lawsuit. How a crisis is handled online makes a huge difference to the future ramifications. It’s important to monitor and respond to customers who write on your wall or send you messages to resolve any issues and let users know they’re heard.

Facebook was one of the channels Anthropologie used for announcing a huge online sale in May. Right after they posted about the event, the site went down for maintenance. It didn’t take long for Facebook users to complain and point out that they couldn’t get to the site to buy any products.

The social media team did not respond to every comment personally, but was smart to send out a note to fans that they were working on the issue and the site would be back up soon.

anthropologie

Customer complaints were acknowledged and customers were told that the company was addressing the issue.

When the site was back up, a user still couldn’t access the page, so the social team provided a direct email contact to resolve the issue off of Facebook. Providing an email was a good solution because it gave the user somewhere to go to have her issue addressed.

If you can’t solve a user’s problem with a simple post, take the issue offline and out of the public eye as soon as possible.

anthropologie response

Within 10 minutes, Anthropologie responded with another method of customer service.

Sometimes brand ambassadors will even step in to resolve a conflict for you. Though it is helpful when customers support you enough to calm a disgruntled customer, do not assume that will be the case every time. Set up tools and a strategy to monitor the conversation, so you aren’t surprised with the conversations happening about your brand.

#3: Monitor Conversations

Now that you’ve created and are updating several social profiles on behalf of your brand, you may find it a bit overwhelming to keep up to date with what is being said about your brand online.

Savvy businesses are monitoring their brand for mentions with social media monitoring tools.

“Social media monitoring tools are the first line of defense when managing your online reputation,” explains Andy Beal, CEO and founder of Trackur. “Monitoring tools allow you to quickly fan the flames of any praise or fight reputation fires while they are still manageable.”

Before a negative review goes viral or enters the top 10 search results for your brand name, wouldn’t it be helpful to respond and solve the problem or take the issue offline to address?

Social media monitoring tools range from free to more advanced enterprise-level to tools that only monitor certain platforms. Although online monitoring tools capture a vast amount of mentions on the web, no tool can capture every mention due to privacy policy settings.

Here are a few tools worth checking out:

  • Google Alerts is a free tool that monitors all sites that Google can index with options to be notified as it happens or weekly.
  • Trackur is an affordable tracking tool that monitors several social channels, as well as forums and news sites.
  • SocialMention is a free tool that monitors over 70 social media properties.

There are several Twitter-specific monitoring apps, like Seesmic and HootSuite, as well.

Social media is real-time, so the faster your brand responds, the better your customer service will appear.

While people have the right to voice their complaints, it’s up to you to remedy the situation and turn negative comments into positive opportunities. Since social media is public, your quality customer service will be seen by other users and may influence their purchase decisions.

One company that monitors their brand name very well, especially on Twitter, is Morton’s Steakhouse. Taking a quick look at their Twitter page shows that they respond to many online mentions and try to provide the best customer service they can.

morton's tweet

In the second tweet, Morton's offers an email to take the conversation offline.

People love to feel like they are being heard and mentions of a brand are invited opportunities for a company to respond.

What Are Your Experiences?

What do you think? Do you own a business and use social media to provide customer service and news about your company? Are you a customer who has had a positive or negative experience with a company and voiced that experience online? Did the company respond? Share your experiences in the comments box below!

Social Media and Libel

Thanks to social media we now all have libel daily with our breakfast. Social media will make organisation more aware of the sort of things that have always been said about them. It won't always be pretty. Rather than lash out, organisations will learn to love ordinary breaksfast libel as the ultimate market survey. For serious online libel, we'll have far more information about who saw it and how they reacted. Then we can ask: was the reputation damage bad enough to drag it all up again?

Facebook ‘Likes’ Don’t Drive Brand Loyalty

Liking something indicates esteem. However, liking something does not necessarily result in behavioral change, namely buying or recommending the product. Why do you think so many consumers were upset when Facebook suggested that it would use people's "likes" as indication of their recommendations to friends? People buy because an item is relevant to their needs, not because they like something.