Brand Strategy, Other Posts, Reputation Management, Stephanie Fierman, online reputation

LVMH v. Google: Purses and Profits on the Web

No Comments 05 April 2010

by STEPHANIE FIERMAN

There’s a real reputation-meets-commerce battle happening online.

Today, any advertiser with a Google AdWords account can buy virtually any keyword to advertise its own goods, regardless of whether the advertiser in question has the rights to use the word. This is particularly troublesome to companies that have spent decades burnishing brand franchises and consider the associated names and words to be reputational assets of great value.

If you go to Google right now and type in “LVMH” (the owner of numerous brands including Louis Vuitton and Hennessy), one of the sponsored ads shouts “Designer Handbags 70% off,” with a URL that includes the Louis Vuitton name. This has LVMH steamed, and the company sued Google in Europe for trademark infringement.

Well the ruling is in… and it’s a split decision. Advantage: Google. Continue Reading

Jarvis Cromwell, News & Events, Other Posts, Reputation Management, corporate reputation, digital reputation, online reputation

Speaking at Online Social Reputation Conference

No Comments 18 March 2010

By JARVIS CROMWELL

I’ll be leading a roundtable at BDI’s upcoming Social Reputation Management Conference in NYC on March 24. My topic will be “Quality Assurance for Reputation” Clients, readers and friends of the Reputation Garage can receive a discount and attend for only $155.

You can find more info and register HERE. Use the code RG to receive your discount.

Reputation Management, online reputation

Reputation Management for New Media Survey – How ready are you? (Paul Dunay)

No Comments 01 July 2008

One of my goals this year was to do a study on reputation management. As we all factor in the effects of new media on our brands, I felt this was a topic with long-lasting appeal to every marketer.

My hypothesis going into the creation of these questions was that B2B marketers (including yours truly) just aren’t adequately prepared for an online reputation crisis. Dell wasn’t, Wal-Mart wasn’t. If those big B2C brands weren’t ready, I was betting we weren’t ready either. And I was right!

To be totally transparent with you, I wasn’t surprised by many of the responses to my survey. The bulk of you are monitoring your reputation in some way, shape or form. But are you poised to respond in the case of an online reputation crisis? 55% admitted you weren’t.

Perhaps you need stronger guidelines in place, like a blogging policy. Two-thirds of respondents don’t have one!

Many of you are do-it-yourselfers when it comes to monitoring your reputation. Is that perhaps because your company hasn’t made this a strategic priority? 53% admitted it wasn’t a strategic priority for you – yet!

My goal here is to give you the state of the union when it comes to monitoring reputations online. This data is bound to change, so I hope I get you thinking of ways to close the gap with your organization’s reputation!

Click here to download the free research report

Special thanks to my sponsors – Trackur.com, run by the renowned Andy Beal of the blog MarketingPilgrim.com, and Marketing Profs’ equally renowned Ann Handley for their support on this survey.

CMO, Google, Stephanie Fierman, Trust Issues, digital reputation, online marketing, online reputation

On Stephanie Fierman, Google and your Online Reputation (Jarvis Cromwell)

No Comments 16 October 2007

Listen up, because this is important to your professional reputation and career.

Readers know I blog about the impacts of low trust on all kinds of human exchange and enterprise. Do you trust me as a credible expert? If you’re not so sure, what action would you take?

Did I hear the word “Google”?

Well, google me and you’ll get a bunch of corroborating evidence. I’m a seasoned chief marketing officer (CMO), I’ve contributed a chapter on trust to a marketing book and I speak about trust and reputation at conferences around the country. Unfortunately, a Google search on my name also serves up this result:

“A 25-year-old Goldsboro man — wanted by New York City police on two murder charges — was arrested Tuesday by Goldsboro police.”

That other Jarvis Cromwell – who apparently is a couple of decades my junior – shows up on page 7 of my Google search listings. If you ever thought he was me, your opinion would surely change. Which is why online reputation is so important, and that brings us to Stephanie Fierman.

Last week Stephanie Fierman, a well known and respected marketing executive, spoke at a CMO Club dinner in New York and shared some thinking on managing online reputation. You can find coverage on this topic by Anna Maria Virzi in ClickZ here. You can also read Stephanie’s blog, here.

Stephanie got everyone’s attention by discussing how widespread gossip, innuendo and misinformation about executives are on the internet. And it is easy for executives to wake up one morning and find themselves the victim of misinformation or worse. And the more senior and visible you are in an organization, the more vulnerable you are to potentially damaging disinformation campaigns. The scary part of the story is that everyone from recruiters, to new hires to clients can and do check you out on the web.

So start taking action now. Here are a few of the tips Stephanie shared the other night:

1. Monitor your online footprint. Many people rarely if ever check out their search listings. That’s a mistake. Make sure you check your online presence regularly on all of the search engines. You should also monitor online news services, newsletters, blogs, chatrooms and image banks.

2. Build your online reputation before you need it. If you haven’t already done so, you need to begin creating search-engine friendly content before a crisis arises. Blog, post to other blogs, create a website, create online profiles (LinkedIn, Facebook, etc.) be active at work and in other activities that will get you mentioned online.

3.
Respond quickly to damaging, inaccurate or slanted online content. If you find yourself attacked or worse online, don’t hide. You need to respond quickly and authoritatively in the realm where the original content appeared, with clear and open messages and factual information. Tell the truth.

4. Be discriminating. If you participate in social networks, be very discriminating about whom you connect and what content you post!

5. Appeal to the webmaster. Ask the webmaster to remove questionable or defamatory content. Frequently they will.

In some ways, Google is bringing us back to a Victorian age when social circles were smaller and gossip could spread throughout a community like wildfire. There was little or no anonymity in those circumstances and ladies and gentleman had to vigorously defend their reputations because ruination was a real possibility.

The takeaway for trustmeisters: today’s professionals live in a google-centric world where rumor and innuendo can be used against them. All the more reason to manage your personal reputation proactively and with care.

Instant Webinar

MENG Webinar

Don't pass on viewing this one. It could save your brand from the kinds of missteps that cost billions and torpedo careers.

Jarvis Cromwell and Jerry Doyle offer key reputation management tips for the C-suite. Originally presented to the Marketing Executives Networking Group (MENG)

Runtime: 60 Minutes

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