Tag Archives: Blake Cahill

Track Comments about Your Business Online

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A few weeks ago, a Twitter user tweeted that she was planning to try Zitune, a restaurant in Los Altos, Calif. David Auerbach, the restaurant’s co-owner got an e-mail alert from a Web-based service Trackle, calling his attention to the tweet. As he often does, he sent a response thanking her for visiting Zitune and asking how she’d liked it. Soon, they had a dialogue going. Then she asked if Zitune’s chef (and Auerbach’s brother-in-law) would like to be interviewed for her video blog. “The restaurant business has been tough for the last year and a half,” Auerbach says. “Having a blogger or video blogger write anything about us, any extra PR we can get is a huge plus. And Trackle found it.” Trackle is one of a new crop of online services that helps you “listen” for keyword mentions on social networks and around the Web, and will send an alert when someone mentions your business or product — or your competitor. Services like Trackle go way beyond Google Alerts and other news alert services because they monitor microblogs such as Twitter, social networks such as Facebook, and the blogosphere, as well. “Increasingly, it’s consumers, not news outlets, that are putting out information other consumers use,” says Blake Cahill, senior vice president of marketing at Visible Technologies, which both tracks keywords and interprets the resulting data. “Consumers have as much impact on your brand as you do.” The majority of consumers check user reviews before making a major purchase, he notes.  But if knowing what customers and others are saying about you online is absolutely essential, it can also be very time-consuming. “You can spend a lot of time doing searches on Twitter and Facebook and Google and so on to find out who’s talking about your restaurant,” Auerbach says. “It’s really helpful to get a daily update where everything is all in one place.” For Veronica Sopher, executive assistant at Ben Bridge Jeweler, looking after the company’s social network presence is only one part of her job. She uses Social Mention among other services to follow Ben Bridge, but also flag mentions of “ring shopping,” so as to find and start conversations with brides-to-be under her Twitter handle @BenBridgeGirl. “I talk with them in a girly fashion and find out what wedding dress they’re dreaming about or ask them to send me photos of the ring they’re considering,” she says. “My strategy is not to make sales with tweets, but to raise brand awareness and present a more personable side of what is often perceived as a cookie-cutter jewelry retailer.” The advantage of a service like Social Mention, she adds, is that it also flags the company’s name all over the Web, so if, for instance, a non-profit organization thanks Ben Bridge for a donation on its website, Sopher can follow up with a friendly e-mail. Picking the right service Most every small business can benefit from some online tracking of its name and product mentions around the Web and in social networks, but picking the right service can be tricky. Services range from completely free to a minimum charge of $500 a month — and most seem to fall at one extreme or the other. The pay services will aggregate thousands of mentions according to metrics like “sentiment” (whether people are mentioning you in a negative or positive light). Here are some popular choices: Social Mention, a free service, allows you to search the Web, as well as Twitter and Facebook for keywords, and can list them in a once-a-day e-mail alert as well or get a “Realtime buzz” widget for your website. Trackle tracks keywords across the Internet and social media, but also tracks many other items, such as weather in your location, local news, real estate values, and even crime in your neighborhood. You can get email alerts, or any of the company’s “tracklets” can also be used as widgets. Viralheat alerts you to mentions with some analytics and a new option to filter results by location. It’s a rare moderately priced pay option, with plans starting at $9.99 a month a month to track up to 10 keywords or phrases. Visible Technologies has plans starting at $500 per month for up to 20,000 results and offers analysis to help you get the sense of what people are saying. “Small businesses can do a lot of tracking with free tools,” Cahill notes. “But as brands get popular and the volume gets big, it becomes difficult to follow all those mentions.” Whichever service you use, experts agree, it’s important to not only listen to what people are saying, but respond promptly. “Social networks can help bring a problem to the surface faster than it would otherwise,” Cahill says. By letting users know you’re working to solve the problem you may find some of your critics turn into defenders, he says. But, he adds, “Once you start engaging in a dialogue with customers on a social network, you have to be genuine, you have to be transparent, and you have to keep at it.” “I try never to go 24 hours without checking what people are saying about us and posting,” Sopher adds. “Once you have a presence in social media, it’s like adopting a puppy. You can’t ignore it.”

Safeguard Your Brand Reputation Online

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Think you know what’s being said about your company? Don’t be so sure. There are billions of searches conducted on the Internet on a daily basis and what is being said about your company, or your products, can make or break a sale, says Blake Cahill, vice president of marketing for Visible Technologies, a reputation monitoring company. You may not want to believe it, but first impressions matter. Negative comments about your company online can be detrimental to getting business and keeping business, not to mention scaring away prospective employees. How can you keep a lid on what’s out there? Know what’s being said Most business people either don’t take the time to monitor it or don’t want to look. Take your head out of the sand and at the very least do a Google search of yourself and/or your company. Also, set a Google Alert to let you know when something is being said about you or your company. Both are free options. Peter Kim, an analyst at Forrester Research, suggests other good  — and free — options include checking certain blog search engines, such as Technorati and BlogPuls. You can also download a piece of software, called the Buzzmonitor, an open source aggregator conceived and sponsored by the World Bank, of all places. The caveat, of course, is as with anything, especially free anythings, is that you get what you pay for. In the above cases, what you’re getting is free alerts, which are good for a thumbnail sketch, for getting a sense of what’s going on, or getting into the conversation. But these alerts don’t offer any help for devising a strategy to correct misinformation. Have a communication strategy in place Someone on your staff — or, if you need to, hire someone — to handle participation in online conversations. If something happens online, such as a negative post about your company, there should be a reactive post on it. It should take the writer of the post into a direction where they feel that their concerns are being met. To that end, it may mean admitting a mistake and taking whatever corrective measure to satisfy that audience. Next, put out a correction. If there is misinformation out there, you have to put out the correct version, says Joseph Fiore, a vice president at Canada’s CoreX Technology and Solutions Inc., in Milton, Ontario, a reputation monitoring company. Bring in outside help When should you bring in a professional monitoring firm? “When free tools are just aren’t doing it well enough,” says Fiore. “That’s when a paid service is something to consider. Once, a client who was using 31 different tools came to us. She said, ‘I know there’s something I’m missing.’” Monitoring services make the most sense if you have business in different countries. Many, like Fiore’s company, are aware of different language nuances. Even if you do hire an outside firm you shouldn’t just “hand it over” to them, says Fiore. The company should keep you informed, even if it’s just on a macro level, say, when the comments are turning positive or negative. Many of these companies use artificial intelligence to monitor these kinds of patterns, and they can receive alerts. How much does this outside help cost? Typically, they run for as little as $2,000 a month to about $90,000 a year, says Kim. The disparity is largely because monitoring companies work differently. Some formulate strategies for dealing with the negative comments and create dashboards for their clients, instead of just creating an e-mail alert. Part of what the dashboards do is aggregate the comments and enable you to jump into the online conversations more easily and directly. Get promoted What the outside firms can also do for you — although you could do this too, yourself, but its time consuming — is to promote content that you want promoted. Ideally, you’d want that kind of positive and correct information to come up on the first page of a search. Says Cahill, the majority of people only look at the results on the first page. The only way to promote the news/message you want out there is to make sure it shows up on the first page. One example of this is to have a Wikipedia.com page, or to correct one about you that may have incorrect information. Wikipedia.com is an example of a site which shows up very high in search rankings. One caveat: Be wary of firms that say they can eliminate negative content on you. When it gets beyond writing a “please remove this post letter” this can get into a murky area that may backfire, experts say.

Safeguard Your Brand Reputation Online

our beautiful site

Think you know what’s being said about your company? Don’t be so sure. There are billions of searches conducted on the Internet on a daily basis and what is being said about your company, or your products, can make or break a sale, says Blake Cahill, vice president of marketing for Visible Technologies, a reputation monitoring company. You may not want to believe it, but first impressions matter. Negative comments about your company online can be detrimental to getting business and keeping business, not to mention scaring away prospective employees. How can you keep a lid on what’s out there? Know what’s being said Most business people either don’t take the time to monitor it or don’t want to look. Take your head out of the sand and at the very least do a Google search of yourself and/or your company. Also, set a Google Alert to let you know when something is being said about you or your company. Both are free options. Peter Kim, an analyst at Forrester Research, suggests other good  — and free — options include checking certain blog search engines, such as Technorati and BlogPuls. You can also download a piece of software, called the Buzzmonitor, an open source aggregator conceived and sponsored by the World Bank, of all places. The caveat, of course, is as with anything, especially free anythings, is that you get what you pay for. In the above cases, what you’re getting is free alerts, which are good for a thumbnail sketch, for getting a sense of what’s going on, or getting into the conversation. But these alerts don’t offer any help for devising a strategy to correct misinformation. Have a communication strategy in place Someone on your staff — or, if you need to, hire someone — to handle participation in online conversations. If something happens online, such as a negative post about your company, there should be a reactive post on it. It should take the writer of the post into a direction where they feel that their concerns are being met. To that end, it may mean admitting a mistake and taking whatever corrective measure to satisfy that audience. Next, put out a correction. If there is misinformation out there, you have to put out the correct version, says Joseph Fiore, a vice president at Canada’s CoreX Technology and Solutions Inc., in Milton, Ontario, a reputation monitoring company. Bring in outside help When should you bring in a professional monitoring firm? “When free tools are just aren’t doing it well enough,” says Fiore. “That’s when a paid service is something to consider. Once, a client who was using 31 different tools came to us. She said, ‘I know there’s something I’m missing.’” Monitoring services make the most sense if you have business in different countries. Many, like Fiore’s company, are aware of different language nuances. Even if you do hire an outside firm you shouldn’t just “hand it over” to them, says Fiore. The company should keep you informed, even if it’s just on a macro level, say, when the comments are turning positive or negative. Many of these companies use artificial intelligence to monitor these kinds of patterns, and they can receive alerts. How much does this outside help cost? Typically, they run for as little as $2,000 a month to about $90,000 a year, says Kim. The disparity is largely because monitoring companies work differently. Some formulate strategies for dealing with the negative comments and create dashboards for their clients, instead of just creating an e-mail alert. Part of what the dashboards do is aggregate the comments and enable you to jump into the online conversations more easily and directly. Get promoted What the outside firms can also do for you — although you could do this too, yourself, but its time consuming — is to promote content that you want promoted. Ideally, you’d want that kind of positive and correct information to come up on the first page of a search. Says Cahill, the majority of people only look at the results on the first page. The only way to promote the news/message you want out there is to make sure it shows up on the first page. One example of this is to have a Wikipedia.com page, or to correct one about you that may have incorrect information. Wikipedia.com is an example of a site which shows up very high in search rankings. One caveat: Be wary of firms that say they can eliminate negative content on you. When it gets beyond writing a “please remove this post letter” this can get into a murky area that may backfire, experts say.

Safeguard Your Brand Reputation Online

our beautiful site

Think you know what’s being said about your company? Don’t be so sure. There are billions of searches conducted on the Internet on a daily basis and what is being said about your company, or your products, can make or break a sale, says Blake Cahill, vice president of marketing for Visible Technologies, a reputation monitoring company. You may not want to believe it, but first impressions matter. Negative comments about your company online can be detrimental to getting business and keeping business, not to mention scaring away prospective employees. How can you keep a lid on what’s out there? Know what’s being said Most business people either don’t take the time to monitor it or don’t want to look. Take your head out of the sand and at the very least do a Google search of yourself and/or your company. Also, set a Google Alert to let you know when something is being said about you or your company. Both are free options. Peter Kim, an analyst at Forrester Research, suggests other good  — and free — options include checking certain blog search engines, such as Technorati and BlogPuls. You can also download a piece of software, called the Buzzmonitor, an open source aggregator conceived and sponsored by the World Bank, of all places. The caveat, of course, is as with anything, especially free anythings, is that you get what you pay for. In the above cases, what you’re getting is free alerts, which are good for a thumbnail sketch, for getting a sense of what’s going on, or getting into the conversation. But these alerts don’t offer any help for devising a strategy to correct misinformation. Have a communication strategy in place Someone on your staff — or, if you need to, hire someone — to handle participation in online conversations. If something happens online, such as a negative post about your company, there should be a reactive post on it. It should take the writer of the post into a direction where they feel that their concerns are being met. To that end, it may mean admitting a mistake and taking whatever corrective measure to satisfy that audience. Next, put out a correction. If there is misinformation out there, you have to put out the correct version, says Joseph Fiore, a vice president at Canada’s CoreX Technology and Solutions Inc., in Milton, Ontario, a reputation monitoring company. Bring in outside help When should you bring in a professional monitoring firm? “When free tools are just aren’t doing it well enough,” says Fiore. “That’s when a paid service is something to consider. Once, a client who was using 31 different tools came to us. She said, ‘I know there’s something I’m missing.’” Monitoring services make the most sense if you have business in different countries. Many, like Fiore’s company, are aware of different language nuances. Even if you do hire an outside firm you shouldn’t just “hand it over” to them, says Fiore. The company should keep you informed, even if it’s just on a macro level, say, when the comments are turning positive or negative. Many of these companies use artificial intelligence to monitor these kinds of patterns, and they can receive alerts. How much does this outside help cost? Typically, they run for as little as $2,000 a month to about $90,000 a year, says Kim. The disparity is largely because monitoring companies work differently. Some formulate strategies for dealing with the negative comments and create dashboards for their clients, instead of just creating an e-mail alert. Part of what the dashboards do is aggregate the comments and enable you to jump into the online conversations more easily and directly. Get promoted What the outside firms can also do for you — although you could do this too, yourself, but its time consuming — is to promote content that you want promoted. Ideally, you’d want that kind of positive and correct information to come up on the first page of a search. Says Cahill, the majority of people only look at the results on the first page. The only way to promote the news/message you want out there is to make sure it shows up on the first page. One example of this is to have a Wikipedia.com page, or to correct one about you that may have incorrect information. Wikipedia.com is an example of a site which shows up very high in search rankings. One caveat: Be wary of firms that say they can eliminate negative content on you. When it gets beyond writing a “please remove this post letter” this can get into a murky area that may backfire, experts say.

Safeguard Your Brand Reputation Online

our beautiful site

Think you know what’s being said about your company? Don’t be so sure. There are billions of searches conducted on the Internet on a daily basis and what is being said about your company, or your products, can make or break a sale, says Blake Cahill, vice president of marketing for Visible Technologies, a reputation monitoring company. You may not want to believe it, but first impressions matter. Negative comments about your company online can be detrimental to getting business and keeping business, not to mention scaring away prospective employees. How can you keep a lid on what’s out there? Know what’s being said Most business people either don’t take the time to monitor it or don’t want to look. Take your head out of the sand and at the very least do a Google search of yourself and/or your company. Also, set a Google Alert to let you know when something is being said about you or your company. Both are free options. Peter Kim, an analyst at Forrester Research, suggests other good  — and free — options include checking certain blog search engines, such as Technorati and BlogPuls. You can also download a piece of software, called the Buzzmonitor, an open source aggregator conceived and sponsored by the World Bank, of all places. The caveat, of course, is as with anything, especially free anythings, is that you get what you pay for. In the above cases, what you’re getting is free alerts, which are good for a thumbnail sketch, for getting a sense of what’s going on, or getting into the conversation. But these alerts don’t offer any help for devising a strategy to correct misinformation. Have a communication strategy in place Someone on your staff — or, if you need to, hire someone — to handle participation in online conversations. If something happens online, such as a negative post about your company, there should be a reactive post on it. It should take the writer of the post into a direction where they feel that their concerns are being met. To that end, it may mean admitting a mistake and taking whatever corrective measure to satisfy that audience. Next, put out a correction. If there is misinformation out there, you have to put out the correct version, says Joseph Fiore, a vice president at Canada’s CoreX Technology and Solutions Inc., in Milton, Ontario, a reputation monitoring company. Bring in outside help When should you bring in a professional monitoring firm? “When free tools are just aren’t doing it well enough,” says Fiore. “That’s when a paid service is something to consider. Once, a client who was using 31 different tools came to us. She said, ‘I know there’s something I’m missing.’” Monitoring services make the most sense if you have business in different countries. Many, like Fiore’s company, are aware of different language nuances. Even if you do hire an outside firm you shouldn’t just “hand it over” to them, says Fiore. The company should keep you informed, even if it’s just on a macro level, say, when the comments are turning positive or negative. Many of these companies use artificial intelligence to monitor these kinds of patterns, and they can receive alerts. How much does this outside help cost? Typically, they run for as little as $2,000 a month to about $90,000 a year, says Kim. The disparity is largely because monitoring companies work differently. Some formulate strategies for dealing with the negative comments and create dashboards for their clients, instead of just creating an e-mail alert. Part of what the dashboards do is aggregate the comments and enable you to jump into the online conversations more easily and directly. Get promoted What the outside firms can also do for you — although you could do this too, yourself, but its time consuming — is to promote content that you want promoted. Ideally, you’d want that kind of positive and correct information to come up on the first page of a search. Says Cahill, the majority of people only look at the results on the first page. The only way to promote the news/message you want out there is to make sure it shows up on the first page. One example of this is to have a Wikipedia.com page, or to correct one about you that may have incorrect information. Wikipedia.com is an example of a site which shows up very high in search rankings. One caveat: Be wary of firms that say they can eliminate negative content on you. When it gets beyond writing a “please remove this post letter” this can get into a murky area that may backfire, experts say.