Thirteen ways to boost your online reputation

February 23, 2009, 01:55 PM —  Computerworld Canada — 

Strategies and tactics to turn the Internet into an ally for your professional persona. Part Two of a three-part series.

Yesterday, we looked at how the information trail you leave on the Internet can boost or bust your career. Today, we present 13 online strategies and tactics to help keep your professional reputation in check.

1) Double-check those privacy settings

A lot of people compartmentalize -- using LinkedIn as their professional network for colleagues and clients and Facebook as their network for family and friends, said Richard Binhammer, responsible for conversations, communities and communications at Dell Inc. "That's fine, you can compartmentalize that way, but the fact is both of them are searchable, so if an employer wants to go to Facebook and search you and find those things, well they can unless you've protected them from being found," he said."

2) Don't neglect your social network accounts

Letting an account go stale is a big concern, said Paolo Pasquini, spokesperson for Consumer and Online at Microsoft Canada Corp. "What happens when you join the LinkedIn community and then you neglect it because you're busy with your Facebook pages or your blog site...your LinkedIn [shows] two companies ago where you used to work and it may have a contact or profile or personal information that's no longer relevant," he said..?"

If you have several accounts, Pasquini suggested using an aggregator that makes it easier to create content once and publish in multiple places. For example, Windows Live recently announced a partnership with Facebook and already maintains partnerships with LinkedIn and Twitter, he said.

3) Maintain a consistent personal brand

"When you realize that you can't control all your personal information...you embrace the ability to surrender some of that privacy so you can have this proactive brand online. I like to tell people to think of it as your personal corporate logo. When people think of me, what do I want them to get? That should be consistent across all the places where you are actively socializing," said Pasquini.

4) Honour transparency

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Sidekick: The Good News & the Bad News
Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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