Online Reputation Management
Online Reputation Management
By Reputation Management
Online Reputation Management: How to Protect Your Business from an Online Attack
If your small business has recently established its online presence, building credibility is a vital part of your online marketing and advertising plan. A proactive online reputation management strategy is more important than ever; with the growth of blogs, discussion forum activity, and other small websites that can go unmonitored, many small businesses can become the victim of online attacks through negative postings and commentary. This was once only a problem for large corporations; however, small companies are particularly at risk when they have not established a strong online presence and are beginning to branch out online.
Every small business needs to work on their online branding strategy, ensuring that their image is not affected by consumers and clients. A few spam comments, flaming posts on social networks, or negative reviews can all affect your business and turn off potential customers. If your small business website runs a blog along with the basic product and services site, a successful online reputation management strategy can help you improve your brand image and encourage more visitors to yours site. Blogs, social networking, and link building are just a few ways to boost credibility.
Blogging helps you interact with customers and clients in a personable and informal way. Even if your website looks is highly structured and organized, a blog can create a more ‘human’ feeling to your business and help you engage customers on a variety of topics. Blogging has grown to become a valuable online marketing and social networking tool for businesses of all sizes. Making sure you update your blog regularly can help you build credibility in your industry, provide useful information for your visitors, and easily enhance your online reputation management strategy. You may consider tackling a variety of subjects relevant to your customers and prospective clients, and making an RSS feed available. This enhances your credibility, and encourages visitors to post comments and ideas on a regular basis.
Social networking is another important component of online reputation management. Participating in many of today’s leading social networks helps you become more visible and approachable to customers, helping to drive traffic to your site and enhancing your brand image in the process. Joining multiple social networks in your industry, or even building your own, helps your brand and business become highly visible; this can increase the ‘comfort level’ for prospective customers and help build a positive reputation.
Link building is another element of online reputation management. Inbound and outbound links located on your website and blog can not only boost your search engine rankings, but also provide visitors with valuable resources. Link building helps visitors find even more information about a specific topic or subject, and they can start relying on your business to provide them with quality and relevant information.
Building your positive image is much easier when you have a credible website or blog, and make it much easier to extinguish negative posts and other feedback that may have been posted across the web. Online reputation management is just as important for a small business as it is for large corporations; proactively taking the steps to enhance your brand and company image is easy with social networking, blogging, and building quality links throughout your site.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Entrepreneur and outdoor photography adventurer Caroline Melberg is President and CEO of Small Business Mavericks, a division of Melberg Marketing. She has over 20 years of experience creating marketing communications materials and writing copy for some of the largest and most successful companies in the world. Her small business columns are syndicated online, and she publishes the popular e-Zine “Maverick Internet Marketing Secrets.” Learn insider Maverick Marketing secrets you can use immediately to find new customers and increase your sales.
Online Reputation Management – A prerequisite of Effective Link Building
By Reputation Management
Author: Rob Sullivan
Over the past few articles I’ve brought you different tactics you can use to help build quality links to your site.And while I am going to continue to bring you even more of these tactics I thought it would be good to step back and take a big picture look at why link building is important.Further, I wanted to look at other things you should be considering when you are doing your link building: Namely managing your online reputation.
As the web evolves, reputation management becomes even more critical to your online business. This is because many people will form their opinion of your or your business based on the sites found around you.
An upset former customer can do a whole lot more damage to your reputation online that you may suspect. If they are a popular blogger, for example, and are able to call on their network of sites to help promote their negative view of you, it can have a detrimental impact on your search rankings.
This is because they can use a tactic called link bombing to rank higher than you for your name or the name of your company.
What do you mean links can be bad?
Just like how you need to build links to improve your link popularity and ultimately search engine rankings, links from other sites can work against you.
Let me give you a practical example:
If you do a search on Google for “miserable failure” or “failure” you will see that President George Bush’s White House bio is ranked number one. This is an example of many thousands of sites linking to the site’s bio page, with the anchor text “miserable failure” and “failure” in them. Google then counts these links as votes for the site for that phrase. Since the site receives the most votes it ranks the highest.
But this is just one example of using links to negatively influence search rankings. There is another where personal sites and blogs have used similar linking strategies to outrank corporate websites for negative terms.
I once talked to an attorney who was ranked #2 for his own name behind a blog site which went on about how terrible an attorney he was and how you shouldn’t hire him.
The blog site took advantage of the system by requesting links on the attorneys name from other bloggers, thus moving it ahead of the attorney’s own site.
It is this type of tactic which can be used against you because in this case, short of legal action, the attorney would have to build even more links to his site for his name than the negative blog.
In the mean time, however, the blogger continues receiving links as other sites which link to him now request the same links. It becomes a snowball effect. One link leads to three, which leads to ten, then a hundred, then 500 then 1,000 and so on.
That is the real power of blogging – the ability to quickly build links back to your site on virtually any phrase you chose to target.
And since bloggers have that much pull, they can (and in many cases do) use that ability against you.
But it doesn’t have to be just bloggers that do that. Any site that has the pull can post a derogatory page about you and flood the web with backlinks, through submissions to thousands of directories and other sites which don’t check for quality and will accept automated submissions.
And the kicker of this is, by the time you realize it has happened to you, it’s almost too late.
That’s because those links were submitted months ago and have passed Google’s aging policy. The only way you can combat this is to build a similar number of positive links and wait the same time until Google approves the links and adds them to your link inventory.
As you can imagine that can take some time so in the meantime your site suffers because of these negative tactics which were begun months ago.
So how you do combat negative links?
There is no real way to combat them. Once they are there they pretty much exist forever. The only real strategy is to ensure that you continue to build high quality relevant links to your site. Thus, you are essentially taking preventative action against those who may not have your best interests at heart.
That means using the tactics I’ve described in some of the recent articles, and continuing to monitor your link popularity.
It also doesn’t hurt to subscribe to services like Google Alerts. I use this to monitor a variety of keywords both in the news and in the organic rankings.
You could create an alert for your name and receive emails whenever there is a mention of your name – either through the news, or when a site begins to move in the organic rankings.
Then you can monitor a few sites to ensure that nothing magically appears ahead of you that is negative in nature.
And if you do find a negative site that appears on Google’s radar, at least you can take a somewhat proactive stance and begin building positive links at an increased rate, to keep them down in the rankings, and solidifying your position.
Summary
I don’t want to scare you with this. It’s not something that is rampant on the web. In fact, the average person has no idea how to “trash” you online, other than perhaps posting a negative comment on your website (if you allow commenting).
All I wanted to do with this article was to let you know that such individuals do exist. And they do have the power to supplant your positive online image with a negative review of you even if it is untrue.
But if you follow the rules of good link building you can help prevent such attacks from happening to you.
Riding the Web of Reputation Management
By Reputation Management
Author: Vishal Saxena
“A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.” – Winston Churchill.
News traveled at a snail pace and methodically before the advent of Internet. The communication channels have radically transformed since then, Internet being the most conspicuous one. Internet has gained the distinction of becoming the most preferred platform for finding information and the same is provided at lightening speed. Internet has an abundance of consumer generated media (CGM) in the form of forums, blogs, review sites, opinion postings, and many more; on any topic imaginable. With a plethora of self publishing options available to users, nothing is inviolable, including online reputation.
Building reputation, both online and offline, demand years of hard work and millions of dollars. It would be justified to say that reputation management is critical to any organization. Your brand is not immune to comments (positive, neutral or negative) in the public domain. People enjoy the liberty to talk about whatever they want and wherever they want. A lot of these discussions involve brands, products and services. A vindictive content has the potential to start an avalanche that could sully your reputation forever and thus online reputation management becomes essential.
Researchers have found that negative comments always look credible, even if they are frivolous or unfounded. There are numerous sites such as Rip-off Reports, Epinions.com, etc. which helps people voice their concerns vociferously. Negative press, in the form of discussion pages from these websites can show in search results, worse make it to the top ten. For the same reason, reputation management that belonged to the PR (public relations) domain since time immemorial, is proliferating into the realm of search engine marketing.
The power of search engine optimization could be leveraged to counteract negative publicity. The strategy is simple – displace offending search engine listings by favorable listings. Easier said than done. An extensive analysis of keywords and brand terms would help in assessing the extent of damage done. Promoting company’s primary website in tandem with positive pages is a tried and tested technique and would delivery fruitful results. All these exercises (search engine optimization and social media optimization) could be coupled with efforts, to get the derogatory comments removed. Online reputation management companies also explore legal avenues or contact webmasters individually to accomplish this task.
‘Prevention is better than cure’ and preemptive online reputation management allows you to do it. Creating listening posts to track what is being said about your company, would help you in nipping trouble before it blows out of proportion. There are many online reputation monitoring tools which prove to be handy for doing this task and some of them are mentioned below:
1 Set up Google and Yahoo email alert for specified keywords.
2 Track message boards, forums and groups.
3 Use tools like Copernic tracker, Website Watchers, Watchthatpage.com to track changes made to particular web pages.
4 Create RSS feeds for designated keywords (Feedster, Technorati, Yahoo/Google news, MSN Spaces, Blogpulse, etc).
5 Use ‘MonitorThis’ that allows you to subscribe to results from 22 search engines and many more.
Companies should incorporate online reputation monitoring as a permanent function and not consider it as a counteractive measure only.
‘Online reputation management ethics’ is a widely debated topic. Is it ethical to help a business which is ‘guilty as charged’? Doing online reputation management for innocent people, whose names have been tarnished by disgruntled customers, unhappy (ex) employees, etc. is justified and not against business ethics. Unfortunately, many online reputation management companies don’t buy this argument and do business with anyone and everyone.
Online Reputation Management is a terrible thing to lose
By Reputation Management
Posted by Deon Binneman
Please pass this on to all the PR and Medisa lecturers, they may find this provocative.
Online Reputation a terrible thing to lose
What has JCI, SARFU, Exxon, Thor Chemicals, Bill Clinton and Michael Jackson got in common? Their reputation got shattered by a single act of indiscretion. Reputations that were painstakingly built over many years and at great cost. No wonder that “Reputation Management” is the newest buzz phrase in management
circles.
The reason for this new and intensive focus is simple: A good image is a terrible thing to lose! It has been said that 30 years of hard work can be destroyed in 30 seconds. And, while that might seem melodramatic, don’t try soft selling its meaning to Exxon, Johnson & Johnson, Pepsi-Cola, South Africa or Union Carbide who had a shadow cast over its operations since the Bhopal disaster where over 2000 people were killed due to a gas leak.
Ask Thor Chemicals or Staal en Beton, Pretoria. Grim reminders that crises can strike a Business at any time; and during these crises a Companys image and reputation can be damaged significantly. Often, this can be a result of not responding adequately to media enquiries. Understanding what Communication challenges may arise during crises or before one occurs is therefore critical.
So what constitutes a good reputation? This depends from organisation. There is no one reputation that works for an organisation that will work for another. Each organisation must find its own version, based on
the industry the company is in and what the customer requires. BUT one thing stands out “A Company with a good reputation is one in which the deliverable and the demands are in synch”. Companies whose reputations are aligned with corporate goals include Federal Express, which has a reputation for
reliability, Honda which has a reputation for quality and Disney whose fun, family-friendly reputation is a perfect fit for the companys products and services.
No Company, organisation or individual whose livelihood depends on public support can therefore afford to function without a reputation building and a crises communication plan, Yet, many organisations still have no such plans. Many companies say they need it but think that with positive thinking and hope the inevitable will never occur.
The reality is that Crises (and Reputation disasters) are often unavoidable. What is avoidable is being ill prepared. After all, Noah built the Ark before it rained. And, how is it possible that some companies find
opportunities in the time of crises, while others succumb to the danger.
The secret is that they have a well prepared Crises Communication and Management Plan and reputation management process in place and that all the staff, including those who will deal with the media are well trained, reputation conscious and ready to face the crises. For many years the PR profession propounded the importance of planning proactively for crises. Crisis management became a plan of action to be implemented quickly once a negative situation occurred.
Crisis Management however is now evolving into reputation management for a number of reasons:
Firstly, because this new phrase should attract more attention from top management. Chairmen and CEOs don’t often want to think about potential crisis situations. For many executives, a crisis is something that happens to someone else. It is a distant thought that can quickly be relegated to the back of the mind, replaced by concern for profit and productivity. After all that is the “business of business”. This is often caused by belief systems that have put boundaries on their thinking. A Failure to look systemically at things, to view issues in a new light. Some executives believe in denial. It will never happen to us, whilst others suffer from myopic thinking, believing that they can actually control everything, including the impact of non- reputational decisions. Others believe that if they have 5 star NOSA ratings and have complied with legal requirements such as the Occupational Health & Safety Act – that they have done what is required. So, the phrase “crisis management” may not sell well at the top. But every executive must be concerned about the reputation of the company or organization.
Second, more and more organizations are facing situations that have real potential for harming their reputations. The rapid change, the warp speed in which markets change, the quick way in which information can be communicated using the world wide web all play a part in increasing opportunity for
disasters. For instance : What happens to a company when a senior executive is arrested for fraud,
such as in the Old Mutual/Blank affair? What happens when an AIDS-infected employee is eating in your company cafeteria, and most employees refuse to come to work? In each case, the organisations reputation is at stake?
According to the Institute for Crisis Management in Louisville, KY, news stories on class action lawsuits against organisations went up 538% from 1991 to 1992. Coverage of business crimes rose 328%. Certainly, these incidents created crisis situations, but in the long run, it will be the public’s perception of reputation that mattered.
This is an important point, because the media are concentrating more on these types of stories. The June 1993 issue of Public Relations Journal (page 7) reported that news coverage of business crises in 1992 increased 45% over the previous year. Most medium- and large-market TV news departments now have special teams to dig into consumer complaints and expose business foul-ups. They salivate over stories such as the JCI fiasco, and the Thor Chemicals mercury poisoning or the Dow-Corning silicone scandal.
Perception is truth. And, even though most executives don’t like it, the media establishes the perception of your organization. And, unfortunately public opinion shift quickly, but reverse itself slowly as attitudes
die-hard. When there was a rumor a while ago that Nelson Mandela was ill, share prices dropped almost immediately.
So, in this new public relations discipline of reputation management, dealing with the media in an organized,
aggressive and timely fashion is mandatory. When your reputation is at stake because of a crisis that occurred one hour ago, it is not a good to call a meeting to discuss strategy. Second, the most important rule in defending, preserving or enhancing a reputation is that you work at it all year long, regardless of whether or not a crisis strikes.
The time to build a reputation is day by day. After all, would you like to be in a position where you have to alter or counteract unfavorable opinion, convince uninformed or uncommitted opinion, or reinforcing or conserving favorable opinion of your company? Of these three, changing hostile opinion, or neutralising it is the most difficult. Gathering latent opinion on your side is easier. It may take time, but ” latent” opinions contain fewer prejudices to overcome. Conserving your reputation is like dealing with old friends you want tokeep them.
On January 29, 1992, the New York Times reported that Dow-Cornings handling of the controversy that led to the Food and Drug Administrations call for a moratorium on breast implants could be compared to the Exxon Corporation response to the Exxon Valdez oil spill. Critics said that their mistakes included a lack of public action by its CEO, too little sympathy and compassion for women who said they were harmed,
and the failure to get the news out quickly. One consultant called it a classic textbook case of crisis mismanagement. He told the Times: ” It looks like the lawyers are in charge trying too limit their liability. But the damage is much worse to the corporation if they lose in a court of public opinion than if they lose in the court of law”. They obviously did not have a reputational management perspective.
Reputation Management is a trend, not a fad. It is also far more than just company image. Reputation will always supersede image. Can a company for have a good image but a bad reputation? You bet. Look at Apple Computer Inc., which coasted on its good image as long as it could until its reputation for not innovating and producing new products caught up with it.
The reasons have been set out above, but the philosophy is rather simple: Your image was not built in a day, but it can be destroyed in one. Every CEO, company president and corporate public relations executive should begin each day in a very basic way by remembering that Noah built the Ark before
it rained”.
Reputation management is a strategy that is used all year long, utilising a proactive approach, and being proactive is the best crisis preventative. Building a reservoir of goodwill not only greatly reduces the likelihood of corporate crisis, but positively enhances an organisations ability to enter, win and maintain its markets around the world. When Russia and China welcome McDonald’s, it is because reputation, not hamburgers, paved the way. And perhaps that is what Dow-Corning forgot : that credibility is more
important than legal positioning.
So what is Reputation Management?
Reputation management is a proactive and systematic approach to identifying issues that currently affect your company or will affect it within the next 12 to 36 months. Like it or not, your company’s policies and actions are shaped and developed in anticipation of, and reaction to, political, economic, social and technological forces. It is also a process of casting a look internally and examining processes, procedures, policies and issues that could impact and damage the company online reputation. It involves an in depth look at the quality of management, financial soundness, use of corporate assets, community and environmental responsibility, quality of products or services, value as a long term investment, innovativeness, and the ability to attract, develop and keep talented people.
How to build a good reputation
Building a good reputation starts in the boardroom, not with a news release. Your companys good name is based on the development of good policies, not reactive damage control of bad ones. It requires an allocation of your management time and budget and assigning them to your reputation asset. It recognizes that direct and indirect costs of continual reputation damage are unacceptable. It creates a culture where long-term reputation enhancement outweighs short-term expediency. It empowers everyone to ask: If we do this, will it hurt our reputation? It should be noted that Public relations is not reputation management.
Rather, it is an outgrowth of reputation policy. Think of public relations as a mirror on the wall in your home; it reflects what you are. Think of reputation management as the foundation of your house; if it is unsound, your house will tumble to the ground, mirror and all. Regardless of your organizations size, reputation is a senior management responsibility. That does not mean senior managers execute the tactics of reputation, but it does mean they are responsible for reputation policies and the people who work on reputation issues. Assuming the mantel of that responsibility requires an understanding of the foundations of reputation.
The basic foundation of reputation
1. Important decisions by stakeholders are invariably based on trust. Trust is a 2-way process that is based on consistency (After all you expect a Coke to taste the same each and every time), reliability and predictability. It is about being congruent in word and deed. Good reputations are therefore built on good actions and policies that earn stakeholder trust. Before there is any communications, there must be reputation substance. The techniques of modern public relations (or advertising or promotion) are useless and worthless in the absence of substance. Examine your own role as a stakeholder with other organizations, and you will realize that trust is at the core of your product choices. Johnson and Johnson reinforced that lesson in a very special and positive way when several people died after taking Tylenol that had been poisoned? We buy what we trust. And when you invest in a share, you buy what you trust.
Companies such as Waltons and Dimension Data have seen their names appear on the top of the Business Times list, because of their reputation.
2. There is no quick or easy way to have a good reputation. You earn a good reputation over time by working at it. If you want people to regard your organisation highly, that must be a priority to which you allocate time and money, one for which you plan and budget as you would for any aspect of your business. Pay attention to your name. It is written in management literature: ” which does not get inspected, will not be respected”.
3. A good reputation is everyones job, not just managements. The entire organisation must nurture reputation relationships, from the tealady to the distribution clerk. Every action of every person affects perceptions. A careless act by one person tears down the good efforts of many. There are no shortcuts. Everyone has to always ask: “If other people knew what we were doing, would we be able to withstand that scrutiny?”
4. You cannot have good external reputation unless you have a good internal reputation. Charity starts at home. There are multiple reputation stakeholders. First among equals are employees, the front-line troops of reputation. If the folks on the inside do not buy in, how can you expect external stakeholders to think your organization is credible? Your own employees will be vocal about their relationships with your organization – good or bad. If they do not trust you, they will tell everyone, severely damaging your reputation and likely hurting your business in the process. The employees of the organisation can be either negative or positive ambassadors.
5. It may take years to build a reputation but only a moment to destroy one. Just as your next customer order for products is dependent on the quality and timeliness of your last one, a reputation is, more than anything, a reflection of what is perceived right now. There is a saying in show business that ” Every night is opening night”. Yes, it is helpful to have earned a good reputation over time. That can be invaluable for the day trouble knocks at your door. But, you can never let up even for a minute-workout risking all you have built.
A reputation is priceless asset to be protected and managed at all times. “Buildings deteriorate, products malfunction, copyrights expire, but if properly managed, an organizations good name and reputation grow in value with each passing year,” says communications consultant Mary Ann Pires.
What It All Means
First and foremost is that organisations should ensure that the right policies and programs are in place.
You should be telling your organizations story but only once you have determined that there is congruence between internal and external messages. Understanding the need to do that and being able to lead an effective, properly targeted communications program to all stakeholders is the responsibility of every reputation manager.
You may as well assume that your organisation will surely face tough business issues that have tremendous implications for your reputation. You will not spill a million gallons of oil in the ocean, but you may have a
sludge dam that breaks. You will not make a product that causes breast cancer, but you may have an employee die due to hazardous chemical exposure. You will be forced to lay off workers when business is down. You will not sell products that make people sick, but you may sell a product that malfunctions and if you may face what the IBM advertisement example depicted: “If your failure rate is one in a million, what do you tell that one customer” . Each of these examples reflects, at the very least, a serious problem. If
mishandled, each represents a genuine business crisis and a serious threat to your organizations reputation.
Conclusion
There is a clear and present need for you to become sensitized to reputation management, to understand its importance to both your company and your career, and to become comfortable with what you should not expect from this function. It must become a priority, along side marketing, production, legal, financial, and sales issues, so reputation problems never even arise.
A Reputation is like a fragile vase. You can glue a broken reputation back together again, but it will never look the same as it did before you damaged it. What are you doing to preserve, maintain or enhance your companys good name. What do you intend doing in the next 12 months to improve your reputation, your departments or your organisations reputation. Those are the issues. Those are the choices. The ball is now in your court
ACTION JOURNAL
Companies attempting to improve their reputation should adopt one or more of the following steps:
Plan to enhance, build, sustain or maintain their reputation. Assess and rethink from the ground up not only how, what, where and to whom you want to communicate internally as well as externally, but also how to best manage the entire reputational process. The first step in the process is research. You have to find out what your reputation is before you can begin to influence it. Start with a clean slate. Have an in depth look at internal issues including a reputational management audit. Review external impacts and reconcile the two. Prepare a white paper that deals with an objective look at all aspects of the reputation building process.
Remember the effective solution of problems is dependant on a thorough diagnosis.. In the absence of a proper diagnosis, the wrong solutions may be applied. All companies conduct a legal financial audit every year. Why not conduct a reputational audit? Turn the company inside out and address all the factors that contribute to the consumers perceptions of the company.
Set operating standards for the behaviors expected of all personnel. Walk the walk if you talk the talk. Some organisations pay lip service to the reputational management process. If senior executives don’t believe in
and consistently practice reputation building, neither will the troops. Educate management and the workforce through training workshops and using every available internal medium to build awareness of the process.
Remember awareness always precedes behavior change. Sell the message, not the program. Remember it must be an ongoing effort. One-time or sporadic communications accomplish little and may be counterproductive. As with any communication, the key to success is repetition and reinforcement.
The Author: Deon Binneman, CPRP,RAPP is the owner of DB Consulting, a Johannesburg based
management and Public Relations consultancy
Online Reputation Management-customer Generated Media and Tracking Tools
By Reputation Management
Author: Arunraj V.S.
Every single moment, someone or the other is talking about you, your product, your services, your business, your competitors or your industry. They may be complimenting about a particular aspect of your business, appreciating certain things or generating hype for your business. There are also people who do not think too high about your service. They are cribbing, complaining or criticizing about your service or your product.
Let us say a much-hyped movie is on the verge of release. A lot of money, time and efforts have been spent in creating the magnum opus, and an equal amount of money has been spent on publicity. Can you imagine how much it can hurt both the distributors and creative team when the pre-release hype is countered by negative posts and scathing amount of criticism. A lot of people who read negative posts and information are bound to stay away from the movie affecting its business.
Not just a movie, but every conceivable product or service has its online reputation at stake thanks to the open platform offered by the web 2.O tradition. A blog post or a couple of comments posted online can either be a windfall for your business or topple it down like a pack of cards. There is also a term for this phenomenon-it is called customer generated media or CGM. To tackle the negativity generated by the consumer generated media, you need to take resort of online reputation management.
Online reputation management involves the method of tracking or monitoring every hour. Make sure you track everything that involves your product or service, right from product lines and employees to marketing strategies and competitors. You can go to morever.com; a website gives information on your industry and the latest developments and news in your industry.
You can collate all possible keywords that a user usually searches on in terms of your product or service. You can then set up Google Alerts or Yahoo Alerts for all of these keywords so that you are alerted when something about your company is posted online with the listed keywords. You can also go to monitorthis.com which helps you keep track of a single keyword across different search engine feeds simultaneously.
Based on your keyword searches, you can make custom RSS fees from places like Technorati.com, Topblogging, Google News, Yahoo News and such others sites. It is even better to maintain all feeds into one RSS Reader like Google Reader, My Yahoo, Netvibes, Pageflakes, Bloglines, Newsgator etc. Find out some of the different forum sites or message boards that talk about your product or service and then closely track whatever is being written about. Similarly you can also track message groups like Yahoo Groups, Google Groups, MSN groups, AOL groups etc.
For online reputation management, you can also keep a track on some of the web pages through tools like watchthat.com and websitewatcher.com. You have to make sure you monitor every keyword and every page of the website that has anything even remote written about you. Monitoring and keeping a close watch of anything associated with your business is the one of the most important steps in online reputation management.

