Picking up on my last post here at Slaw (Social Media and Background Checks [1]), I recently came across some excellent commentary from some heavyweight legal bloggers about managing one’s online reputation.
It begins with Jim Calloway’s post Online Reputation Management: First Rule is to Avoid Self-Inflicted Wounds [2]. That really is the first rule and the one that is sometimes forgotten “in the moment”. Jim writes:
As we have seen with many well-documented Facebook and Twitter stories, the biggest potential danger area for damage to your online reputation is you. We saw it happen with flame e-mailing when angry and now you can post your anger or missteps online for the entire world to see with social networking.
But what others write about us can also have an impact. According to a 2009 Neilsen Global Survey [3]:
Recommendations from personal acquaintances or opinions posted by consumers online are the most trusted forms of advertising, according to the latest Nielsen Global Online Consumer Survey of over 25,000 Internet consumers from 50 countries.
Albeit in a slightly different context, this quote is instructive, as it shows that online information is a critical source of decision making. Increasingly so.
Dennis Kennedy [4] and Tom Mighell [5] have released a podcast [6] on the subject. Here’s Dennis’s post [7].
Check out, for example, the new MIT Personas [8] to see what’s on the internet about you (or at least someone that shares your name). A bit of a cottage industry has grown up around the concerns about managing the online reputation. As examples, Defendmyname [9] and Reputation Defender [10].
Again, what you post on the internet can have broad implications on your life and career. What others write about you can also have profound implications.