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Archive for the 'Social Networks' Category

Top Social Media Networking Sites for Reputation Management

Facebook has over 250 million unique visitors each month. In Reputation Armor’s opinion facebook is the second best ranking social media site when used properly for reputation management.


Myspace has over 122 million unique visitors each month. Although it ranks well,  and we have used it in the past, Reputation Armor has taken the stance that because of spam issues and the fact that myspace is more geared towards tweens, that it is not an ideal reputation management tool for our clients.

Twitter receives over 80 and a half million visitors per month, and is Reputation Armor’s favorite Social media and networking site. It has become one of the most valuable site of its type for online reputation management.


Linkedin, another of Reputation Armor’s favorites, receives over 50 million unique visitors a month.


Ning, with over 42 million visitors, is a underrated and underused reputation management tool.


Founded in 2004, Tagged has 30 million visitors per month.

With over 29 million visitors a month, Reputation Armor notes that classmates is not to be ignored.


Hi5, which touts itself as a way to Express yourself with custom profiles, avatars, music, and more has over 27,000,000 visitors a month.

One response so far

Reputation Management with Social Media

 

Online reputation management involves many facets. Social Media and Social Networks are a very important ingredient to a successful reputation management campaign. Below is a list of social media sites that can help you build your online reputation.

 

The social media and network sites are categorized to help you find the ones that match up with your specific needs.

 

 

ARTS:

ArtSlant
deviantART
Humble Voice - Art, music, video, photography
imeem
- Music, videos, photos
MyArtInfo

PhotographyVoter
Virb - Music, art, fashion, film and more

 

BOOKMARKING:

AllMyFavorites
Backflip
Blinkbits
Blinklist
Blogmarks
Blummy
BuddyMarks
BookmarkTracker
ChangeToLink
Chipmark
del.icio.us
De.lirio.us
Diigo
Dogear
Favoritoo
Feedmarker
Foxmarks
FreeLink
Furl
GiveALink
Hyperlinkomatic
iKeepBookmarks
Jack of All Links
Lilisto
LinkaGoGo
Linkatopia
Linkroll
List Mixer
Lycos iQ
Ma.gnolia (not functional for now)
Mister Wong
Mobilicio.us
MyBookmarks
MyHq
Mylinkvault
MyPip
My Stuff (from Ask)
MyVmarks
Namakkal
Netvouz
Online Bookmark Manager
OnlyWire
Oyax
Shadows
Simpy
SiteBar
SiteJot
Snipit
Socializer
StartAid
Stufflinker
Sync2it
SyncOne
Turboclip
Windows Live Favorites
WireFan
Zurpy

 

CARS AND AUTO:

AutoSpies
Boompa
Car Community
CarDomain
Motorpulse

 

CONNECTING WITH FRIENDS:

Classmates
ConnectU
Friends Reunited
Graduates
Meetup
MyYearbook
Reunion
SKOUT

 

CONSUMER REVIEWS:

Cork’d - Wine reviews
Chowhound
- Food
Epinions

RateItAll
Yelp

 

COOKING/FOOD

All Recipes Barmano
Bake Space
Epicurious Community
Family Oven
FohBoh - Restaurant network
Kitchen Bug
MyDish
Nibbledish
Recipe Key
Recipezaar
Sharecipe
Tasty Planner
We Eatt
WineLifeToday - Wine

 

CULTURES/FOREIGN LANGUAGES:

Acelerame - Spanish (cars)
Amina - Chechen Republic
Black Planet - African American
ClubGh - Ghana
Hyves - Dutch
IRC Galleria - Finland
iWiW - Hungary
IndianPad
LunarStorm - Sweden
MiGente - Latino
Mixi - Japan
Nexopia - Canada
Playahead - Sweden
Scoopeo - French
StudiVZ - German students
Wamba - Spanish social network
Yigg - German

 

DATING:

Bachelor Place
Chemistry
Crush or Flush
Cupid’s Lab
Flirtomatic
LoveandFriends
OkCupid
SpeedDate
WooMe

 

EDUCATION/BOOKS:

BookCrossing
Bookins
BookMooch
BookSwim
Carmun
Citeulike
Connect via Books
Curriki - for teachers
Good Reads

LibraryThing
PaperBackSwap
qoolsqool
Read It Swap It
Shelfari
We The Teachers


 

 

EVENT PLANNING

Socializr
Zoji

 

FAMILY:

Amiglia
Babbiz
CafeMom
Eons
Family 2.0
Family Den
Famiva
Geni
Genoom
GreatSchools - Parents review schools
Kinzin

MomJunction
MothersClick
Moxie Moms
MyFamily.com
Parentography
TheFamilyPost
WebBiographies

 

FASHION/CLOTHING:

2Threads
Chictini

Fashionising
Fashion Network
Metro Friendly
Movmnt
My Kids Fashion
Springleap - T-shirts
StyleCaster Community
Stylehive
StyleHop
StyleMob
Threadless - T-shirts
Us Trendy

 

FINANCE:

Tip’d

 

GAMES:

Gaia - Games and anime
Game Diggity

GuildCafe
WeeWorld

 

GENERAL NETWORKING:

AIM Pages
Badoo
Bebo
CyWorld
EarthFrisk
ECpod
Facebook
Faves
Friendster
Grono
Hi5
iBritz
LiveJournal
Lovento
Multiply
MySpace
MyWebProfile
NetFriendships
Netlog
Orkut
Passado
Plaxo
Skyrock
Tagged
Tribe
Trig
Windows Live Spaces
Yahoo! 360
Zaadz

 

HEALTH/MEDICAL:

DailyStrength
DrConnected
Health Ranker
icarecafe
MyPharmaNote
Sanewire - recovery
Sermo - Doctors
Walker Tracker
Who is Sick?

 

KIDS:

imbee
KidLinks

 

INTERNET MARKETING:

Gooruze
PlugIM
Sphinn

 

LINK/WEBSITE SHARING:

Ensiting
Faves
StumbleUpon
TagTooga
Trailfire

 

MICROBLOGGING/IM/MOBILE:

BeeMood
Feecle - Japanese
FlickIM

Frazr - German and French
IMified
Jaiku
Komoo - Chinese
loopt

mbuzzy
Numpa - Dutch
Pownce
Radar
Robisz - Polish
Rummble
Twitter
Zannel

 

MOVIES:

Filmcrave
Reelempire

 

MUSIC:

10Tune
Buzznet
Fuzz
JamNow
Jango
Last.fm
MOG
Purevolume
Soundpedia
thesixtyone


 

 

NEWS:

Blog Engage
Blogg-Buzz
BloggingZoom
BlogsVine
BookmarkUs.net
BuzzFlash
Content Pop
Digg
Fark
Hubdub
Mad or Love
Mixx
NewsCloud
NewsHeat - Politics
Newsvine
NowPublic
Plime
Propeller
RawSugar
Reddit
Shoutwire
Stirr’d Up
Tagza
Wobblog
Zoomit (Canada)

 

PETS:

Catster
Dogster
Fuzzster
MyCatSpace
MyDogSpace
PetSide
PetZume
Pikapet
UnitedDogs

 

PHOTO SHARING:

eSnips
Flickr
Fotki
Fotolog
Linkinn
My Opera
Photbucket
Picli
Tagmee
Text America
Zoomr

 

PHOTOGRAPHY:

MyShutterspace
Photography Mentor
Photography Network

Picture Social

Shutterate
Shutter Social

 

POLITICS:

Carnival of Politics

 

POP CULTURE:

Lipstick - Celebrity
Showhype

 

PROFESSIONAL:

APSense
Biznik
CitiAlly
Cofoundr - Entrepreneurial
CompanyLoop
DoMyStuff
Doostang
Ecademy
Fast Pitch
JASEzone
KillerStartups
Konnects
Lawyrs
LinkedIn
MeetIn
MyCareer.ge
Naymes
NetHooks
Ryze
Small Business Brief
StartupNation - Entrepreneurial
Startupping - Internet entrepreneurs
Synergy Street - Entrepreneurial
Tapped In - Educational professionals
Upspring
Venture Capital Network
Xing
Ziggs

 

REAL ESTATE:

Puurple
Trulia
Zillow


 

 

RELIGIOUS:

Blessedit
GospelShout
MyChurch
Tangle - video sharing
Xianz

 

SHOPPING:

AgentB
BiddingBuddies - For Ebay members
Deal Comet
Dealigg
Iliketotallyloveit
Judy’s Book
OSoYou
ThisNext
Yub
Zebo

 

SOCIAL ACTION:

Care2 - Social Issues/Humanities
Hugg - Environmental
Planet Change - Environmental
TakingITGlobal

 

SPORTS:

Armchair GM
Ballhype
eFans
FanNation
Fanspot
GymMeet
KeeCricket
Joga - Soccer (Football)
Prep Champs
ScoreGuru
SportsFlip
Sportsvite
Takkle - high school sports
SportsCast
Strands

 

TECHNOLOGY:

Design Bump - Web/graphic design
Design Float - Web/graphic design
DesignRelated
DevelopersNiche
DNHour - Domain Name News
DotNetKicks
Dzone - Developers
Earner’s Club - Internet Marketing
Hacker News
Hosting Bookmarks
Pixel Groovy - Web design
Slashdot
Tweako
SWiK - Open source software
WPscoop - WordPress

 

TEEN:

eCRUSH
eSpintheBottle
Piczo
Profile Heaven
Sconex
Student.com
Stardoll
Teenwag

 

TRAVEL:

Couch Surfing
EveryTrail
- GPS
GeckoGo
Groople
Gusto
TravBuddy
Travellerspoint
TrekCafe
Trip Advisor
TripUp
WAYN
Woophy

 

VIDEO SHARING:

Broadcaster
Panjea
Revver
Tubearoo
Viddler
Video Bomb
Video Sift
Vimby
Xillian TV
YouTube

 

WOMEN:

Kirtsy
PNN
SurgarLoving

 

MISCELLANEOUS:

9rules
43 Things - Goal sharing
Beautiful Society - List and vote for your favorite things
Clip Clip
ChickAdvisor
Clipmarks
Clipstar
Clubnet UK - clubbing
Consumating
Dandelife - A social biography network
Dawdle - Auction
Daytipper - Tips and tutorials
Digglicious
DigStock - Financial
DontStayIn - Clubbing
EnergyPeopleConnect
Experience Project - Share Life Experiences
Faceparty - “The biggest party on Earth”
Fazed
Faqqly - Community of questions and answers
Ficlets - Collaborative writing
Flixster - Movies
Freagle
Gather
Global Voices
GoLark - Events and activities
GreekStrength - fraternities and sororities
Hypediss
I Am Bored
Jambo
JetEye
LinkFilter
Listible
Match A Dream
Neighborrow - Borrowing and sharing
Ning - Create your own network
Outside.in - local news
Product Clash - Product reviews
Prosper - People to people lending
Recruiting.com
Scoop.at - Austria
Searchles
SEO Tagg
Shared Confession - Secrets
Spout - Films
Squidoo
StoryLink - Screen Writers
Sydney Networkers
Tipstrs - Tips and tutorials
Tribe
Truemors
Value Investing News - Financial
Vampire Freaks
Velospace - Bicycles
WeGame - Video games
Wists

One response so far

Reputation Management and Using Social Networks

Reputation Armor notes that using social networks as a Reputation Management tool or technique is a must! The fact is social networks like FaceBook, Twitter, Linkedin, MySpace, and hundreds of others rank very well on Google and other search engines when developed and utilized properly. If you have twenty or so social networking sites about you that rank high on Google, you control 20 spots about yourself and own those positions.

Creating social networking accounts is easy, fast, and in some cases actually fun. Reputation Armor uses TONS of social networks on the web for individuals and businesses. Reputation Armor recommends picking a few for yourself and actually using them to your advantage.

One extremely important tip that Reputation Armor would like to share is remember to log-in to your social network accounts frequently (At Least Weekly) and update your status, or add new content to your public profiles. By adding something new or showing Google that you are actively using these accounts, Reputation Armor has found that Google will in most cases perceive that this “account” is very relevant about your name thus ranking higher and stronger.

Here are a few social networks that Reputation Armor recommends:

Facebook can be a great place to network, just make certain you keep your profile free from things you wouldn’t want spread about you online. Example: Facebook.com/ReputationArmor

MySpace has millions of visitors; this popular social networking site can be a great place to get your and your business’ name out there. Example: MySpace.com/ReputationArmor

LinkedIn Here you can create a professional profile that will allow you to interact with others in your profession in a safe and positive manner. Example: LinkedIn.com/ReputationArmor

Twitter is great whether you want to communicate with others or follow the noise about you on the net, Twitter is an essential tool. Example: Twitter.com/ReputationArmor

Reputation Armor recommends that after creating these social networks it is a good idea to find like minded people, and industry partners to link up with you and network. You should also promote your social networks by linking to them when possible from your blog, website, or other social sites.

Reputation Armor Social Profile Creation

Reputation Armor creates over 125 social network accounts for our clients and optimizes them using the latest cutting edge social networking SEO techniques. This method ensures that the profiles rank highly in search engine results, therefore giving control of the top spots back to clients.

Social Networking Profile creation is only a minor portion of the Reputation Armor Online Reputation Management process.

For more information, contact Reputation Armor 888-358-ARMOR

2 responses so far

Reputation Management | Tools, Tips, and Techniques

These days it seems to Reputation Armor that the harder that individuals try to be transparent online, the bigger target they become.

Reputation Armor sees it all the time, at first you receive out of this world reviews, you add yourselves to more sites and directories, set up google Alerts to receive emails whenever you’re referred to online, and all is good with the world, then comes the day that you receive a bad review. Reputation Armor finds that some reviews and complaints are warranted, while most are anonymous and false, and posted by competitors and/or ex-employees. In some cases reputation armor is able to have these complaints removed if they are unfounded. Most review sites allow anonymous reviews, and although it’s unfair, it’s not illegal.

Reputation Armor answers…how to avoid potential customers and clients seeing bad reviews of your service?

If you can’t fix it or refute it, and getting it removed isn’t an option, then reputation armor advises that you may want to consider burying it. Basically, this means you need to push the bad reviews off  at least the first two pages of Google, Bing, Yahoo etc. - so potential customers looking for you on the Internet find the real you before they find false reviews.

Here are few elements that reputation armor finds important:

Your company website, for example “ReputationArmor.com” Ideally, reputation armor finds that this will rank in the number one position, and have prominent links showing to the main areas of your website, including testimonials.

Your website is more than likely the first thing a client will look for, make sure it contains some great testimonials / reviews. Case studies, examples of work and quotes from happy clients are great for showing you in a good light.

Reputation Armor can’t say enough about the importance of blogs. Whether your blog is attached to your website, or a sub domain, it gives any potential client the opportunity to find company updates and news. A corporate blog (ex. blog.ReputationArmor.com) can often tell as much, if not more, than a company website, as a blog tends to be more informal and have more of a ‘personality’

Twitter profiles are also an important aspect of any Reputation Armor online reputation management operation. Of course, this is only a positive element if you want people to find it, and your company image and brand is well represented while posting tweets  If your Twitter profile is full of ‘Was out late have a hangover this morning’ then reputation armor advises that it’s probably not for you. However, if you use your Twitter profile as part of your companies brand then having it show up on the first page for your company’s key words is excellent.

LinkedIn and other professional online networking profiles are also recommended by reputation armor. These profiles, especially if very active and up to date, show that you’re not just a fly by night, and go a long way in representing your company’s online brand.

We also like to take advantage of articles that clients have written. Whether they are articles on your own site, or articles on somewhere authoritative, reputation armor notes that having your content easily indexable shows you spend time promoting yourself, and those articles could be the difference in standing out among competitors.

Reputation Armor finds that the single most over looked aspect of online reputation management is Video Search engine optimization. Whether it’s own YouTube channel, or videos on your site, having videos show up in the search results for your company name is great. Not everyone likes reading tons of text about how great you are. Reputation Armor has observed that video about your brand can be one of the most convincing aspects of online reputation management.

Facebook profiles and / or Fan Pages are another important characteristic of reputation armor. Example, www.facebook.com/ReputationArmor. Again, this is only a good thing if you’re aware that your Facebook profile could be seen as part of a ‘fact finding’ mission by potential customers.

In summation, Reputation Armor wants clients to understand that search results for your company or individual name should provide a well rounded promotion of your company and services. When people see your website, your blog, your Twitter profile and Facebook Fan Page, several articles written by you, and videos, they see that you’ve been around a while, that you’re not going anywhere and that you’re the who they want to deal with.

For the above reasons Reputation Armor always recommends having up to date profiles in as many places as possible, and regularly updated blogs. The down side to this is that it can take up a great deal of time.

When it comes to burying bad reviews, the above methods alone are usually not enough, although a good start. Review sites and blogs, by their very nature, do well in search engines such as Google, and a more aggressive approach may be needed inured to ensure that positive results out rank the negative ones.

For more information about removing bad reviews online and managing your online reputation, contact ReputationArmor.com.

888-358-ARMOR

No responses yet

faceBook’s Website Is Down?

At 6PM EST our team at ReputationArmor.com noticed that facebook was down! We received several calls and emails from clients asking if we knew why their facebook pages were down. faceBook rarely goes down, although their website sometimes has minor short-term glitches.

I am certain that facebook will be back up within a few minutes or at the worst hours.

www.ReputationArmor.com

No responses yet

Reputation Management | Social Media | Social Networks

Online Reputation Management

Reputation Armor knows that the success of an online business depends on how potential customers perceive it and in a day and age when so much information is available; reputation armor notes that online reputation is that much more important. Potential customers look for companies that have a strong online reputation.

Reputation Armor also sees the other side of reputation management. The net is often used by competitors to post untrue information about their counterparts. These sorts of posts, as reputation armor sees it, always directly impact the bottom line. The more information posted the higher the link will rank on Google and other search engine results therefore amplifying the issue.

Fortunately, qualified reputation management firms, such as Reputation Armor, can resolve such issues by way of activating an aggressive campaign.

When Reputation Armor takes on a new client our reputation management consultants revise a personalized strategy that end the end will tackle even the worst case reputation problems

What does Reputation Armor Do?

Reputation Armor uses a method that is sometimes referred to as ‘Reverse Search Engine Optimization’, or ‘Inoculation’ in which we guarantee that the first few pages of search engine results will be clear of negative links; doing so by ‘insulating’ them with positive content.

Reputation Armor makes use of positive news gathered through earlier press releases or that given by our clients. The reputation armor process also encompasses the use of “Social Media” and other micro sites and blogs so that the same content gets reflected. The use of social media/networking sites is actually the first step that reputation armor takes. Within hours of becoming a reputation armor client, over 150 such profiles are created. A portion of these profiles will become a working faction of the ‘Google Insulation’ that while burying the negative, shines a bright light on the positive.

Reputation Armor combines effective, cutting edge reputation management techniques that no other so called “Reputation Management” companies can enact. We also constantly monitor search engine rankings so that the positive impact is long term and our client’s online reputation is well protected over many years.

For more information contact, Reputation Armor @ 888-358-ARMOR

No responses yet

Tips For Safe Social Networking

Reputation Armor knows good name can be worth millions, and we all know by now what happens when a first-class name gets into bad trouble. Tiger Woods is only one example of how imperative your reputation is, and how effortless it is to damage it.

The online world has fashioned a new area of law in this age of Web 2.0. It’s called Online Reputation Management Law, as reputation armor sees it, it hovers right around the law of defamation, freedom of speech, privacy law, copyright law, and trademark law. It also involves the non-legal (but equally as important) fields of public relations and crisis management. Many of the legal issues in this area involve Facebook, which has over 350,000,000 users, (including about 90% of all the middle school and secondary school students you and your colleagues teach every day. You might be a Facebook user as well.)

If someone says or publishes something about another person that is untrue, not otherwise privileged, and this damages the other person’s reputation, this may well amount to defamation and legal consequences may follow. “online” publication of defamatory statements on Facebook, Twitter, or on blogs is still publication. Reputation Armor asks this question, what if the damaged reputation is self-inflicted? Although there are things that older adults may share with others in more private ways, there has never been a generation so willing to share their innermost feelings, their outrageous opinions and their inappropriate photographs than the under-25 age group who make up the mainstay of Facebook. Reputation armor hears stories about the things 15- to 18-year-olds post on Facebook. Many of these people don’t seem to understand how the comments and photos they post can be publicly accessible, profoundly inappropriate, and, in the future, career-limiting.

Reputation Armor continuously tells clients: “Clean up your Social Networking Sites”

So here are a few legal and practical things that Reputation Armor thinks might interest you.

Reputation Armor Tips and Thoughts

1. Social networking sites can retain cached archives of everything everyone posts, even if it’s deleted 60 seconds after being posted.

2. Any posting can be saved to another’s computer by an easy screen shot. And any photograph on can be dragged to another’s desktop and circulated to others by e-mail, even though it may have been removed from the original poster’s page. Digital pictures pulled can be Photoshopped and otherwise manipulated in very bad ways.

3. Reputation Armor has noted before that Insurance company investigators frequently check pages of those they are investigating, sometimes posing as an old high school friends, or friends of friends so they can surreptitiously see the page and confirm or deny the claim4. Social Networking pages can be evidence and can be the subject of cross examination, even though a defendant had made his page as private as possible.

4. A court in New York City forced Google (as owner of a particular blogging website), to disclose the name of an anonymous blogger who arguably defamed a prominent model; the moral of the story being that no one is anonymous anymore. The defamed can always find the defamer.

5. Tweets on Twitter are searchable on Google, (so that tweets about how much an employee hates his/her boss can be found by that math teacher). Of course we don’t have that problem at Reputation Armor (because out boss is awesome….haha)

6. Users should limit the number of friends on such sites to real friends. If someone has 800 friends, one of them may be an insurance investigator, and another could be someone far, far worse.

7. This is actually viewed by reputation armor as the most important aspect: Privacy Privacy Privacy. Users should adjust their privacy settings so that only friends (and not “everyone”) can see what they have posted. And never allow “friends of friends” access. Although Facebook changed its privacy settings in December 2009, Reputation Armor have observed reports that show that 70% of users still have their settings set to “everyone can see everything,” possibly because they don’t know how the privacy settings work. And of course, Google sees it all.

8. Parents might want to monitor the social networking activities of their teens, but teens (understandably) don’t want to allow parent access as “friends.” Reputation Armor recommends a “designated driver”; a young adult the teen and the parent both trust, and who won’t contact parents about questionable postings or photos (but will call up the teen).

9. Finally, you shouldn’t post pictures or comments you wouldn’t want your mother, grandmother, or future employer to see, because one day soon, they will.

No responses yet

Online Reputation Management Tips

In consideration to protecting a brand with online reputation management, whether it is an individual’s name or a company, Reputation Armor recommends a pro-active approach. Positive showings that rank high in search engine results are most certainly good for business; but Reputation Armor has found that a surprisingly high amount of CEO’s aren’t considering the fact that those same high ranking results could also be providing “insulation”, effectively shielding their brand from the many negative results that can become a PR nightmare. Reputation Armor provides proactive Online Reputation through a variety of innovative techniques. Some of the reputation management methods that Reputation Armor employs can be enacted by basically any individual who has the time.

Reputation Armor tips for Do It Yourself Online Reputation Management

1) Purchase all the related domains to your brand, including the sub domains. For example “ReputationArmor.com”  “ReputationArmor.net” “Reputation-Armor.com” …etc.

2) Create profiles on a handful of social networking sites. Use your name or brand when possible in the URL and Title of the profile. Then update often.

3) Start a blog on one of the domains that you now control. Use it to update clients on new product releases or industry news. Update frequently.

These are just a few simple techniques from reputation armor that can be completed in order to enact a proactive online reputation management campaign. By perusing this process and dedicating the time it takes to implement and update, the odds of positive information out weighing the negative results is greatly increased.

For more information about Proactive Online Reputation Management, contact Reputation Armor

@ ReputationArmor.com

No responses yet

Make sure you have a strong online presence

Make sure you have a strong online presence. Social networking sites are not just used by young professionals. You and/or your business need to stay up-to-date. Present and future clients, customers, business contacts, and potential employers will look you up. The information they find can affect their buying or hiring decisions. If you don’t want others knowing certain things about you, keep in mind that you control what information you post.

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Think Before you post!

Think before you post. Things you put on your websites and forum sites can and will come back to haunt you. Any pictures you show or updates you write are public. Even if your account has privacy settings activated, your information is never completely secure. If you are questioning whether your post is appropriate, ask yourself, would you get into trouble if your boss saw it? If the answer is “yes,” don’t post it!

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