Sample of Me and My Web Shadow
Me and My
Web Shadow
How to Manage Your
 Reputation Online

   Antony Mayfield




   A & C Black • London
First published in Great Britain 2010

A & C Black Publishers Ltd
36 Soho Square, London W1D 3QY
www.acblack.com

Copyright © Antony Mayfield, 2010

All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored
in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior written
permission of the Publisher.

No responsibility for loss caused to any individual or organisation acting
or refraining from action as a result of the material in this publication can
be accepted by A & C Black Publishers Ltd or the authors.

A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN: 9–781–4081–1908–2

This book is produced using paper that is made from wood grown in
managed, sustainable forests. It is natural, renewable and recyclable.
The logging and manufacturing processes conform to the environmental
regulations of the country of origin.

Design by Fiona Pike, Pike Design, Winchester
Typeset by Saxon Graphics, Derby
Printed in Spain by GraphyCems
Contents
Introduction                                                vii
If you read nothing else...                                 xii

Part I: Welcome to the Web Age                              1
   1. Where the web began                                   2
   2. The fog of revolution                                 8
   3. Our personal webs                                    12
   4. Making sense of the web                              15

Part II: Managing your web shadow                          25
   1. Why manage your web shadow?                          26
   2. Exploring your web shadow (and beyond)               34
   3. Making a plan for your web shadow                    44
   4. Establishing your web presence                       54
   5. Public and private                                   61
   6. Behaving yourself                                    70
   7. Dealing with bad things online                       81

Part III: Practical advice for digital lives               89
   1. Workflow: Fitting web shadow management into your
        routine                                            91
   2. About me: Creating and maintaining your web shadow
        content                                            101
   3. Useful tools for managing your web shadow            109
   4. Things you need to know about... LinkedIn            127
        1. Overview                                        127
        2. Setting up or re-setting your LinkedIn profile   128
        3. Building your contacts network                  133
        4. LinkedIn features                               136
        5. Applications                                    141
iv me and my web shadow




   5. Things you need to know about... Facebook       143
      1. Facebook and your web shadow                 143
      2. What’s Facebook for?                         144
      3. Basics: Getting set up                       144
      4. Privacy and Facebook                         147
      5. Further reading                              151
   6. Things you need to know about... Twitter        152
      1. What is Twitter?                             152
      2. Setting up your Twitter presence             155
      3. Getting your Twitter network started         157
      4. Using Twitter                                159
      5. Building up your Twitter use and presence    162
      6. Further reading                              164
   7. Things you need to know about... blogging       166
      1. Why blog?                                    166
      2. Basics: Getting set up                       168
      3. Anatomy of a blog                            171
      4. Blog posts                                   174
      5. Blogging workflow                             178
      6. Promoting and connecting your blog           180
      7. Further reading                              183

Conclusion: connected lives and serendipity engines   184

Index                                                 186
Web Shadow: 1. What someone finds when they look for you on the web.
2. The combination of an individual’s online owned presence (social
network profiles, blogs, personal websites) and their earned presence:
what others say about them for instance on company websites, blogs,
Twitter and wikis. (Etymology: derives from Jeff Jarvis’s term “Google
shadow”, describing the search results for an individual.)

Tag: #webshadows
introduction
‘Want to see something juicy?’
   That was the greeting from Spokeo, a web search engine that finds
photos and information about people from 48 social networks. I’d
stumbled across it looking for ways people could check out what I was
calling their web shadow – the traces of themselves that they or anyone
else could find on the web.
   What a question.
   I was checking my identity online and those of some friends a little less
web-obsessed than myself. Entering my email into Spokeo gave me more
than that, though – a lot more. Within moments it was delivering hundreds
of photos and other information relating to my Gmail contacts; within
minutes it had scanned the online lives – the web shadows – of almost
1,000 people that I had corresponded with on Gmail. Friends, colleagues,
business contacts, you name it: Spokeo ripped through the web bringing
back all sorts of nuggets of information. Most were harmless and
entertaining, but there were maybe some that these people didn’t intend
the world to see.

Who’s looking at you?
What happens when someone puts your name into Google or Facebook?
If you don’t know, you should maybe find out.
   Chances are in the past few days or weeks someone has tried to find
out about you online. Maybe it was a colleague, maybe it was a prospective
employer, a client, a supplier, a bank manager. Maybe it was a spammer
or a fraudster or some other individual that might wish you ill.
   Our lives increasingly leave echoes, footprints or shadows on the web,
whether it’s being mentioned in a company press release or a friend
putting a picture of us from a weekend barbecue up online. There’s no
such thing as being unGoogleable, as Bernhard Warner said in an article
for The Times1.

1
     How to be unGoogleable, by Bernhard Warner: The Times, May 28 2008 http://technology.
    timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article4022374.ece
viii me and my web shadow




  Unless you go ‘off the grid’ in a really extreme way. And why would you
want to go off the grid, anyway? The web is bringing a communications
revolution that is unparalleled in the history of our species.
  The benefits of understanding the web and the things you can do online
at a personal level are also immense. Plus, you get to live through a
revolution. Which is nice.
  This book is about understanding how the online part of our lives
works. How we can manage our online personal presence with a little bit
more certainty.

Web shadows
So this book is called Me and My Web Shadow. It’s adapted from a
phrase coined by Jeff Jarvis, one of the most inspiring writers about how
the web is changing the world. He called the search results that appear
when we put our names into Google our ‘Google Shadow’2.
  Your web shadow is the mark you make on the web, the trace of you that
people can see there. It’s the sum of your presence (social networks profiles,
blogs, personal website) and the things that mention you or link to you.
  Increasingly, the things we do in our lives end up leaving a trace online.
Photos, CVs (or résumé, if you speak US English), company news, blogs,
Twitter updates, and all manner of things we and those we know put up
on social networks mean that our lives leave an impression on the web.
  I work in an industry that for the moment is called ‘digital media’. It used
to be called ‘new media’ just a few years ago. Soon it will just be called
media. We tend to do that to new things – give them special names that
kind of fade away. You can almost hear the words getting shorter and less
exotic year by year (cellular telephone, mobile phone, mobile, moby...).
  So for now we will talk about our online personal presence, managing
our reputation on the web and looking after our web shadows. Soon,
sooner perhaps than you think, this will just be how we think about
ourselves and our reputation.

2
    Jeff Jarvis’s What Would Google Do? Collins, 2009, is a must-read for anyone interested in the
    web and its impact on business and society more widely.
introduction ix




Who is this book for?
Me and My Web Shadow is intended as a guide to understanding how to
look after your presence on the web: what the web says about you and
what it tells people when they come looking for you.
   This is a book for anyone who is online but feels like parts of how the
web works are running away from them. Also it is for people who want to
ensure that they are aware of how the web’s growth into so many parts of
our lives may affect them, and what they can do to maintain some control
over what information is available about them.
   You have to write for someone, so I wrote this book for my friends,
family and colleagues who need to know more about how the web works
and how they fit in as individuals. I have a lot of friends who work with the
web, who understand it as well or even better than I do – but most of my
friends and family are anxious or unsure about issues such as privacy and
personal privacy online.
   If you think you’re an expert in the web already, there may not be
much here for you. But I bet you know some people who might get a lot
out of it.

Who am I?
Well, naturally the best way to find out about me would be to Google
‘Antony Mayfield’.
   Before I worked in ‘digital’ I worked in public relations and communications,
helping brands and organisations understand people who were important
to them and how to communicate with them. Actually, I still do, but because
I look at websites, online videos, social networks and blogs, I get called
something else. Soon it will just be called ‘communications’.
   I say these things partly by way of establishing my credentials, but also
partly to reinforce an important point. The web is quickly becoming un-
exotic (although there will always be exotic things to be found on it); it has
become a feature of everyday life.
   If you were going to be a bit ‘self-help manual’, a bit ‘this book can give
your career a digital turbo-charge’, a bit ‘take your career to 2.0’, a bit
‘brand-dot-you-dot-zero’, you might say that the compelling thing was
x me and my web shadow




that this book was about taking the techniques that big brands use to be
successful on the web and applying them to yourself.
   But that’s not the way I see it. Most of what I do is to help brands to
understand that the web is a place where they have to operate at a social
level, a human level (hence the phrases ‘social networks’ and ‘social
media’ that are currently in vogue).

How to use this book
I can’t help it. I have written for the web for so long that I tend not to think
of 60,000 words like this as a document that many people, if any, will sit
down and read in a linear fashion, from start to finish. If you do go down
that route, I’m sure it will still work, but this book has been written in parts
that you will probably dip in and out of as you need them.

    First up, there’s a short-ish chapter which should give you everything
    you need to know to manage your web shadow – the basics, the
    skinny, the low-down on the basics and the bare minimum you should
    know. If you’re a flighty sort or time-starved, read this and know you
    can come back to the rest later.
    Second, in Welcome to the Web Age, I set some context around the
    web; what it means for us and the way that it is changing our world.
    Then, in Managing your web shadow, we get deeper into a
    recommended approach for getting serious about your online presence.
    Next up, we have what you might think of as the ‘Haynes manual’ section
    of the book, dealing with practical use of web tools, social networks like
    LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and how to set up your own website.
    After that cheerful last note, there are some appendices which have links
    and suggestions for further reading on some of the topics in this book.

This is a personal view rather than an objective one; more of a Mrs Beeton’s3


3
    Not for non-British readers: Mrs Beeton was a Victorian who wrote a book about household
    management which is mainly remembered for the recipes. Wikipedia has more... http://en.
    wikipedia.org/wiki/Mrs_Beeton
introduction xi




for your personal web, rather than a definitive guide. In truth, I have to be
relaxed about this approach – if I’d tried to write a definitive guide I would
have gone mad trying. I don’t think you can be definitive, absolute, when it
comes to something as fast-moving and complex as the web.

This book was out of date six months ago
Sorry to break it to you like that, but it’s not as bad as it sounds...
  One of the inevitable challenges of writing a book about the web and
technology is that things move so fast that some of Me and My Web
Shadow will be out of date before the presses even start rolling, perhaps
even before the publisher clicks ‘open’ on the Word file. [Note to publisher:
go with me on this, I’m making a serious point :-)]
  Throughout Me and My Web Shadow I have included links to sources
and places where you can find more information. There’s always a chance
that some of these links will be ‘broken’ by the time this book is printed
and you get to read it. In that case, please do visit www.antonymayfield.
com/webshadows where there should be links to most things – or you
could just try Googling whatever it is you were interested in seeing.
  A note about terms: I am guilty of using ‘Google’ as a synonym for
‘search’ very often. As 80% of searches in the UK are carried out on
Google and it is the company that defined the modern search engine, I’ll
make no apology for it. Who knows, this 2010 colloquialism could end up
looking very dated indeed in a few years’ time, but for now, we Google
stuff when we want to find it, mostly.
if you read nothing else...
Let’s be honest, you are not likely to finish reading this book in one sitting.
If you’re anything like me with business and reference books you will be
lucky to make it halfway through. That’s not necessarily a bad thing –
usually after a half or even a third of big concept business books you have
got the gist. You can dip back into them if you need more detail, but
basically you probably have the best of them and it’s time to move on.
   In fact, this book is part introduction to the brave new world of social
networking, part advice piece on how to manage your personal presence
on the web and part manual for using various web tools and services.
   It practically begs you to dip in and out as you see fit, but hopefully will
bear up to – and reward – a straightforward reading from cover to cover.
   As a first dip into Me and My Web Shadow, try out this section. Then
put it down to mull it over, carry on reading, or follow the references to the
other chapters that seem interesting.

Why manage your web shadow?
Here are the three most important reasons why you need to think about
managing your web shadow:

  Our lives are moving online: The web is doubling in size every couple
  of years, and is drawing in more and more things we do and say: there
  are going to be more and more traces of you on the web. Becoming a
  digital hermit will be very hard to do and will cut you off from a great
  deal of benefits. Best to manage your online presence rather than have
  it defined solely by what others say.
  The web is the first place many will look to find out about you: It is
  becoming second nature for people to Google one another. Whether
  vetting potential employees and partners, or simply to know more
  about colleagues, clients and new acquaintances, people will look
  online. It is becoming a kind of personal due diligence that you make
  sure that useful, accurate information about you can be found online.
  Being findable and connected brings opportunities: Managing your
  web shadow, your personal web presence, will often mean using the
if you read nothing else… xiii




  web to connect with others and share useful information. This can
  create great opportunities, personally, culturally, politically or
  professionally – whatever is important to you. Taking charge of your
  web shadow will lead to a great level of what we can call ‘web literacy’.

The top ten rules for managing your web
shadow
When I was thinking about writing a book along the lines of what has
become Me and My Web Shadow, I was given some unexpected clarity
and inspiration from the Chartered Accountants in England and Wales.
Their PR agency asked me to help make a video about the 12 Golden
Rules for online reputation management. You may still be able to find it
online at Vimeo (http://www.vimeo.com/1477988).
   Being prescriptive, claiming to be ‘definitive’, is about the fastest way to
trouble there is when it comes to the web. We have to start somewhere,
though, so here are the 10 things everyone needs to bear in mind when
they are thinking about how to manage their web shadow.

1. Check your Google shadow regularly
No excuses. You need to at least know what Google says about you.
The starting point – and the very least you should do if you care about
your reputation – is to search for yourself on Google. Google is, for now,
the first step on the web journey that most people take.
   Unfortunately, the still popular terms for searching for yourself is ‘vanity
search’ or ‘ego surfing’. This makes some people feel like they are being
immodest, egotistical or navel-gazing by taking a look at what the web
says about them. But it is the most basic form of due diligence: managing
what people find when they come looking for you.
   Now you’ve checked your Google shadow, you should keep checking
it: in two ways. First, set up Google alerts on your name and common
misspellings of it. Second: revisit the search results regularly to see what,
if anything, has changed about the results that appear (especially on the
first half of the first page – most people never look further than the first
page of results on a search engine).
xiv me and my web shadow




2. Be the first/best source of information about yourself
If you are first in Google then you always have the first say about
yourself.
Ideally, you should be the number one source of information about yourself
on the web.
   Why? Because whatever people read about you elsewhere, it may be
flattering but may also be out of date, slightly inaccurate, or sometimes
damaging to your reputation. Best that the first impressions people get
are accurate and yours. If there is erroneous or even negative information
about you on the web, it is much less of a worry if people can find out
about you from you first, as it were.
   This is essentially what we mean by ‘managing’ your web shadow, or
your personal reputation, online. Because the web is open, there is no
way that you can control what is said about you (try ringing Google and
asking for them to print a retraction) but you can have a big influence on
how you are perceived.
   As we’ll discuss later on, to achieve this you don’t have to have your
own website (but it definitely helps).
   (See Establishing your web presence in Part II for more on this.)

3. Understand networks and which ones are important
to you
Where are the networks that matter for you, your work and your
organisation?
The first thing you should know about the web is that understanding it
comes down to seeing it as a network of networks. Everything on the web
is connected to everything else. When you see your networks within it,
you are looking at clusters of pages that are part of a theme.
   The theme could be you. The theme could be your profession, your
company, your industry or a million related topics. Pick a handful of
keywords, open up a web browser and start exploring. If you focus and
spend some time on it, I guarantee you will be amazed by what you find.
   Understanding any reputation on the web, whether it’s a global brand
or a private citizen’s, is all about understanding which networks you live in
if you read nothing else… xv




professionally and personally. Where are the blogs, forums and social
network groups that relate to your work, family and personal interests?
Are you present in them, are you mentioned in them?
  Look for places where colleagues and competitors are mentioned.
Anyone with a personal website or blog is worth looking more closely at.
Who do they link to? What forums and media do they cite?

4. Be present in your networks
Make sure people find you in Facebook, LinkedIn and other places
that matter.
Once you understand a little more about your networks, it should be clear
where you can establish profiles. You can establish a base, minimum
presence – creating a profile without having to commit to updating it all
that often.
   Most people in, say, the UK (and many other countries) should ensure
that they have a presence that is maintained and up to date on LinkedIn
and Facebook. At the time of writing, these are the places where the most
people have personal and professional presences.
   Having a presence makes it easier to understand what is going on that
is relevant to you in these networks, and gives you the option to explore
possibilities. Think of it as setting up a base.
   (See Establishing your web presence in Part II.)

5. Be useful
The best way to grow your web shadow is to do useful things to
improve your networks.
Search engines and social media are the most important ways that people
find things on the web. Both work in basically the same way most of the
time when it comes to sending people to places – things that other people
find interesting. Attention – the time and energy you spend looking at stuff
and the small things you do as a result – is the raw currency of the web.
Links and traffic and recommendations make the web go round.
   If you want to be found first for yourself, and if you want to go further
and grow your reputation online, you need to earn attention. Don’t be
xvi me and my web shadow




suckered and try to sucker others with tricks and shortcuts: the best way
to earn attention is by graft – by genuinely being useful.
  You can be useful in all sorts of ways – joining conversations, giving
your point of view, recommending useful content to others – but most
useful of all is sharing your knowledge and ideas by publishing them
online. Being useful will help you make connections, attract attention and
grow, or enrich your network.

6. Draw a line between private and public
There is a line to be drawn and you need to decide to where to
draw it.
Living our lives in public on the web is such a new phenomenon for most
of us that we don’t have any rules, any reference points or any boundaries
drawn. (This can manifest itself as that slight feeling of discomfort many
have had when their boss ‘friends’ them on Facebook.)
   Practically, we need to understand how privacy works online in technical
terms. What can other people see of us through search engines and social
networks? What controls can we make use of to manage our privacy?
   As a very basic point, since you are very likely to be on Facebook, take
a look at your privacy settings. You may not be in the running for the head
of MI6 just at the moment, but that doesn’t mean that you don’t want to
keep some information, some photographs, some thoughts to yourself
and people you know and trust.
   (See Things you need to know about… Facebook in Part III for more on
privacy settings.)

7. Remember that you are always on the record
There’s no such thing as ‘off the record’, we used to tell our clients
who were about to be interviewed by journalists. It applies all the
time online.
Even when you delete something on the web, it is likely to exist somewhere
else, usually either in the ‘cache’ of a search engine, or in people’s blog-
reader, email or Twitter software.
   We will discuss being a publisher later on, but something we’ll all need
if you read nothing else… xvii




to get used to is that we have, in our phones and computers, the ability to
publish our thoughts at any moment in front of a billion and a half or so
people around the world. So when we are angry, upset, or perceive that a
slight has been made against us, it’s all too easy – and momentarily may
even be satisfying – to vent online.
   Four sub-clauses to this golden rule might be:

  Normal social rules apply online. Some say ‘don’t say anything you
  wouldn’t want to see published in a newspaper’. Even more practical is
  to remember common rules of politeness: if you wouldn’t say
  something to someone’s face, don’t say it online. If you would say it and
  they might take offence, be prepared to stand by it and explain yourself.
  Pause before you publish. Pausing before we publish is a habit to get
  into for the one moment where you are about to broadcast a heartfelt
  opinion to the world and you suddenly realise you’re about to make a
  fool of yourself. If you’re not sure, walk away (or around the block a few
  times) and come back to re-read what you’re about to put out there.
  Retraction looks suspicious. If you are lucky enough to have people
  paying attention to what you say, subscribing to your blog, following
  you on Twitter or simply by being a contact on LinkedIn or Facebook,
  then they will have your content the moment it appears. Pulling that
  content can ring alarm bells and make people look more closely than
  they might have otherwise.
  Don’t drink and blog (or Tweet, or Facebook, or whatever). Yep,
  goes without saying. Or at least, it should. Also try not to do it when
  you’re angry – that’s just as bad.

8. Get a thicker skin
If you’re putting your head above the parapet, don’t be surprised if
you get the odd disagreement.
The flip-side of not making a fool of yourself online – or at least doing it as
little as possible – is learning how to take criticism.
    In the early days of my own exploration of online culture and communities,
I found this very difficult indeed. English culture, especially in business, is
xviii me and my web shadow




a little over-cautious and leery of upsetting people in public. That means
generally not being direct, saying people are wrong to their face, asking
for a clear, open debate.
   In short, we’re a little thin-skinned which, frankly, gets in the way of
useful, meaningful discussion. This is especially difficult when it is so
hilariously easy to get the wrong end of the stick on the web.
   A very clever PR person once told me that the most challenging thing
about dealing with high-profile clients with negative stories in the tabloids
was that they tended to see a completely different story to the one everyone
else was reading. In their minds, they were adding all sorts of details and
connotations that weren’t there, perhaps out of fear or guilt. Regardless,
our perceptions of what people are saying, especially via text on a page or
a screen can be very different to what’s actually being said by the author.
   Remember that it’s OK to be wrong, OK to change your mind and also
OK to have a different point of view from others. Take disagreement as the
useful counter-argument it is: an opportunity to refine or change your
point of view.

9. Don’t think of the web as another world
The web is all around us – not a strange land that you can choose
to visit.
First, perhaps most importantly, we need to get rid of our habit of thinking
of the web as another place.
   In the 90s, there was a lot of hype about virtual reality (VR), the idea of
putting on goggles and stepping into virtual space created by computers.
Today, what you are more likely to hear about is augmented reality (AR),
where, using camera-phones or special heads-up displays like the ones
you would see in a fighter plane, information is overlaid on the real world.
   For instance, with the iPhone 3GS you can have an application that lets
you point your device’s camera at the night sky and on the screen you will
see the sky with an overlay of labels telling you what the names of the
stars are. In 2008, IBM showed iPhone software for the Wimbledon
tennis tournament venue that would give you directions to restaurants
and other amenities.
if you read nothing else… xix




   That virtual reality/augmented reality contrast is a useful metaphor for
how we think about the web in our lives. Somehow people still often think
of the web as separate, something they can opt in and out of.
   You probably recall hearing some time ago about the internet and the
web described in terms of ‘cyberspace’4. It seemed like an appropriate
analogy at the time. It was intriguing, to see this electronic realm that we
were hearing more and more about reflected in science fiction and in the
media. People and computers were creating a parallel universe, one
which we could kind of step into, as though we were going through the
wardrobe into a digital Narnia.
   While the cyberspace, VR-like idea was thrilling to some, it was
frightening for many others. And in some ways its legacy is that it is too
easy for people to almost literally think of the web as another country, a
place they don’t necessarily need to visit, and one which is full of dark
things they would rather not have to have anything to do with.
   Rather than C.S. Lewis, maybe we would be better off thinking about the
web as being like the magical world of Harry Potter. There are places that are
apart from the world, but mostly it exists all around us, simply out of sight to
the uninitiated. That leaves a lot of people feeling like Muggles, then. Worse,
Muggles who get glimpses of what the digerati are up to. What to do? Ignore
them? Rally against them? Or pick up a wand and see what happens?
   Let’s leave the analogies and come back to earth. An earth that is
networked and connected by the web, that is.
   The web as we experience it is becoming more like a layer over the
world we live in, especially as mobile devices allow us to access it
anywhere and make a lot of the information relate very closely to the
physical world. Using the web becomes something that enhances the
world, augments our ability to make the most of it – not a nether realm
that people retreat to darkened rooms with a PC to gain access to.

  When I wake up I can know within moments – through my mobile device
with web access – what is happening in the world, what my friends and

4
    The term was popularised in William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer.
xx me and my web shadow




colleagues are doing and thinking this morning. Going for a run, my
exercise information can be registered with my computer and if I choose
to share it, posted to my Facebook profile. I know exactly when to leave
the house to catch the bus across the road because I can see the live
digital timetable on my phone. On the bus I can re-check documents my
team have updated ahead of the first meeting of the day with a client. I’ve
not met them before so I Google them and spend some minutes following
the links through their online life and know not only what’s on their CV, but
what they are reading at the moment, that they are training for a triathalon
and started a couple of interesting but short-lived photography blogs over
the past couple of years. I’ve never met them before but already they
don’t feel like a stranger and I’m looking forward to having a conversation
with them...

  Web shadows are important because so many of the things we say and
do end up online. The web is all around us, you might say, all of the time.

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Sample of Me and My Web Shadow

  • 2. Me and My Web Shadow How to Manage Your Reputation Online Antony Mayfield A & C Black • London
  • 3. First published in Great Britain 2010 A & C Black Publishers Ltd 36 Soho Square, London W1D 3QY www.acblack.com Copyright © Antony Mayfield, 2010 All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the Publisher. No responsibility for loss caused to any individual or organisation acting or refraining from action as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by A & C Black Publishers Ltd or the authors. A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: 9–781–4081–1908–2 This book is produced using paper that is made from wood grown in managed, sustainable forests. It is natural, renewable and recyclable. The logging and manufacturing processes conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin. Design by Fiona Pike, Pike Design, Winchester Typeset by Saxon Graphics, Derby Printed in Spain by GraphyCems
  • 4. Contents Introduction vii If you read nothing else... xii Part I: Welcome to the Web Age 1 1. Where the web began 2 2. The fog of revolution 8 3. Our personal webs 12 4. Making sense of the web 15 Part II: Managing your web shadow 25 1. Why manage your web shadow? 26 2. Exploring your web shadow (and beyond) 34 3. Making a plan for your web shadow 44 4. Establishing your web presence 54 5. Public and private 61 6. Behaving yourself 70 7. Dealing with bad things online 81 Part III: Practical advice for digital lives 89 1. Workflow: Fitting web shadow management into your routine 91 2. About me: Creating and maintaining your web shadow content 101 3. Useful tools for managing your web shadow 109 4. Things you need to know about... LinkedIn 127 1. Overview 127 2. Setting up or re-setting your LinkedIn profile 128 3. Building your contacts network 133 4. LinkedIn features 136 5. Applications 141
  • 5. iv me and my web shadow 5. Things you need to know about... Facebook 143 1. Facebook and your web shadow 143 2. What’s Facebook for? 144 3. Basics: Getting set up 144 4. Privacy and Facebook 147 5. Further reading 151 6. Things you need to know about... Twitter 152 1. What is Twitter? 152 2. Setting up your Twitter presence 155 3. Getting your Twitter network started 157 4. Using Twitter 159 5. Building up your Twitter use and presence 162 6. Further reading 164 7. Things you need to know about... blogging 166 1. Why blog? 166 2. Basics: Getting set up 168 3. Anatomy of a blog 171 4. Blog posts 174 5. Blogging workflow 178 6. Promoting and connecting your blog 180 7. Further reading 183 Conclusion: connected lives and serendipity engines 184 Index 186
  • 6. Web Shadow: 1. What someone finds when they look for you on the web. 2. The combination of an individual’s online owned presence (social network profiles, blogs, personal websites) and their earned presence: what others say about them for instance on company websites, blogs, Twitter and wikis. (Etymology: derives from Jeff Jarvis’s term “Google shadow”, describing the search results for an individual.) Tag: #webshadows
  • 7. introduction ‘Want to see something juicy?’ That was the greeting from Spokeo, a web search engine that finds photos and information about people from 48 social networks. I’d stumbled across it looking for ways people could check out what I was calling their web shadow – the traces of themselves that they or anyone else could find on the web. What a question. I was checking my identity online and those of some friends a little less web-obsessed than myself. Entering my email into Spokeo gave me more than that, though – a lot more. Within moments it was delivering hundreds of photos and other information relating to my Gmail contacts; within minutes it had scanned the online lives – the web shadows – of almost 1,000 people that I had corresponded with on Gmail. Friends, colleagues, business contacts, you name it: Spokeo ripped through the web bringing back all sorts of nuggets of information. Most were harmless and entertaining, but there were maybe some that these people didn’t intend the world to see. Who’s looking at you? What happens when someone puts your name into Google or Facebook? If you don’t know, you should maybe find out. Chances are in the past few days or weeks someone has tried to find out about you online. Maybe it was a colleague, maybe it was a prospective employer, a client, a supplier, a bank manager. Maybe it was a spammer or a fraudster or some other individual that might wish you ill. Our lives increasingly leave echoes, footprints or shadows on the web, whether it’s being mentioned in a company press release or a friend putting a picture of us from a weekend barbecue up online. There’s no such thing as being unGoogleable, as Bernhard Warner said in an article for The Times1. 1 How to be unGoogleable, by Bernhard Warner: The Times, May 28 2008 http://technology. timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article4022374.ece
  • 8. viii me and my web shadow Unless you go ‘off the grid’ in a really extreme way. And why would you want to go off the grid, anyway? The web is bringing a communications revolution that is unparalleled in the history of our species. The benefits of understanding the web and the things you can do online at a personal level are also immense. Plus, you get to live through a revolution. Which is nice. This book is about understanding how the online part of our lives works. How we can manage our online personal presence with a little bit more certainty. Web shadows So this book is called Me and My Web Shadow. It’s adapted from a phrase coined by Jeff Jarvis, one of the most inspiring writers about how the web is changing the world. He called the search results that appear when we put our names into Google our ‘Google Shadow’2. Your web shadow is the mark you make on the web, the trace of you that people can see there. It’s the sum of your presence (social networks profiles, blogs, personal website) and the things that mention you or link to you. Increasingly, the things we do in our lives end up leaving a trace online. Photos, CVs (or résumé, if you speak US English), company news, blogs, Twitter updates, and all manner of things we and those we know put up on social networks mean that our lives leave an impression on the web. I work in an industry that for the moment is called ‘digital media’. It used to be called ‘new media’ just a few years ago. Soon it will just be called media. We tend to do that to new things – give them special names that kind of fade away. You can almost hear the words getting shorter and less exotic year by year (cellular telephone, mobile phone, mobile, moby...). So for now we will talk about our online personal presence, managing our reputation on the web and looking after our web shadows. Soon, sooner perhaps than you think, this will just be how we think about ourselves and our reputation. 2 Jeff Jarvis’s What Would Google Do? Collins, 2009, is a must-read for anyone interested in the web and its impact on business and society more widely.
  • 9. introduction ix Who is this book for? Me and My Web Shadow is intended as a guide to understanding how to look after your presence on the web: what the web says about you and what it tells people when they come looking for you. This is a book for anyone who is online but feels like parts of how the web works are running away from them. Also it is for people who want to ensure that they are aware of how the web’s growth into so many parts of our lives may affect them, and what they can do to maintain some control over what information is available about them. You have to write for someone, so I wrote this book for my friends, family and colleagues who need to know more about how the web works and how they fit in as individuals. I have a lot of friends who work with the web, who understand it as well or even better than I do – but most of my friends and family are anxious or unsure about issues such as privacy and personal privacy online. If you think you’re an expert in the web already, there may not be much here for you. But I bet you know some people who might get a lot out of it. Who am I? Well, naturally the best way to find out about me would be to Google ‘Antony Mayfield’. Before I worked in ‘digital’ I worked in public relations and communications, helping brands and organisations understand people who were important to them and how to communicate with them. Actually, I still do, but because I look at websites, online videos, social networks and blogs, I get called something else. Soon it will just be called ‘communications’. I say these things partly by way of establishing my credentials, but also partly to reinforce an important point. The web is quickly becoming un- exotic (although there will always be exotic things to be found on it); it has become a feature of everyday life. If you were going to be a bit ‘self-help manual’, a bit ‘this book can give your career a digital turbo-charge’, a bit ‘take your career to 2.0’, a bit ‘brand-dot-you-dot-zero’, you might say that the compelling thing was
  • 10. x me and my web shadow that this book was about taking the techniques that big brands use to be successful on the web and applying them to yourself. But that’s not the way I see it. Most of what I do is to help brands to understand that the web is a place where they have to operate at a social level, a human level (hence the phrases ‘social networks’ and ‘social media’ that are currently in vogue). How to use this book I can’t help it. I have written for the web for so long that I tend not to think of 60,000 words like this as a document that many people, if any, will sit down and read in a linear fashion, from start to finish. If you do go down that route, I’m sure it will still work, but this book has been written in parts that you will probably dip in and out of as you need them. First up, there’s a short-ish chapter which should give you everything you need to know to manage your web shadow – the basics, the skinny, the low-down on the basics and the bare minimum you should know. If you’re a flighty sort or time-starved, read this and know you can come back to the rest later. Second, in Welcome to the Web Age, I set some context around the web; what it means for us and the way that it is changing our world. Then, in Managing your web shadow, we get deeper into a recommended approach for getting serious about your online presence. Next up, we have what you might think of as the ‘Haynes manual’ section of the book, dealing with practical use of web tools, social networks like LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and how to set up your own website. After that cheerful last note, there are some appendices which have links and suggestions for further reading on some of the topics in this book. This is a personal view rather than an objective one; more of a Mrs Beeton’s3 3 Not for non-British readers: Mrs Beeton was a Victorian who wrote a book about household management which is mainly remembered for the recipes. Wikipedia has more... http://en. wikipedia.org/wiki/Mrs_Beeton
  • 11. introduction xi for your personal web, rather than a definitive guide. In truth, I have to be relaxed about this approach – if I’d tried to write a definitive guide I would have gone mad trying. I don’t think you can be definitive, absolute, when it comes to something as fast-moving and complex as the web. This book was out of date six months ago Sorry to break it to you like that, but it’s not as bad as it sounds... One of the inevitable challenges of writing a book about the web and technology is that things move so fast that some of Me and My Web Shadow will be out of date before the presses even start rolling, perhaps even before the publisher clicks ‘open’ on the Word file. [Note to publisher: go with me on this, I’m making a serious point :-)] Throughout Me and My Web Shadow I have included links to sources and places where you can find more information. There’s always a chance that some of these links will be ‘broken’ by the time this book is printed and you get to read it. In that case, please do visit www.antonymayfield. com/webshadows where there should be links to most things – or you could just try Googling whatever it is you were interested in seeing. A note about terms: I am guilty of using ‘Google’ as a synonym for ‘search’ very often. As 80% of searches in the UK are carried out on Google and it is the company that defined the modern search engine, I’ll make no apology for it. Who knows, this 2010 colloquialism could end up looking very dated indeed in a few years’ time, but for now, we Google stuff when we want to find it, mostly.
  • 12. if you read nothing else... Let’s be honest, you are not likely to finish reading this book in one sitting. If you’re anything like me with business and reference books you will be lucky to make it halfway through. That’s not necessarily a bad thing – usually after a half or even a third of big concept business books you have got the gist. You can dip back into them if you need more detail, but basically you probably have the best of them and it’s time to move on. In fact, this book is part introduction to the brave new world of social networking, part advice piece on how to manage your personal presence on the web and part manual for using various web tools and services. It practically begs you to dip in and out as you see fit, but hopefully will bear up to – and reward – a straightforward reading from cover to cover. As a first dip into Me and My Web Shadow, try out this section. Then put it down to mull it over, carry on reading, or follow the references to the other chapters that seem interesting. Why manage your web shadow? Here are the three most important reasons why you need to think about managing your web shadow: Our lives are moving online: The web is doubling in size every couple of years, and is drawing in more and more things we do and say: there are going to be more and more traces of you on the web. Becoming a digital hermit will be very hard to do and will cut you off from a great deal of benefits. Best to manage your online presence rather than have it defined solely by what others say. The web is the first place many will look to find out about you: It is becoming second nature for people to Google one another. Whether vetting potential employees and partners, or simply to know more about colleagues, clients and new acquaintances, people will look online. It is becoming a kind of personal due diligence that you make sure that useful, accurate information about you can be found online. Being findable and connected brings opportunities: Managing your web shadow, your personal web presence, will often mean using the
  • 13. if you read nothing else… xiii web to connect with others and share useful information. This can create great opportunities, personally, culturally, politically or professionally – whatever is important to you. Taking charge of your web shadow will lead to a great level of what we can call ‘web literacy’. The top ten rules for managing your web shadow When I was thinking about writing a book along the lines of what has become Me and My Web Shadow, I was given some unexpected clarity and inspiration from the Chartered Accountants in England and Wales. Their PR agency asked me to help make a video about the 12 Golden Rules for online reputation management. You may still be able to find it online at Vimeo (http://www.vimeo.com/1477988). Being prescriptive, claiming to be ‘definitive’, is about the fastest way to trouble there is when it comes to the web. We have to start somewhere, though, so here are the 10 things everyone needs to bear in mind when they are thinking about how to manage their web shadow. 1. Check your Google shadow regularly No excuses. You need to at least know what Google says about you. The starting point – and the very least you should do if you care about your reputation – is to search for yourself on Google. Google is, for now, the first step on the web journey that most people take. Unfortunately, the still popular terms for searching for yourself is ‘vanity search’ or ‘ego surfing’. This makes some people feel like they are being immodest, egotistical or navel-gazing by taking a look at what the web says about them. But it is the most basic form of due diligence: managing what people find when they come looking for you. Now you’ve checked your Google shadow, you should keep checking it: in two ways. First, set up Google alerts on your name and common misspellings of it. Second: revisit the search results regularly to see what, if anything, has changed about the results that appear (especially on the first half of the first page – most people never look further than the first page of results on a search engine).
  • 14. xiv me and my web shadow 2. Be the first/best source of information about yourself If you are first in Google then you always have the first say about yourself. Ideally, you should be the number one source of information about yourself on the web. Why? Because whatever people read about you elsewhere, it may be flattering but may also be out of date, slightly inaccurate, or sometimes damaging to your reputation. Best that the first impressions people get are accurate and yours. If there is erroneous or even negative information about you on the web, it is much less of a worry if people can find out about you from you first, as it were. This is essentially what we mean by ‘managing’ your web shadow, or your personal reputation, online. Because the web is open, there is no way that you can control what is said about you (try ringing Google and asking for them to print a retraction) but you can have a big influence on how you are perceived. As we’ll discuss later on, to achieve this you don’t have to have your own website (but it definitely helps). (See Establishing your web presence in Part II for more on this.) 3. Understand networks and which ones are important to you Where are the networks that matter for you, your work and your organisation? The first thing you should know about the web is that understanding it comes down to seeing it as a network of networks. Everything on the web is connected to everything else. When you see your networks within it, you are looking at clusters of pages that are part of a theme. The theme could be you. The theme could be your profession, your company, your industry or a million related topics. Pick a handful of keywords, open up a web browser and start exploring. If you focus and spend some time on it, I guarantee you will be amazed by what you find. Understanding any reputation on the web, whether it’s a global brand or a private citizen’s, is all about understanding which networks you live in
  • 15. if you read nothing else… xv professionally and personally. Where are the blogs, forums and social network groups that relate to your work, family and personal interests? Are you present in them, are you mentioned in them? Look for places where colleagues and competitors are mentioned. Anyone with a personal website or blog is worth looking more closely at. Who do they link to? What forums and media do they cite? 4. Be present in your networks Make sure people find you in Facebook, LinkedIn and other places that matter. Once you understand a little more about your networks, it should be clear where you can establish profiles. You can establish a base, minimum presence – creating a profile without having to commit to updating it all that often. Most people in, say, the UK (and many other countries) should ensure that they have a presence that is maintained and up to date on LinkedIn and Facebook. At the time of writing, these are the places where the most people have personal and professional presences. Having a presence makes it easier to understand what is going on that is relevant to you in these networks, and gives you the option to explore possibilities. Think of it as setting up a base. (See Establishing your web presence in Part II.) 5. Be useful The best way to grow your web shadow is to do useful things to improve your networks. Search engines and social media are the most important ways that people find things on the web. Both work in basically the same way most of the time when it comes to sending people to places – things that other people find interesting. Attention – the time and energy you spend looking at stuff and the small things you do as a result – is the raw currency of the web. Links and traffic and recommendations make the web go round. If you want to be found first for yourself, and if you want to go further and grow your reputation online, you need to earn attention. Don’t be
  • 16. xvi me and my web shadow suckered and try to sucker others with tricks and shortcuts: the best way to earn attention is by graft – by genuinely being useful. You can be useful in all sorts of ways – joining conversations, giving your point of view, recommending useful content to others – but most useful of all is sharing your knowledge and ideas by publishing them online. Being useful will help you make connections, attract attention and grow, or enrich your network. 6. Draw a line between private and public There is a line to be drawn and you need to decide to where to draw it. Living our lives in public on the web is such a new phenomenon for most of us that we don’t have any rules, any reference points or any boundaries drawn. (This can manifest itself as that slight feeling of discomfort many have had when their boss ‘friends’ them on Facebook.) Practically, we need to understand how privacy works online in technical terms. What can other people see of us through search engines and social networks? What controls can we make use of to manage our privacy? As a very basic point, since you are very likely to be on Facebook, take a look at your privacy settings. You may not be in the running for the head of MI6 just at the moment, but that doesn’t mean that you don’t want to keep some information, some photographs, some thoughts to yourself and people you know and trust. (See Things you need to know about… Facebook in Part III for more on privacy settings.) 7. Remember that you are always on the record There’s no such thing as ‘off the record’, we used to tell our clients who were about to be interviewed by journalists. It applies all the time online. Even when you delete something on the web, it is likely to exist somewhere else, usually either in the ‘cache’ of a search engine, or in people’s blog- reader, email or Twitter software. We will discuss being a publisher later on, but something we’ll all need
  • 17. if you read nothing else… xvii to get used to is that we have, in our phones and computers, the ability to publish our thoughts at any moment in front of a billion and a half or so people around the world. So when we are angry, upset, or perceive that a slight has been made against us, it’s all too easy – and momentarily may even be satisfying – to vent online. Four sub-clauses to this golden rule might be: Normal social rules apply online. Some say ‘don’t say anything you wouldn’t want to see published in a newspaper’. Even more practical is to remember common rules of politeness: if you wouldn’t say something to someone’s face, don’t say it online. If you would say it and they might take offence, be prepared to stand by it and explain yourself. Pause before you publish. Pausing before we publish is a habit to get into for the one moment where you are about to broadcast a heartfelt opinion to the world and you suddenly realise you’re about to make a fool of yourself. If you’re not sure, walk away (or around the block a few times) and come back to re-read what you’re about to put out there. Retraction looks suspicious. If you are lucky enough to have people paying attention to what you say, subscribing to your blog, following you on Twitter or simply by being a contact on LinkedIn or Facebook, then they will have your content the moment it appears. Pulling that content can ring alarm bells and make people look more closely than they might have otherwise. Don’t drink and blog (or Tweet, or Facebook, or whatever). Yep, goes without saying. Or at least, it should. Also try not to do it when you’re angry – that’s just as bad. 8. Get a thicker skin If you’re putting your head above the parapet, don’t be surprised if you get the odd disagreement. The flip-side of not making a fool of yourself online – or at least doing it as little as possible – is learning how to take criticism. In the early days of my own exploration of online culture and communities, I found this very difficult indeed. English culture, especially in business, is
  • 18. xviii me and my web shadow a little over-cautious and leery of upsetting people in public. That means generally not being direct, saying people are wrong to their face, asking for a clear, open debate. In short, we’re a little thin-skinned which, frankly, gets in the way of useful, meaningful discussion. This is especially difficult when it is so hilariously easy to get the wrong end of the stick on the web. A very clever PR person once told me that the most challenging thing about dealing with high-profile clients with negative stories in the tabloids was that they tended to see a completely different story to the one everyone else was reading. In their minds, they were adding all sorts of details and connotations that weren’t there, perhaps out of fear or guilt. Regardless, our perceptions of what people are saying, especially via text on a page or a screen can be very different to what’s actually being said by the author. Remember that it’s OK to be wrong, OK to change your mind and also OK to have a different point of view from others. Take disagreement as the useful counter-argument it is: an opportunity to refine or change your point of view. 9. Don’t think of the web as another world The web is all around us – not a strange land that you can choose to visit. First, perhaps most importantly, we need to get rid of our habit of thinking of the web as another place. In the 90s, there was a lot of hype about virtual reality (VR), the idea of putting on goggles and stepping into virtual space created by computers. Today, what you are more likely to hear about is augmented reality (AR), where, using camera-phones or special heads-up displays like the ones you would see in a fighter plane, information is overlaid on the real world. For instance, with the iPhone 3GS you can have an application that lets you point your device’s camera at the night sky and on the screen you will see the sky with an overlay of labels telling you what the names of the stars are. In 2008, IBM showed iPhone software for the Wimbledon tennis tournament venue that would give you directions to restaurants and other amenities.
  • 19. if you read nothing else… xix That virtual reality/augmented reality contrast is a useful metaphor for how we think about the web in our lives. Somehow people still often think of the web as separate, something they can opt in and out of. You probably recall hearing some time ago about the internet and the web described in terms of ‘cyberspace’4. It seemed like an appropriate analogy at the time. It was intriguing, to see this electronic realm that we were hearing more and more about reflected in science fiction and in the media. People and computers were creating a parallel universe, one which we could kind of step into, as though we were going through the wardrobe into a digital Narnia. While the cyberspace, VR-like idea was thrilling to some, it was frightening for many others. And in some ways its legacy is that it is too easy for people to almost literally think of the web as another country, a place they don’t necessarily need to visit, and one which is full of dark things they would rather not have to have anything to do with. Rather than C.S. Lewis, maybe we would be better off thinking about the web as being like the magical world of Harry Potter. There are places that are apart from the world, but mostly it exists all around us, simply out of sight to the uninitiated. That leaves a lot of people feeling like Muggles, then. Worse, Muggles who get glimpses of what the digerati are up to. What to do? Ignore them? Rally against them? Or pick up a wand and see what happens? Let’s leave the analogies and come back to earth. An earth that is networked and connected by the web, that is. The web as we experience it is becoming more like a layer over the world we live in, especially as mobile devices allow us to access it anywhere and make a lot of the information relate very closely to the physical world. Using the web becomes something that enhances the world, augments our ability to make the most of it – not a nether realm that people retreat to darkened rooms with a PC to gain access to. When I wake up I can know within moments – through my mobile device with web access – what is happening in the world, what my friends and 4 The term was popularised in William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer.
  • 20. xx me and my web shadow colleagues are doing and thinking this morning. Going for a run, my exercise information can be registered with my computer and if I choose to share it, posted to my Facebook profile. I know exactly when to leave the house to catch the bus across the road because I can see the live digital timetable on my phone. On the bus I can re-check documents my team have updated ahead of the first meeting of the day with a client. I’ve not met them before so I Google them and spend some minutes following the links through their online life and know not only what’s on their CV, but what they are reading at the moment, that they are training for a triathalon and started a couple of interesting but short-lived photography blogs over the past couple of years. I’ve never met them before but already they don’t feel like a stranger and I’m looking forward to having a conversation with them... Web shadows are important because so many of the things we say and do end up online. The web is all around us, you might say, all of the time.