What to Do When Your Reputation is Targeted Maliciously

When you have been in business as long as we have sometimes you become a target. Here is our story and what we have done about it.

A month ago or so, I was contacted by an owner of an e-commerce appliance store. This person wanted to hire us for blog writing services. As a routine part of qualifying our clients I reviewed the prospect’s website after an initial chat with him by phone. I then did a search for his business name and reviews. I was very surprised when I saw the volume of complaints about the prospect’s business. To be fair his business had positive reviews as well, but there were numerous negative reviews. Some complaints were documented with strong details, names, dates and situations as well as conversations with the management of the e-store.

At that time I decided that we were simply not a good match for this blog writing project. We are not the right resource for every business and not every prospect is the right match for us. I sent a decline note to the person and mentioned the reason was the number of negative review on epinions.com. The prospect then sent me a harassing email a week later that was over 500 words long and targeted me personally.

I routinely check my online reputation and came across a review posted by what appears to be the same person on an online site. The writing style and references to the situation were too similar to his situation to be of coincidence. However this time, the prospect made it sound like they had been a client and slammed our business and expertise.  Here is the complaint in its entirety.

Company knows little about E-Commerce. Total waste of time. Don’t spend your hard earned money with a company that knows little about the industry.

As writers, they should be experts. Company does not have the basic knowledge of the industry. I spoke with the owner who astounded me with her inability to do basic research and unreasonable attitude and policies to their customers.

Additionally, this person posted the complaint anonymously.

So, how does a legitimate business respond to a situation when they are targeted in this manner? You can chose to do nothing and hope it will go away, or chose to be upfront and address the situation head-on. I personally prefer the head-on approach.

I posted the following comment under the prospect’s complaint:

 I am Nancy McCord of McCord Web Services LLC.

Based on the information noted above and the writing style of the person making the complaint about our services, I believe that the person writing this “complaint” is a prospect that we decided would not be a good match for our services. We decided to not perform blogging services for them due to the large number of online complaints at epinions.com.

I believe that we have never provided services for this person in question or their business.

We work hard to keep our many blog writing customers satisfied and offer personal and responsive services.

You can view our many positive service reviews and samples of our blog writing work on our website at http://www.mccordweb.com/blog-writing/index.php.

Additionally, I am taking the time to further address this online complaint by posting a blog about the situation which will also appear on Twitter and the home page of my website today. We pride ourselves on responsive, friendly, professional blog writing services. If we have a complaint (and we have had very, very few in the years for which we have been blogging), we work hard to immediately rectify the problem. Our business has been built on writing quality, trust, and value. We don’t compromise when it comes to customer satisfaction!

It happens sometimes that a person may want to damage your reputation unfairly, but it is important to meet the difficulty head-on with a sense of urgency. I think that I have done so in this case.

Top Google AdWords Questions

There are questions that we get asked by clients about Google AdWords frequently. Here are several and our answers to each.

I am looking for my ad at 8:00 PM on Google and can’t see it why?

When you cannot see your ad in the evening it is typically because your daily budget has already been spent for the day and Google has stopped showing your ads. The frequency of your ad being shown is all tied to your daily budget which is found by taking your 30 day click budget and dividing it by 30 days. Google may spend over 20% of your daily budget on any one day, but will never spend over your 30 day budget in a 30 day period.

My budget is $500 and Google spent $516 in December, why?

December is a 31 day month so Google could spend an extra day spend in December. Remember the budget you set is for clicks for a 30 day period. Some months will have 31 days.

I have reviewed my credit card and it appears that I was billed by Google several times why?

Google does not bill according to your credit card billing cycle or for that matter even on a set monthly basis. Google bills when you have spent your pre-assigned Google spending limit. Here are the limits from the Google help center:

The initial credit limit of $100 is incrementally raised each time an account hits its credit limit before 30 days have ended. The credit limit is first raised to $100, then to $250, then to $500 and then to $1000. The amount billed may be slightly in excess of the credit limit if an account accrues clicks very quickly.

So you may actually have several transactions to your credit card in the same month or straddled over two months appearing that Google is constantly billing you, but in essence they are following their credit guidelines noted above.

I thought it used to be $5 to set up an AdWords account, but I got billed $10

 Google has recently changed its set up fee. You are right it has always been $5 and just in the very recent past has Google started to bill $10 for set up.

As pricing and billing are some of the most asked questions about AdWords, here is a link to the AdWords help center to specifically additionally address some other topics you may find of interest.

Loving the WordPress Atahualpa Template

I have to say that the Atahualpa WordPress template is by far one of the nicest and most customizable blog templates that I have used. You can visit the designer’s website to see what other templates they have or to download your free copy.

What I like about the template is the ability to create your own banner for the blog and the ability to customize colors easily. Here are several blogs that we have helped to set up that are using the Atahualpa template:

Each blog has a unique template but you can see some of the similarities when you review each such as sidebar, categories, and tag placement. It can be a difficult job to customize a blog template but with the widget-driven Atahualpa WordPress template all the controls are set up in a very easy to use control panel.

Featured Blog Client – Marco Island Luxury Estates

We’ve got a new customer that we wanted to highlight today – Marco Island Luxury Estates. This fairly new blog is owned by Keller Williams Realty the top Marco Island Realtor. The blog showcases Marco Island real estate listings, points to the Marco Island Florida MLS property search tool, and highlights interesting tidbits about Marco Island life for new visitors and home owners.

Many real estate firms have problems in setting up a blog as they use a template service for their main website. This keeps them from having a blog installed under their own domain name. In this case with the Marco Island Luxury Estate real estate team from Keller Williams, we purchased a keyword dense domain name – www.Marco-Island-Luxury-Estates.com and installed their blog there. The main website is located at www.MarcoIslandLuxuryEstates.com. Note the nice match of domain names but with keywords separated by hyphens to piggyback on Google’s new thrust of keyword rich domain names.

The blog points back to the main website providing keyword dense links and helps to drive traffic to the main website using keyword dense blog posts using a variety of selected keyword phrases. So check out the blog to see what you think. If you have a similar problem, consider an off site keyword dense domain name for your blog if you just can’t install a blog under your own domain name.