8 Books to Defend Your Online Reputation

How can a few good books help you protect your online reputation?

  1. “The Reputation Game” by David Waller & Rupert Younger
    The idea of reputation is so often ephemeral-a reputation built out of whispers and rumors. But it is a very real and calculable asset, say authors Waller and Younger in “The Reputation Game”. It’s a form of currency-you gain it by doing things well, squander it on mistakes, and you can cash it in for success, opportunity, or good will. In a world where an online rumor can level years of reputation-building in a day, understanding the mechanics of how reputations are built and destroyed is important.

  1. “Damage Control: Why Everything You Know About Crisis Management Is Wrong” by Eric Dezenhall (Audiobook)
    When false accusations come your way, the first instinct is often to defend, explain, or overcorrect. But Eric Dezenhall’s “Damage Control” gives quite a different prescription. In a crisis, politeness often goes out of the window. It is not about winning hearts; it is about neutralizing the threat. Below, crisis management expert Dezenhall outlines how traditional crisis PR tactics can fail in the modern age. An apology, transparency, and reasoned responses don’t always win in a battle of perception, especially when one is up against hostile actors who are determined to smear one’s good name.

  1. “Trust Me, I’m Lying: Confessions of a Media Manipulator” by Ryan Holiday (Audiobook)
    Living in a digital world today, understanding how media works is your line of defense against libel. In Ryan Holiday’s “Trust Me, I’m Lying,” he shows the back end of how stories are manipulated and false information spreads. Having once been a media manipulator himself, Holiday describes strategies and tactics to develop true and fabricated narratives that will get attention.

  1. “So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed” by Jon Ronson (Audiobook)
    In today’s world, where anyone has a platform, public shaming can happen to anyone, anywhere, over anything. Jon Ronson’s “So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed” is, in part, an examination of how public shaming has changed with the internet and, more importantly, how people are able to recover from it. The stories he told were heartbreaking and empowering: how people whose lives were seemingly ruined by a few moments of viral infamy eventually clawed their way back to respectability.

  1. “Crisis Communication: The Definitive Guide to Managing the Message” by Steven Fink
    How you communicate with the public when your good name is under attack makes all the difference between destruction and restoration. Steven Fink’s “Crisis Communication” is a lesson in crafting your message when everything is on the line. In light of an attempt at character assassination, knowing what to say and how to communicate is paramount. Should you address an issue directly? Should you say nothing at all? Should you fight back against detractors? Fink has the answers.

  1. “Online Reputation Management For Dummies” by Lori Randall Stradtman
    If you want to manage your digital footprints, then you must read “Online Reputation Management For Dummies” by Lori Randall Stradtman. This is a very comprehensive, user-friendly guide on how to take proactive steps toward the protection and defense of an online reputation.

  1. “The Art of War” by Sun Tzu
    Though unlikely to feature on the list for reputation management, Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War” offers timeless, boundless strategies for navigating conflicts at war and in life. After all, as Sun Tzu famously said, “All warfare is based on deception.” In the modern context of character assassinations, this means being one step ahead of your adversary and trying to anticipate what their next move will be.

  1. “The 48 Laws of Power” by Robert Greene
    Finally, there is the rather stark but realistic look that Robert Greene gives to reputation with “The 48 Laws of Power”. Those who live in today’s cutthroat world and know the tacit laws of power will invariably have an advantage over others. The laws Greene proposes-such as “Conceal your intentions” and “Court attention at all costs”-may be ruthless but deliver a really salutary lesson in how others may try to bring you down, and how to defend oneself.

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