Home > digital biographer, googlicious, online identity, social media > You’re a Nobody unless your name Googles well – Wall Street Journal

You’re a Nobody unless your name Googles well – Wall Street Journal

It’s official – well, it is if you rate the Wall Street Journal’s front page as authoritative – if your name doesn’t Google well, you can have problems with your credibility – and not just with prospective employers.

You’re a Nobody Unless your Name Googles Well published on the 8th of May 2007, cites the example of  Abigail Garvey, who, when she adopted the married name of Wilson, began to be questioned on publications she listed on her CV (résumé) because they weren’t finding the publications in online searches.

In the age of Google, being special increasingly requires standing out from the crowd online. Many people aspire for themselves — or their offspring — to command prominent placement in the top few links on search engines or social networking sites’ member lookup functions. But, as more people flood the Web, that’s becoming an especially tall order for those with common names. Type “John Smith” into Google’s search engine and it estimates it has 158 million results. (See search results.)

Ask.com estimates about 7% of all searches are for a person’s name, and more than 80% of executive recruiters said they routinely use search engines to learn more about candidates, according to a recent survey by ExecuNet.  ExecuNet published “Growing Number Of Job Searches Disrupted By Digital Dirt” in June of 2006,  which  found that “35% (of executive recruiters) have eliminated a candidate from consideration based on the information uncovered online – up significantly from 26% just one year ago.

So, aside from naming your children carefully after a Google search, and including your full name in all online postings, how can you reach the top of Google?

The answer is actually very simple: Join Ecademy: – Just create an online profile at Ecademy, and within as short a timescale as a few weeks, by following simple techniques to add structured information to your profile, and adding blogs and marketplace content relevant to your expertise within Ecademy, Google will rank your name, link to your web content and web sites. The cost is minimal – £10 ($20) a month lets you raise your visibility, as well as become part of a strong business network that’s been growing quietly and organically since 1998, when social media really was not on anyone’s radar.

Amazing.This is a one-off, I can not find any related stories.

  1. January 24th, 2008 at 15:12 | #1

    So where is this ‘Ecademy’ then? Your links for “Ecademy” go around in a circle. Ten quid a month is a lot of money to invest with no proof that it works, so where are the examples and testimonials? I hate to sound negative but this looks like a fraud.

  2. David Petherick
    January 24th, 2008 at 17:35 | #2

    Ecademy’s no fraud, Daz.

    It works. Try searching for “search success” in Google. My Ecademy page is usually top 3, and searchsuccess.net, a site I set up to prove whether or not this worked, is usually position 5-8.

    Last time I checked, there were 37,800,000 pages in my wake.

    Try Ecademy FREE for a month at http://www.ecademy.com/account.php?op=signup&xref=101560

    To get the benefits of Ecademy’s SEO effect, you do need to pay to join though, as your input in the first trial month is limited to prevent abuse.

  1. January 26th, 2008 at 09:40 | #1
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