Tag Archives: reputation

Content Syndication Is Your Friend

Content duplication has been a buzz topic in SEO for a while now. You can read about it til you puke and never have to leave WebProNews.com. It's one of the modern webmaster's favorite things to fret over and has been for at least two years. Google doesn't like duplicate content. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged assurances, content syndication, googlers, niche, reputation, require-further, seo, traffic, video | Leave a comment

Average Person Spends 13 Hours a Week Online

Harris Interactive has released the findings of its latest poll on Internet users. This doesn't come as much of a shock, but people are spending more time online these days. According to the poll, adult Internet users are spending an average of 13 hours a week online." Of course, people's usage varies greatly; one in five (20%) of adult Internet users are online for only two hours or less a week while one in seven (14%) are spending 24 or more hours a week online," says Harris. The firm presents the following as highlights from the poll: - The age groups that spend the most time online are those aged 30-39 (18 hours) and those aged 25-29 (17 hours) and 40-49 (17 hours). - Half (50%) of all those online bought something on the Internet in the last month. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged 24 hours, average person, harris interactive, includes, internet, nbsp, number, people, polls, reputation, research, review and story, time spent online | Leave a comment

A Few Guidelines for Drafting Social Media Guidelines

For all of the great opportunities that can come from social media, there are plenty of negatives that come with it as well. This is of course why many businesses are hesitant to adopt social media strategies and/or let their employees engage with different social networking tools. It is also why many of the companies that do have social media strategies in tact, and do allow employees to use these tools have guidelines in place. Does your company have social media guidelines? Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged audience, Business, companies, drafting, employees, media platforms, media strategies, networking tools, personas, pick-the-brains, reputation, reputation management, review and story, social-networks, wayne sutton | Leave a comment

Employee Fired From American Airlines For Transparent Email

What is it with airlines? If they’re not breaking guitars , their pilots are missing airports , or they’re berating people that are trying to help them. Well, we have one more reputation disaster to add to the list, courtesy of American Airlines. You may recall the open letter web designer Dusting Curtis wrote to the airline. In it, Curtis suggested that AA was losing millions because of its poorly designed web site. He even went as far as suggesting a new design for the site. Shortly after, one of AA’s designers took it upon himself to reply and explain the complexities of AA web site design decisions. His reply was open, honest…radically transparent. American Airlines has allegedly fired him for it! This may have happened back in May, but it’s only just come to light that the AA designer was apparently fired an hour after he wrote his reply. AA searched their exchange database for the text I posted, found the guy, and fired Mr. X on the spot. From what I have learned, they also threatened him with legal action if he spoke to me again. Apparently he broke his non-disclosure agreement by discussing the design process at AA. OK, so maybe he shouldn’t have broken his NDA with the airline. But, maybe AA shouldn’t have been so near-sighted and pedantic about its employee policies. Surely the airline is aware that it’s industry hardly has the best reputation for caring about its customers. Heck, even Jet Blue–the poster child of airline awesomeness–has screwed-up royally in the past. In some ways, you can’t blame American Airlines. It is completely ignorant of how customers want to interact with the airline. We don’t want to hand flight attendants slips of paper that say “well done”–something AA encourages me to do as a frequent flier–we want to engage with the airline. We want it to do better, and we have ideas. Ideas about clean blankets, baggage fees, and yes, web site design. How does AA marry its apparent openness on Twitter , with this crackdown on a real employee that wants to help? Yes, you should have guidelines in place, but those guidelines should be designed to encourage thoughtful customer interaction, not prevent it! If we hear that you’re firing employees because of their transparency, how are we supposed to take your official social networking efforts seriously? What, do we now assume that everything that is shared on Twitter or Facebook is nothing more than sterile, PR sanctioned, sound bites? The airline industry may well be the very last to “get” the concept of Radically Transparent . When they do finally have that “aha!” moment, we’ll know that we’ve finally entered the age of open, honest, dialogs. Andy Beal – AA Platinum Card Holder; Million Mile Flier. ( via ) Comments Continue reading

Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged airlines, best-reputation, Business, complexities, design decisions, dusting-curtis, exchange database, flight attendants, poster child, reputation, web designer | Leave a comment

Picking Your Online Reputation Battles

Part of managing your online reputation involves your strategy for handling the negative commentary that you acquire. If you write articles on the Internet, use Facebook, Twitter, or other social media outlets, or simply have a prodcut that people talk about, there is a very good chance you will encounter comments somewhere on the web that are less than favorable. That's just the nature of the game. Some people choose to go on the defensive and immediately get caught up in a so-called "flame war." Others just ignore them. You may do a mixture of the two. The right call really depends on the nature of the comment and its potential impact on your brand or product. Negative commentary has been discussed throughout the industry a lot lately. It was a common theme at the recent BlogWorld Expo . Rebecca Kelley, Director of Social Media for 10e20, has written a humorous post on the subject for Jeremy Schoemaker's ShoeMoney blog. "The fact of the matter is that the Internet is like a great big public bathroom stall," she says. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged Business, director, facebook, game, internet, nature, negative, online-marketing, reputation, review and story, social, subject, time | Leave a comment