Archive: Posts Tagged ‘Management’

Content Management System: New Era of Technology

No comments December 3rd, 2009

Content Management systems have reached the stage of being a commodity that is highly in demand. The proof is in the number of competing products that are on the market today and the low prices that these high-end content management systems are currently being offered at.

Then also there is a very good demand for content management system. There are a number of reasons for it. But the main reason for good demand is more consumers are becoming publishers and the growing number of Web users turned online entrepreneurs who are seeking ways to managing their content output. With so much content being published every day and at such an accelerated speed, the demand for content management systems continue to grow.

These consumers usually don’t have the budget or don’t want to spend a time on Web designers, or software programmers to build their websites. They don’t want to spend to have someone else update their websites. What they want is to have control over their content and the freedom to update their sites as frequently whenever necessary. They want to be able to publish their thoughts as soon as it hits them. Online businesses share this same desire – to have control over their content, to have freedom to update their sites whenever needed and to publish their content in a flash. Content management systems help them achieve this, easily. By using a content management system, online entrepreneurs can:

How Internet Reputation Management Can Save You or Your Company From a Disaster

No comments December 2nd, 2009

Internet Reputation Management is the practice of manipulating or reshaping one’s search results to reflect a more positive, or accurate, depiction of a particular person or company. This industry got started in 2006, originally to defend children from the dangers of social networking sites. However, it has evolved into something more than that. The Internet, and search engines particularly, has become more important as a source for information, whether that is an impression of a celebrity or a review of a product. Think about itwhen you are going to try a new restaurant, go see a movie, look up a celebrity, buy a new product, you look to the Internet, and especially search engines, for information. Search engines allow for the aggregation of a great deal of information, most of which is user-generated, rather than produced by any professional journalist. Using a search engine to find new information about a subject has become so common, in fact, that “Google” has become a verb. You’ve heard it before, “‘I don’t know anything about H.L. Mencken.’ ‘Well Google him!’” User-generated journalism, often in the form of blogging, is incredibly unpredictable, though, and notoriously unreliable. Negative search results are quite common, and although they are sometimes perfectly understandableoften they are ridiculous or simply false. Input “Octomom” or “David Vitter” and you will see a plethora of negative comments which any person would say they may or may not deserve. However, I think we can all agree that both Nadya Suleman (Octomom) and David Vitter have a right to publicize themselves in a positive light, too, rather than letting their reputations be held hostage to the whims of angry bloggers and forum trolls. The only effective way to fight back against this anonymous barrage of negativity in their search results is to hire an Internet Reputation Management professional. They will conduct a campaign, on a business or individual’s behalf, that will help them to publicize themselves more positively. Although they cannot remove the offending search results, they can push them down in rankonto the second, third, or fourth pagewhere hardly anyone will see them. This is the essence of Internet Reputation Management, the suppression of links through the elevation of positive publicity.