I am in the middle of a crazy couple of months of seminars, conferences and other assorted presentations. If you're interested in seeing any of them, my speaking schedule is online.
Last week I spent Wednesday at ad:tech in London where I spoke about advanced analytics and online reputation management. In my analytics presentation, I was refining ideas for what I'm going to talk about at our own advanced SEO seminar so I'm not putting that one online just yet, but I thought the online reputation stuff would make a good Monday morning post. The audience was mainly brand and advertising people so I didn't assume too much knowledge of SEO or ORM, but instead ran through why you would want to monitor for your brand, how to determine if something is going to be a problem and some tips and tricks we've picked up along the way.
For those of you who haven't seen me speak, my slides are not always the most self-explanatory things so although I have included them here, I am also going to run through the key themes and tips:
Who's talking about your brand?
- London Fashion Week: I wanted to start with something topical so I used some examples from London Fashion Week (including brands and models) to demonstrate the impact of news events (interestingly, I found no significant correlation between spikes in search volume for the brands or models during fashion week). Out of this came two kinds of worked example, however:
- The power of news stories and official websites such as londonfashionweek.co.uk - both of which were ranking for big brand names throughout the week
- A look at an example set of negative search results - for a model who has no official website ranking, has wikipedia at #1 for her name and has a story about a sex tape on the first page
- How to tell if something's a problem: although most of this will be obvious to anyone with an SEO background, I presented some ways to tell whether a new story you find while monitoring for your name or brand is likely to end up ranking for your name. The factors I encouraged people to look out for were:
- Is the keyword in the title / URL
- Is the keyword in the headline and copy
- How powerful is the domain (noting that most new stories won't have gathered many links of their own yet so we have to make assumptions based on the power of the domain)
- Of course I recommended people install the mozbar to get easy access to all these factors
- The pyramid of pain: the stories you are looking out for especially hard are the negative ones which include the keyword prominently and which reside on a powerful domain. Not only are people very likely to be reading and sharing the story, but it's highly likely to end up ranking
- Tips and tricks: through our work for a variety of clients, we have been lucky(?) enough to have encountered at least our fair share of gotchas. I thought the least I could do was share a few tips:
- Have a plan in advance of bad stuff happening - mid-crisis is not the time to be wondering whose job it is to check the wheelnuts
- We have found the most valuable part of our daily / weekly reports to be the forecast - trying to "write tomorrow's executive summary today"
- When emailing busy executives with critical reputation information make sure your subject line gives them the first thing they need to know, and by the time they've read the first sentence on the preview pane of their iphone they are fully up to speed
- Know who to speak to out of hours. What happens if you discover something critical during monitoring and you can't reach your normal contact? Make sure you have a plan. I illustrated this with a true story about some monitoring we were doing for a client (not Tesco) and discovered a credible threat against Tesco employees and property. I had to cold-call them and try to get through to the right person without sounding like a bomb-threat nutter. To their credit, I got a quick call back from the head of security, but whenever it's your client, you shouldn't have to take that risk
I hope there's some tips in there for everyone. If it raises any questions, feel free to drop me a line or leave them in the comments.
My next presentations
There are a few tickets left for the PRO SEO seminar but we are expecting it to sell out this week.
On Wednesday, at 4.30pm UK time (8.30am PST / 11.30am EST) I am hosting a free conference call entitled How to be an Excel Ninja (and how it helps your SEO) where I will be slicing and dicing Linkscape data among other things. If you'd like to join the call or get the recording afterwards, you can sign up here.
Both of your presentations at ad:tech London were absolutely great! Best of the pack together with the brilliant stuff from Efficient Frontier. Thanks a lot for putting them online.
Intersting stuff - and look forward to the Pro seminar :D
However my comment comes about because of the Tips & Tricks... which is serious kudo's for tipping off Tesco - def a great sign of your reputation there! Too many people would be "not my client".
So a healthy thumbs up Will for that.
This is perfect. I liked where you mentioned about online branding.
thank you ! What would you like to say about community management for E-repuation!
I think I have missed something in this posting, what is the most effective method for counter acting bad P.R. in the search engine results for a company's brand name?
The obvious first reaction is to have the bad PR redacted but if that doesn't work then what...
Start churning out press releases and blog posts to try and push the bad PR down the page, how effective could that actually be as the search engines like diverse content.
There are a lot of things you can do to help in this situation. "Churning out" press releases is relatively unlikely to work but creating new content is definitely part of most strategies. Here are a couple of things we have written that might help: a case study and a presentation from Tom.
Will is absolutely right in stressing the importance of having direct access to the relevant people when working on online crisis scenarios.
I equally agree that being proactive and having 'a plan in advance of bad stuff happening' can save everyone many a headache. But that can only happen with the implementation of the right monitorization tools.
I just woukld like to stress here the importance of 'training' the client about what ORM can and cannot do so that we are not facing unrealistic expectations and can also enlist their full co-operation in what usually are complex and collaborative projects for a digital agency.
Maybe I could add that signing up for google alerts
https://www.google.com/alerts
about a name or brand name can also help you keep on top of what people are saying/what is being posted.
Although the amount of posts that are missed out does suggest that it is defiantley not the complete monitoring solution.
I was there at Ad:Tech, it was my first time attending a digital marketing conference since being employed as a SEO developer for Thomsonlocal.com, I found it interesting with various seminars and presentations especially the analytic side and how it fits in with SEO and conversions, Omniture had 15 minute sessions at their exhibition stand which I found particularly interesting, especially the social media presentation.
However the exhibition itself all revolved around advertising agencies and affiliate marketing, this is something I found surprising since I thought it would focus more on tools to aid digital marketers rather than agencies selling their services.
I also went to BT Business Direct conference at Wembley Stadium the day after Ad:Tech, this was particularly good, not because I wont the competition of who could do the most headers with Alvin Martin (Former West Ham & England Footballer) but because there was preview of Windows 7 and Adobes new CS4.
Interesting conferences both of them.
I liked the post, not too heavy or 'involved' for a Monday.