A Reputation Repair and Reputation Management Guide from a Search Engine Optimization Expert "It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you'll do things differently.” – Warren Buffet
We all know the importance of having a good reputation. We all know just how critical it is for people to look at us in a favorable light. But, the unfortunate truth about today's world and its hyper-fast communications across mobile and Web platforms, is that word spreads fast. And, when mistakes are made, people certainly know how to call others out on it.
Learn How to Build, Protect, and Repair your Reputation on Google Whether or not you've had issues with your reputation in the past, this book will open your eyes to just how to build, protect, and repair a reputation. Reputations are critical to our future success in life and it shouldn't always take a crisis to ensure that we're one step ahead in our all-important online world.
Don't Leave your Online Reputation Exposed Today, people use Google searches to glean all sorts of information about people in various different situations: Companies do it when evaluating potential candidates for job positions Businesses do it when evaluating potential partnerships Vendors use it to uncover information about suppliers Men and women use it to evaluate one another in relationships Law enforcement agencies use it to gather intelligence and so much more...
You can't afford not to understand the strategies and principles for building, repairing, and protecting your reputation on Google. And, in this book, I uncover many of the Reputation Management trade's secrets for effectively managing that reputation on the Web.
Look, the reputation management industry is one that's deeply-rooted in the search engine optimization, a field that I'm well-versed in. In this book, I explain the fundamentals of just how to wield full control over your own reputation on the Web.
Although I did find some useful tools from this book to manage one's online presence, I also found it to be way too long. It should really be condensed into something more concise, like a New Yorker length article. Another thing that I found strange about the book is it's prose. It seems to me like the book itself is optimized for search engines. A few keywords like "online reputation" are repeated until it almost seemed comical. Several times I had to go back to check if I hadn't already read a passage since many passages are repeated throughout the book. However, If you can live with these minor flaws, the book does offer solid advice on how to bump up (and down) certain entries on search engines like Google.