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Consumer brands in India under attack?

12 March, 2008
Venkat Ramna, Chief, Valuepitch Interactive
What do ICICI Bank, Dish TV, Sharekhan and Coke India have in common?

When you Google these corporate brands, you get at least one negative result.

For 'icicibank', the 8th result reads – "ICICI Bank - A bad experience for many"

For 'dish tv', the 10th result reads, "Zee Dish TV vs. Tata Sky DTH :: Insanity Rediscovered", which speaks of a consumer’s bad experience with Dish TV.

For 'share khan' the 5th result reads "A blog about nothing: Share Khan or Sheer Wimp?".

Search for 'coke india' and you will notice 5 of the 10 results being negative. The 5th result reads "IRC- Coca-Cola -- Campaign to Hold Coca-Cola Accountable".

These corporations are not the only ones that get negative visibility. An increasing number of brands have an increasing number of negative posts occupying the first page in Google search results. Millions of people use search engines to reach websites, since remembering website addresses is a tough task. For instance, how do I reach Hindustan Lever's corporate website? Should I try 'hindustanlever.com', 'hindustanlever.in', 'hll.com' or even 'hul.com'? – Too many combinations. The simple alternative is to google 'Hindustan lever', see the list of sites that Google returns, and click on the site I wish to visit.

While users are increasingly depending on googling for finding information (on brands or otherwise), search engines are also increasingly including user generated content (blogs, etc) in the result pages. Very often, this user generated content, might even show up on the first page!

This is where undesirable sites or blogs with negative or libelous content are attracting, hijacking and shaping opinions of the searchers. If I search for 'share khan', the 5th result in Google attracts my attention and my opinion is shaped up forever after reading the post. It becomes difficult for any corporation to neutralize an opinion formed in this fashion.

Kinds of Phrases

Search phrases on corporates can be categorized as brand words, negative words and research words. For negative phrases (icici sucks), one can expect negative results; for phrases pertaining to research (icici bank reviews) it's ok to expect some negativity along with the positives; but for brand phrases (icici bank), finding negative results is a bad brand association. The brand becomes synonymous with the negativity – "ICICI Bank - A bad experience for many", "Share Khan or Sheer Wimp?", etc.

Situation Abroad Research abroad tells us that 29% of the search engine results pages for Fortune 100 companies for neutral phrases, contain at least one negative mention in the first page. [http://www.97thfloor.com/blog/29-fortune-100s-are-letting-google-tarnish-their-reputation/] Gartner says that by 2010, criminals will control the first page of Google search results, inject negative or libelous posts and extort funds from organizations. [http://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=531407]

Is it a problem?

Currently, due to the comparatively low penetration of Internet in India, this isn't a problem for everyone here. But at the same time, with an increasing population logging onto the internet everyday, we cannot ignore it for long. Studies abroad tell us that online sales largely depend on third party reviews. Sites like 'Mouthshut' do help to shape up prospective customers opinions and encourage them to ask tough questions before accepting the offer from brands. For instance, Mouthshut has 2.2 million users, and the site occupies close to 25% of the first page real estate. Imagine the influence it has on your prospective customer. There are at least 20 such sites in India occupying the first page at various levels in various domains, and there are also individual blogs – A particular post on Arjun Prabhu's blog [http://www.arjunprabhu.com/blog/archives/2005/04/27/icici-bank-a-bad-experience-for-many/] which was written in 2005, has more than 800 comments, with the last comment written in Feb 08'. The sheer popularity of this blog ensures that it appears on high positions for searches related to ICICI. These new age information models are shaping up opinions of current and future customers.

Is there a solution?

The only solution to tackle with negative results is to outnumber them with positive results. Corporations need to ensure that for their positive, neutral and brand searches, positives show up higher in number, and higher in position than negatives. Of course, for negative searches, the negative results will always take first place.

To propel positive results and to remove negative phrases, a brand could among other things:

- Push down the negatives by techniques such as conducting SEO for the desirable sites
- Approach the negative authors and sort out their issues, thereby curbing any further negatives from them
- Sue them for libel
- Complain to search engines to pull down the results, if the copy has malicious intent

Now what?

It seems only a matter of time till mass consumer brands will face difficult situations in answering to the information savvy population - well informed prospects, vigilant customers & scoop hungry journalists - unless they are adequately prepared and systematically work towards an internet visibility management exercise.





What do ICICI Bank, Dish TV, Sharekhan and Coke India have in common?

When you Google these corporate brands, you get at least one negative result.

For 'icicibank', the 8th result reads – "ICICI Bank - A bad experience for many"

For 'dish tv', the 10th result reads, "Zee Dish TV vs. Tata Sky DTH :: Insanity Rediscovered", which speaks of a consumer’s bad experience with Dish TV.

For 'share khan' the 5th result reads "A blog about nothing: Share Khan or Sheer Wimp?".

Read More



For 'dish tv', the 10th result reads, "Zee Dish TV vs. Tata Sky DTH :: Insanity Rediscovered", which speaks of a consumer’s bad experience with Dish TV.

For 'share khan' the 5th result reads "A blog about nothing: Share Khan or Sheer Wimp?".

Read More"/>    
by Chemical Sister on 23 July, 2008

The contents of this article are NOT true. I just googled "ICICI Bank" and I don't see anything like "ICICI Bank sucks" - most of the listing in the first page are from icicibank domains or subdomains and none of them are negative. But yes if you google "ICICI Bank sucks" you will find matching results. So it depends what you want to read. It is wrong to say that brands are attacked, if they are attacked there are reasons. No PR can save the brands unless they listen to the consumers and try to sort out the grievances. Any PR attempt without removing the underlying reasons would cause more fresh attacks.

by Ravi Pathak on 19 March, 2008

Isnt web considered to be Democratic by its nature existance ? Its web's nature. I dont understand how can the rules of nature be changed !!

by Rohit on 19 March, 2008

Come on! This post infuriates me! The power of web has made these corporate brands more aware to their consumers. Otherwise, the consumer has always been on the receiving end. See, what has these PR agencies done to the print and TV medium. Every word, every mention is for sale. Let us not try to play around with the freedom which web has given us. If a corporation feels that it has been wrongly maligned or the content has come up with malicious intentions, there are better ways to solve it rather than playing around with SEO and other techniques.
We do not need Online PR agencies, let us not try to control the web. Better will be to work on your products and consumer handling so that even if someone comes up with a malicious post, there are 10 more genuine consumers fighting for you on web!
Frankly, we do not need people like Venkat who are trying to "play" with the web and the power it has given to the people. Please shut down your shop or the game will be someday over for you . Learn from Mr Tim Nye of Geosign.

by Praveen Pandey on 19 March, 2008

It is good awareness post in deed.
Online reputaion management will surely get their share in Online marketing.
Cheers
Praveen Pandey

by Ramesh on 18 March, 2008

do you see an opportunity for the emergence of Online PR agencies this year? how different would they be from traditional PR? Do let us know!

by Venkat on 18 March, 2008

I guess online PR agencies will emerge this year. Online offers much more flexibility and choice to impact masses (limited to online masses). Standalone PR agencies may be tough, but digital ad agencies and design agencies will have inhouse online PR agency expertise. The difference between ad agency and PR agency may be blurred.

Traditional PR agencies plan well and execution is easier. Online PR is different, chances of you getting caught and exposed in public are more. There are just too many choices - where to post, who to influence, how to influence etc, unlike traditional PR where you succeed if some article mentions your clients name. Just look at the numbers - 550 publications + 220 channels Vs 100 million blog sites + 40k forum sites.

by Pradeep Chopra on 17 March, 2008

Very well said Venkat.

Search for key phrases such as "apple india sucks" and "apple sucks" and you will find two of my following reviews on the first page:
http://www.mouthshut.com/review/Apple_MacBook-137876-1.html
http://reviews.cnet.com/laptops/apple-macbook-white-core/4864-3121_7-327...

For the reasons mentioned by you, 'Reputation Management' has become a very important and niche service in the online branding game.

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