If you do One Thing to grow your online marketing efforts this month, you should track what others say about your business.
In other words, I’m suggesting you Google yourself. You should go to your favorite search engine and see who is talking about you. There are several things you can do with this information. If you read on to the end of this post, you’ll find some easy ways to keep track of this.
Sure, you’ll want to Google your company’s name. That’s obvious: if someone is vetting your company, you need to make sure you have positive search results before they do business with you.
The problem is predicting all that a potential customer might search for. I have this conversation with all my SEO clients. They sometimes want to play the “what about this word” game and worry that they aren’t ranking for whatever word they suddenly thought of. Unfortunately, the total number of keywords a potential customer might search for is infinite. This is true even for customers searching for your brand name.
Thankfully, in Google’s Manual Review Guidelines, they make other suggestions:
The Manual Review Guidelines say that the quality of a website is a function of what other people say about the company and the website. You don’t just need to be worrying about what your customers think. You need to worry about what Google thinks about your reputation.
Here are some others to consider:
What other websites say about you is an integral part of Google’s algorithm. They have to do more than mention your name, though. They need to link to your website. If a website is already talking about you, why wouldn’t they link to you, too? UPDATE: Even if links don’t matter in an LLM world, what other credible websites say about your business does matter to LLMs.
The easy way to do this is to ask. Contact the website and politely ask them to change the mention to a link.
If you want to take this a step further, think a little more creatively:
One caveat: don’t link back. When you “link to me and I’ll link to you,” you break Google’s TOS by creating a “link exchange“. That’s bad.
Not everyone who talks about you will be happy with you. Nobody likes criticism, which leads some businesses to try to hide from it. Although you might be able to hide from it, your potential customers will find it. If they do, they might not become customers after reading it.
It’s better to stay ahead of your online reputation. If you find that someone is unhappy, you should address it. Contact them and see if you can make it right. You might be able to turn a bad experience into a good one.
Sometimes the internet creates trolls. The internet creates a distance between people and their own words. This might result in some people who are irrationally angry and inconsolable. If you encounter one of these trolls, don’t make it worse by being defensive or argumentative. It’s best to leave them alone.
Don’t just sit around your office all day Googling yourself. Check out what people are saying about your competitors, too.
What does your business do? For some, it’s hard to summarize it into a simple phrase. Better yet, what do your customers say you do for them? That’s the phrase new customers will take to Google. Perhaps you should look at what else Google says about your industry.
I am not suggesting you sit around and Google your favorite keyword all day. Wondering why your website doesn’t “rank” for that phrase will drive you crazy.
Instead, use this as an opportunity to see what other websites are saying about your industry. This can help you:
Who has time to Google your business name, competitors’ names, and industry keywords daily?
Use one of these tools (or both) and get these notifications delivered to your inbox. Now you can take care of it as you do with the rest of your business.
First, before you give one of these tools a phrase, try a couple of different phrases in a search engine. Find the most specific search phrase that will generate the most relevant results. Consider modifying your phrase with more specific terms (your city, for instance).
The goal here is to narrow down the query to only give you the most relevant results. For example, if you search for my business name, you get results about something that is “reliable” and an “acorn.” If I add “marketing” to my search, I only get things relevant to me. If you use a more specific query, you won’t waste your time with false positives.
Second, none of these (even Google Alerts) will send you every mention. These are edited. They might not tell you everything that’s going on, but they will tell you enough to be useful.
Reliable Acorn will help you create a custom digital marketing strategy that does just that.
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