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Google Forum Listings A Good Idea?
By: Scott Clark 2009-10-02 The web is full of high-ranking complaint forums which accept anonymous postings, often obviously from shills or competitors. These posts often stir up pent-up... ...sentiment from other anonymous posters, and frequently mention companies, executives and others by name. Now, Google is showing forum posts in the main search results, despite the fact that this page is rapidly getting more and more complex. I also found listings for Yahoo! Answers and others. With these brand-name and person-name posts, I think we will see an increasing importance of forums in the ORM strategy of many companies that didnt worry about them before. While there were lots of examples of super-helpful forum listing insertions, I immediately found several cases where complaint forums posts were showing for brand name searches, meaning that companies will need to pay more attention to the internal postings on these forums in their Online Reputation Management monitoring. A Hole in the Garden Wall Im not sure this is a smart idea for Google. First of all, forum posts are not always high quality information " excepting perhaps technical discussions. Looking at forums such as cafepharma.com and others, the forums become cesspools of anonymous crap " much like the bathroom wall at a truckstop. The Headline Kills You However, whats notable about this issue is that even if a reputation-aware companies notice the complaint and handles it with skill, the forum post subject remains in place. The final post of the forum might be company X rocks!!!! but the subject can still be Company X Sucks! " Google cannot determine sentiment that changes as the posts go on. Strategies including starting new threads about the complaint resolution or possibly posting helpful blog-like posts in these popular forums to saturate the headers may come into play. One could ask the original poster to add something like (resolved) to the post headline.
Tag: Google, Forum, SEO Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Have a bookmark! -
About the Author: Scott Clark is an independent consultant who started working in Internet Marketing in 1994 while in the Silicon Valley. Currently he works with organic and paid search optimization (SEO/SEM), social media marketing (SMM), local web marketing, split and multivariate testing of website offers, and integrated marketing activities. He has grown several successful web businesses on his own as well. Scott holds a Bachelors Degree in Computer Science and Mathematics from Southern Illinois University and is an accredited Google Adwords Professional, a Yahoo! Small Business Partner, a Yahoo! Search Marketing Ambassador. He and his family live in beautiful Lexington, KY. Scott can be found online at http://www.buzzmaven.com. |
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