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The Reputation Economy Managing Your Online Identity in the Age of Google Kimberley R. Barker, MLIS Librarian for Digital Life Claude Moore Health Sciences Library University of Virginia

Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

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Page 1: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

The Reputation Economy

Managing Your Online Identity in the Age of Google

Kimberley R. Barker, MLISLibrarian for Digital Life

Claude Moore Health Sciences LibraryUniversity of Virginia

Page 2: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

My Perspective

• Reputation management is not for:

– erasing the deeds of convicted criminals (Brock Turner)

– erasing institutional history (UC Davis Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi)

– erasing negative business reviews

Page 3: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

In this presentation:

• Defining the “reputation economy”• What is “Google Truth”?• How does Google work?• Defining online reputation management services

– Individual– Corporate

• Establishing a reputation management plan• Understanding the real-life ramifications of reputation

damage• Reputation restoration• Further resources

Page 4: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

What is the “reputation economy”?

• Refers to the way in which the standing of a product/person/institution/business is shaped by the contributions of end users.

• “wisdom of crowds”/crowdsourcing

– Nothing new

– Changes in technology mean that we use computers instead of the telephone or writing letters

Page 5: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Your own habits

• How many of you Google the following?– Job candidates

– Dates

– Children’s friends/counselors/teachers

– Doctors

– Products

– Hotels

– Restaurants

• How much are you influenced by what you find?

Page 6: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Incidentally…• 2011 report on Yelp ratings by Harvard

Business School assistant professor Michael Luca:

– a one-star increase in the rating of an independent restaurant leads to a 5 to 9 percent increase in revenue.

•http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/12-016.pdf

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Why

?

Page 8: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Google was King

Data from Hitwise, 1/21/2012

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Google is STILL King

Page 10: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

“Google Truth”

• the automatic acceptance of Google results as an accurate representation of reality

Page 11: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

How Google works (1 of 7)

• Google is comprised of three distinct parts

– Googlebot

– Indexer

– Query processor

• Each part has its own specific and unique function.

Page 12: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

How Google works (2 of 7)• Googlebot

– Composed of 1000’s of computers engaged in parallel processing:

•Requests & retrieves 1000’s of different pages simultaneously; does this two ways

– “Add URL” forms

– Find links via web crawling

» Fresh crawls

» Deep crawls

Page 13: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

How Google works (3 of 7)

• Indexer

– Receives full texts of pages from Googlebot; stores them in databases

– Index sorts search terms alphabetically

• Ignores “stop words”

•Converts all text to lower-case

– Each entry in index stores list of documents with that search term and also the location within the text of that search term

Page 14: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

How Google works (4 of 7)

•Query processorMultiple parts

•Search box

•“engine” that evaluates searches & matches to relevant documents

•Results formatter

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How Google works (5 of 7)

Page 16: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

How Google works (6 of 7)(It’s a popularity contest… sort of)

• PageRank

– Link analysis algorithm

– Page with higher rank displays higher in results list

– Google uses over 100 factors to determine rank

– How is PR calculated?

•Basically, the more times that a page is linked to determines its PR

– Built from this algorithm, which is used iteratively:

» PR(A) = (1-d) + d (PR(T1)/C(T1) + … + PR(Tn)/C(Tn))

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How Google works (7 of 7)

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Hummingbird• Google replaced its algorithm in August 2013

• The preceding seven slides are still valid

• Hummingbird is semantic; i.e., based on natural language queries

– Conversational search technology

– Uses Google’s Knowledge Graph

• Google is looking towards future

– 60% of Americans access Internet on mobile device

– Spoken searches

Page 19: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Mobile-Friendly Update

• April 21, 2015

– Mobile-friendliness

•Tappable buttons

•Easy to navigate from a small screen

•Important information front & center

– Mobile speed

– Desktop speed

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Why did I just spend 9 slides on Google?

• If you understand how Google works, you will understand how to:

– Positively increase your online presence

– Monitor your reputation

– Formulate a basic reputation restoration plan

– Understand when you need to seek professional help

Page 21: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

What is ORM (online reputation management)?

• Basically, “…the practice of making people and businesses look their best on the Internet.”

www.reputation.com

• For whom is this service?– Individuals

– Professionals

– Institutions

•Who can perform this service?•People just like you

•Reputation management professionals

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ORM is big business• “American companies will spend $2.2

billion in 2012 for "reputation and presence management," according to Jed Williams, senior analyst for BIA / Kelsey, a media-consulting firm based in Chantilly, Va.By 2015, that sum will grow to $5 billion, says Williams.”

– “Can you erase your online blunders? With effort, and luck, it's possible”; Lacitis, Erik; Seattle Times; July 29, 2012

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Should individuals/institutions

bother with ORM?

• In my opinion, if you aren’t monitoring your reputation in the same way that you monitor your credit, you’re crazy.

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• Do-it-yourself options have cropped up

– Brand Yourself

– Reputation-Fix

However, traditional RM services are expensive

Page 25: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Why should healthcare providers care about

reputation management?

Page 26: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

No one is caring about

it for you. 1/16/2015

Page 27: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Pew Internet & American Life’s Internet & Health Report 2013

http://www.pewinternet.org/Infographics/2013

/Health-and-Internet-2012.aspx

Page 28: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

“Rising Use of Social & Mobile in Healthcare” - 2012

Page 29: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Social Media & Online Reputation matter

Page 30: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Some online healthcare ranking sites

• HealthGrades

Page 31: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Some online healthcare ranking sites

Rate MDs

Page 32: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Yelp again• Study shows high Yelp rating correlates

with better Hospital outcomes

– Bardach NS, Asteria-peñaloza R, Boscardin WJ, Adams dudley R. The relationship between commercial website ratings and traditional hospital performance measures in the USA. BMJ Qual Saf. 2012.

• http://www.imedicalapps.com/2013/02/yelp-hospital-outcomes/

Page 33: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

But then there’s this:

• “Fake It Till You Make It: Reputation, Competition, and Yelp Review Fraud”

– Investigated economic incentives for creating fake reviews for self or competitor

http://people.hbs.edu/mluca/fakeittillyoumakeit.pdf

Page 34: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Establishing a reputation management plan

• Begin monitoring your online presence

– Good

•Search for your name at least once per month

– Best

• Create a search alert for your name

•Check your privacy settings on all social media

•Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc

•Feed your online presence with positive content

•Blogging, Tweeting, profile sites, YouTube, professional directories, newsletters, etc.

Page 35: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Examples of Positive ContentKimberley R. Barker vs. Kimberley Barker

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• Be aware of who might be looking for information about you

•Think about to what sites Google will direct searchers

•E.g., those searching for information on professors will be directed to sites such as HealthGrades, etc

•Accept the fact that no information does NOT equal a positive image and, in fact, can be viewed with suspicion

Establishing a reputation management plan

Page 37: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Establishing a reputation management plan (TL; DR)

• “6 Steps To Managing Your Online Reputation”

– Search yourself

– Buy your domain name

– Put all of your content in one place

– Join social networks

– Optimize your presence on those sites

– Keep private things private; assume nothing is private

Page 38: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Reputation Restoration•First steps

– Take time to process your emotions.

– You will need the support of family and friends.

– Realize that you are not the first person whose reputation has been damaged- you are not alone.

Page 39: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Reputation Restoration

– Realize that there exist tools to restore your good name.

– Assess the damage; if severe, consult a professional reputation management consultant immediately. Accept that you cannot repair the damage on your own and that the issue won’t just go away.

– DO NOT respond with posts of your own.

Page 40: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Reputation Restoration(information drawn from

Chapter 12 of Wild West 2.0)

• Understand the problem

• Make a plan

• Implement the plan

Page 41: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Understand the problem I(WW 2.0, Chapter 12)

• What is the extent of the problem?

•Perform an online reputation audit (see Chapter 10 of WW 2.0)

•Google your name; check the first three pages of results.

Page 42: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Understand the Problem II

•Find the source of negative content

• Use an Internet archive provider to check the URL’s of negative content. Try to determine where it began.

•Determine whether it is accidental or deliberate

• accidental- “name collision”- reinforcing cycle

• Deliberate- a lie about you; legitimate complaint

Page 43: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Make a plan(WW 2.0)

• Create a recovery road map– As in Chapter 10: create list of people who might

search for you– Create list of sites to which they are directed– Prioritize which sites to repair first- some smears

easier to repair than others

• Create recovery goals– Be realistic: it may be impossible to completely

expunge false information- News sites and some blogs will may always show up in top 10 results and only feeding positive content (and time) can remedy that.

– Pushing negative content to bottom of search results may be just as effective

Page 44: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Make a Plan

• Create recovery goals

– Be realistic: it may be impossible to completely expunge false information-News sites and some blogs will may always show up in top 10 results and only feeding positive content (and time) can remedy that.

– Pushing negative content to bottom of search results may be just as effective

Page 45: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Implement your plan(WW 2.0)

• Try to find a human

– Contact page administrator via form or email

– CALMLY explain the problem- you need his/her help!

– If a human will not help you, figure out from where that website is drawing its false information. Try to correct the information at the source (claim your online identity, etc)

Page 46: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Also…• Sites like Yelp, Facebook, HealthGrades, etc,

are protected from liability for content on their sites by section 230 of the Communication Decency Act (CDA 230), part of the 1996 Telecommunications Act:

– “no provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”

Page 47: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Implement your plan(WW 2.0 Chapter 12)

• Malicious attacks– Determine seriousness of threat & frequency

• If a one-off, let it fade away

• If dedicated, persistent attacker, understand that no matter what you do, this person may continue to spread lies.

•Try to identify attacker

– Sometimes use info known only to a few

– Sometimes pseudonym is a clue

– Try through legal means- understand expensive and lengthy

Page 48: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Implement your plan(WW 2.0, Chapter 12)

• Choose your strategy

– Fight back directly

– Try to resolve offline (but proceed carefully)

– Try to isolate negative content indirectly; i.e., “Google walls”

•Create more positive & neutral content than attacker creates negative. Play the Google algorithm.

Page 49: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Implement your plan:

Claim as many corners of the web as you can!

about.me

Page 50: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

How does reputation restoration work?

• Remember all of those slides about Google?

• ORM professionals will always be more effective than an individual simply because they can devote more resources to it.

Page 51: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

The future of ORM• Just as institutions have attorneys, they

will have contracts with reputation management companies which cover:

– Institution itself

– Individuals who have support of the institution

After all, the reputations of its individuals affects the reputation of the institution.

Page 52: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Don’t be an ostrich!

• Not only SHOULD you not ignore your online identity, but you soon WILL NOT be able to

• The way in which you respond to legitimate criticism can in fact bolster your reputation (individual or institution)

– Yelp example from Atlanta

Page 53: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Further Resources

• Wild West 2.0: How to protect and restore your online reputation on the untamed social frontier; Fertik & Thompson (available digitally in Virgo)

• “Fake it Til You Make It: Reputation, Competition, and Yelp Review Fraud” http://people.hbs.edu/mluca/fakeittillyoumakeit.pdf

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Further Resources

• “The Reputation Society: How online opinions are reshaping the offline world”; http://www.hassanmasum.com/reputationsociety

• “How hospitals hope to boost ratings on Yelp, HealthGrades, ZocDoc and Vitals “https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/sites-like-yelp-can-be-tough-but-hospitals-embrace-online-reviews/2015/06/03/a07a68b6-fe63-11e4-805c-c3f407e5a9e9_story.html

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Further Resources

• How Google Works

– http://www.googleguide.com/google_works.html

• The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine

– http://infolab.stanford.edu/~backrub/google.Html

• Page Rank

– http://www.sirgroane.net/google-page-rank/

Page 56: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Further Resources

• “6 Steps To Managing Your Online Reputation”

– http://www.forbes.com/sites/susanadams/2013/03/14/6-steps-to-managing-your-online-reputation/#175ee16ec1ac

• “Scrubbed” http://nymag.com/news/features/online-reputation-management-2013-6/index2.html

Page 57: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Further Resources• Pew Internet & American Life- Health

– http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2013/Health-online/Part-Two/Section-2.aspx

• Pew Internet & American Life- Mobile

– http://pewinternet.org/Commentary/2012/February/Pew-Internet-Mobile.aspx

Page 58: Reputation Economy (Sept 2017)

Get in [email protected]

• I am available for:

– Department meetings

– Committee meetings

– Small groups

– One-on-one consults

• Topics

• Reputation management

• Digital privacy

• Personal branding

• Emerging technology

• Social media