Home

New Tech Heroes

New Media and Social Publishing

Navigation

  • Home
  • About
    • Site rules
    • Privacy policy
    • Contact
    • About Tom Kephart
Home

Thought provoking

  • Joomla! 1.5.4 Released
  • Ira Glass on Getting Creative Work Done
  • Get Productive with Social Media (and Stay Sane)
  • What Social Media Does Best
  • Could Your Google Search Indict You?
  • The end of SEO?
  • It's All Too Much
  • 20+ Must-Have WordPress 2.5 Compatible Plugins
more

Tag cloud

Adobe AIR amateurs Apple blog blogger blogging blogs browsers buyout CMS content management development Drupal Facebook Firefox flashback friendfeed funny Gmail Google history Internet Internet Explorer jobs Joomla Mahalo marketing Microsoft new media online Open Source patch Plone privacy radio reputation Safari Scoble security SEO SharePoint SilverStripe social social networking social publishing spam TechCrunch Tom Kephart upgrade venture capital video virtual conversation Vista vulnerability web Web 2.0 web design WordPress Yahoo

marketing

St. Patty's Day featured links - March 17, 2008

Submitted by Tom Kephart on Mon, 03/17/2008 - 11:43am.
  • deceptive
  • job cuts
  • marketing
  • newspaper
  • personal branding
  • WordPress

Personal Branding Knowledge Is Just Beginning... - by Jonathan Coffman from jonathancoffman.com - "This really exemplifies the need for personal branding and social-media strategy to be a part of the final curriculum at our nation’s universities. These students know and understand how viral messages get spread, how to network online, and how to control how they look, but they don’t understand quite yet how to apply those skills to multiple outlets across the web."

Running Websites With WordPress? - by J. Angelo Racoma from Blog Herald - "...the common denominator is the use of WordPress as the content management system. I’m sure there’s not much need to explain why. Being used to running WordPress on an entire blog/new media network, it’s almost like second nature to me. So preparing the hosting account, installing the software, uploading themes and plugins, and actually setting up and maintaining a site running WordPress is something that I’m very much comfortable with."

Who's that selling at your (online) door? - by Gloria Goodale from The Christian Science Monitor - "Whether it's Microsoft paying a journalist to edit the company's entry on Wikipedia or the CEO of Whole Foods giving an anonymous online thrashing to competitor Wild Oats or Sony Corporation funding an 'independent' fan blog, deceptive marketing practices on the Internet are a growing problem, new-media analysts say."

Are job cuts death knell for America's newspapers? - by Russ Britt from MarketWatch - "The digital wave washing over newspapers has turned into a tsunami in the past several weeks, as hundreds of newsroom layoffs coast-to-coast are raising fears that the push for profits and a dismal economy are teaming up to accomplish the unthinkable -- putting the print industry in its grave."

Bookmark/Search this post with:
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Magnoliacom
  • Newsvine
  • Google
  • Technorati
  • Icerocket
  • Add a comment

Controlling the online conversation

Submitted by Tom Kephart on Mon, 02/18/2008 - 7:14pm.
  • conversation
  • marketing
  • online
  • privacy
  • reputation

Are your ears burning? Chances are good that they should be, because you're being talked about right now. Have you done a Google Search on your name lately? Or your company's name? Do it now, I'll wait....


Loading...


Were at least a few of those results about you (and not somebody else with the same name)? Did you know that you were listed on those sites? And even if the results were about another person with your name, consider the potential damage to your own reputation if that person isn't exactly an upstanding member of society. Could your friends and customers tell the difference?

Information about you is already public knowledge. Probably - and hopefully - not your bank account numbers, social security number or your important usernames and passwords. But it's likely that, even without your participation, someone has mentioned you online, perhaps on a user group or forum or in a blog post, or included your name on a club or organization website. Asking to be removed from those online references is unlikely to be successful, because:

  1. They're too busy to delete information from web sites or other online sources;
  2. They don't want to, feeling they have the First Amendment right to talk about you;
  3. The original author can't be found;
  4. The information has been cached by Google or other search engines, and has reached data nirvana (it's eternal!).

So what's a person to do? If we can't get others to stop talking about us, how do we defend ourselves online?

The key is to control the conversation. Accept that your business and your professional and personal reputation are going to fair game for others online, and be aggressive in establishing yourself as an authority on the one person you know best - YOU. Here's a checklist of ideas to stay one step ahead of the social media revolution, so you can put these tools to use for you in your efforts to control the online conversation about yourself.

  • Learn about personal social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace, and consider establishing a presence there for yourself and your business.
  • Get connected through business social networking sites like LinkedIn and XING. These sites have become an online alternative to the "black book" or Rolodex, especially among professionals who depend on a large number of contacts for their business success, such as salespeople, recruiters and purchasing professionals. Of course, every business owner, manager or anyone looking to move up professionally can benefit from a strong personal network, so these sites are worth considering for all but the most isolated.
  • Do a regular check of yourself and your company or organization on Google, at the least. Yahoo! and Ask.com are also worth checking. Know what results others are seeing if they search for you online.
  • Consider starting a business or a personal blog. Regular writing about your professional and personal accomplishments will help establish your control over your online reputation. Yes, it can be difficult at first, especially if you've never been much of a diary-keeper or if you are naturally shy. But if you can set the tone about what people read about you online, and you'll have a ready method to respond to things other people say about you.

You did a search about yourself earlier. Now consider that anyone else typing your name or your company's name into Google are seeing the same results. If they're making a decision about doing business with you, are those results going to influence that decision positively or negatively?

Bookmark/Search this post with:
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Magnoliacom
  • Newsvine
  • Google
  • Technorati
  • Icerocket
  • 2 comments

New Tech Heroes

Editor: Tom Kephart

Grab the RSS feed
or subscribe by email

Add to Technorati Favorites

View Tom Kephart's profile on LinkedIn

Lijit Search


follow TomKephart at http://twitter.com

Popular content

Today's:

  • [flashback] The Spot - lonelygirl15's beach party ancestors
  • Drupal 6.2 release fixes bugs and security issues
  • Wednesday's featured links - March 12, 2008

All time:

  • Drupal issues maintenance upgrade to 5.7
  • Scoble cries; blogosphere freaks; Jesus returns
  • Google Sites: Stone Cold Killa? Perhaps not.

Blogroll

CMS versions

  • Drupal 6.2
    (legacy 5.7)
  • Joomla! 1.5.4
    (legacy 1.0.15)
  • WordPress 2.5.1
    (legacy 2.0.11)
  • Movable Type 4.12
  • Plone 3.1.2
  • CMS Made Simple 1.3.1
  • MODx 0.9.6.1
  • SilverStripe 2.2.2
  • ExpressionEngine 1.6.4
  • Alfresco Community 2.9B
  • Midgard CMS 1.8.8

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

© 2008 Kephart & Associates, Marine City, Michigan. Our privacy policy.
Powered by Drupal. Customized theme based on Tapestry by RoopleTheme.
Web hosting by pair Networks.

Kephart & Associates