Google updated both its image SEO best practices and Google Discover help documents to clarify that Google uses both schema.org markup and the og:image meta tag as sources when determining image thumbnails in Google Search and Discover.
Image SEO best practices. Google added a new section to the image SEO best practices help document named Specify a preferred image with metadata. In that section, Google wrote:
“Google’s selection of an image preview is completely automated and takes into account a number of different sources to select which image on a given page is shown on Google (for example, a text result image or the preview image in Discover).”
Here is how you influence the thumbnails Google chooses:
Specify the schema.org primaryImageOfPage property with a URL or ImageObject.
Or specify an image URL or ImageObject property and attach it to the main entity (using the schema.org mainEntity or mainEntityOfPage properties)
Here are the overall best practices when choosing these methods:
Choose an image that’s relevant and representative of the page.
Avoid using a generic image (for example, your site logo) or an image with text in the schema.org markup or og:imagemeta tag.
Avoid using an image with an extreme aspect ratio (such as images that are too narrow or overly wide).
Use a high resolution, if possible.
Google Discover image selection. In the Discover documentation Google added a section that reads:
“Include compelling, high-quality images in your content that are relevant, especially large images that are more likely to generate visits from Discover. We recommend using images that meet the following specifications: At least 1200 px wide, High resolution (at least 300K) and 16×9 aspect ratio”
“Google tries to automatically crop the image for use in Discover. If you choose to crop your images yourself, be sure your images are well-cropped and positioned for landscape usage, and avoid automatically applying an aspect ratio. For example, if you crop a vertical image into 16×9 aspect ratio, be sure the important details are included in the cropped version that you specify in the og:image meta tag).”
“Use either schema.org markup or the og:image meta tag to specify a large image that’s relevant and representative of the web page, as this can influence which image is chosen as the thumbnail in Discover. Learn more about how to specify your preferred image. Avoid using generic images (for example, your site logo) in the schema.org markup or og:image meta tag. Avoid using images with text in the schema.org markup or og:image meta tag.”
Why we care. Images can have a big impact on click-through rates from both Google Search and Google Discover. Here, Google is telling us ways we can encourage Google to select a specific image for that thumbnail. So review these help documents and see if any of this can help you with the images Google selects in Search and Discover.
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If you’re not actively managing your branded search campaigns, you’re leaving money on the table and your reputation in the hands of competitors, review aggregators, and affiliate marketers.
Brand protection through PPC isn’t just about bidding on your own name. It’s a strategy that spans defensive bidding, query monitoring, ad copy testing, and reputation management across the entire customer research journey.
Why brand search deserves more than basic defense
Most PPC managers treat brand campaigns as an afterthought. Set up a campaign, bid on the exact brand name, maybe add some close variants, and call it done.
But the reality is far more complex, especially when we’re talking about bigger, well-known brands. Your brand exists across dozens of query contexts, each representing a different stage of the customer journey and requiring a different strategic approach.
Consider what happens when someone searches for your brand. They’re not just typing your company name, they’re asking questions, seeking validation, comparing alternatives, and researching specific features.
If you’re only covering exact-match brand terms, you’re missing the majority of brand-related searches and leaving those high-intent users exposed to competitor messaging.
Third-party sites like review aggregators and affiliate comparison websites actively bid on your brand terms to capture traffic and redirect it to their comparison pages, where your competitors pay for prominence.
The cost? Your brand equity, customer trust, and ultimately, conversion rates.
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4 categories of branded searches you need to cover
Based on user intent and competitive vulnerability, branded searches fall into four strategic categories. Each requires different bid strategies, ad copy approaches, and landing page experiences.
Let’s break down each category and the specific PPC tactics that can work.
Brand trust and reputation queries
“Is [Brand] good?”
“[Brand] reviews.”
“Is [Brand] legit?”
“Is [Brand] worth it?”
These searchers are in the validation phase. They’ve heard of your brand but want social proof before committing.
The competitive threat here comes from review aggregators and affiliate sites that will happily show your reviews alongside competitor CTAs.
PPC strategy
Bid aggressively — these are high-intent users who are close to converting.
Use review extensions and star ratings in your ads.
Highlight trust signals in ad copy (years in business, customer count, awards).
Send users to dedicated testimonial or case study landing pages, not your homepage.
Test callout extensions with specific proof points.
Product features queries
“What is [Brand] known for?”
“Pros and cons of [Brand].”
“Does [Brand] offer [feature]?”
Users searching for feature-specific information are evaluating whether your solution meets their requirements. Competitors often bid on these queries with ads suggesting they offer superior features.
PPC strategy
Create feature-specific ad groups with tailored ad copy.
Use sitelink extensions to direct users to specific feature pages.
Address the specific feature in headline 1, don’t waste space on your brand name.
Include feature demos or video on the landing page.
Test whether these queries warrant higher bids than core brand terms.
Comparison queries
“Alternatives to [Brand].”
“How does [Brand] compare?”
“Is [Brand] better than [Competitor]?”
“Is [Brand] right for [use case]?”
This is the most competitive category. Users are actively comparing you to alternatives, and both direct competitors and third-party comparison sites are bidding heavily. This is where you’re most vulnerable to losing customers who were already considering you.
PPC strategy
Bid at or above top-of-page estimates to maintain Position 1.
Create dedicated comparison landing pages for each major competitor.
Include pricing transparency if it’s a competitive advantage.
Monitor auction insights obsessively to identify new competitive threats.
Consider category-level comparison ads for “best [category] tools/products” searches.
Niche questions
“Is [Brand] expensive?”
“Does [Brand] offer discounts?”
“Is [Brand] secure?”
These queries reveal specific concerns or evaluation criteria. They’re often low-volume but extremely high-intent because they represent genuine decision-making criteria.
PPC strategy
Develop FAQ landing pages that address multiple related concerns.
Test lower bids — these queries often have less competition.
Use search query reports to identify emerging concerns and address them proactively.
The traditional single-brand campaign approach doesn’t give you enough control or insight at scale. Instead, structure your brand defense across four specialized campaigns, each targeting different intent signals and requiring distinct bid strategies.
Core brand defense
This covers exact-match brand terms and common misspellings with aggressive bidding to maintain 95%+ impression share and top positions. Never let this campaign be budget-limited.
Use multiple RSAs to test different value propositions. Monitor lost impression share due to rank as your primary competitive threat indicator.
Brand + category
Capture phrase-match queries like “[Brand] CRM” or “[Brand] for [use case],” where users are researching you within a specific product context.
Bid slightly lower than core brand terms, but ensure ad copy acknowledges the category and emphasizes your category leadership. Test whether category-specific landing pages outperform your homepage for these queries.
Brand reputation and reviews
Theseintercept validation-phase users searching “[Brand] reviews,” “[Brand] ratings,” or “is [Brand] good” before they click through to third-party aggregators. Bid aggressively here — these comparison-shopping clicks are worth more than core brand searches.
Use review extensions prominently, include specific social proof metrics in ad copy (4.8 stars, 10,000+ reviews), and send traffic to dedicated testimonial pages rather than your homepage. Test video testimonials on landing pages.
Competitive comparison defense
Control the narrative for queries like “[Brand] vs [Competitor],” “[Brand] alternative,” or “better than [Brand].” These are users you’re at risk of losing, so pay up to your maximum acceptable CPA.
Create unique landing pages for each major competitor with honest comparisons that emphasize your advantages, include side-by-side feature tables, and offer special conversion incentives like extended trials or migration assistance.
Defensive tactics against third-party aggregators
Sites like G2, Capterra, and other affiliate comparison sites actively bid on your brand terms without violating trademark policy because they legitimately have content about your brand.
But they’re siphoning off your traffic and often presenting biased or incomplete information. Your defense requires three coordinated approaches.
Bid aggressively on review keywords
Review aggregators bid heavily on “[Brand] reviews” and “[Brand] ratings” because these are their money keywords, so you need to bid even higher.
Run the math: If a review aggregator click costs you $3 but sends that user to a page where your competitor’s ad costs $50, you’re getting a deal at $10 per click on your own review keywords.
Calculate the lifetime value of a customer versus the cost of letting them click to a third-party site where competitors can advertise. Also, keep in mind it’s cheaper for you to bid on your own brand than for competitors to outbid you.
Claim and optimize your profiles on major review platforms you want to work with
Even if you can’t prevent them from bidding on your brand, ensure that when users click through, they see optimized content, strong ratings, and an active presence with responses to reviews.
Many review platforms offer advertising options — test running ads on your own profile pages to capture users who arrive via organic search or competitor ads.
Build dedicated testimonial and customer story pages
Make yours more compelling than third-party review aggregators. Include video testimonials, detailed case studies with metrics, filterable reviews by industry or use case, and verified customer badges.
Then use your PPC ads to drive users to these owned properties instead of letting them discover review aggregators organically.
Your brand campaign ad copy needs to do more than confirm your brand name. It needs to preempt objections, differentiate from competitors, and provide compelling reasons to click your ad instead of a competitor’s or third-party site. Three frameworks deliver results.
The preemptive strike
Identify the top 3-5 objections that come up in your sales process and address them directly in your ad copy before users encounter them on competitor or review sites.
If implementation time is a concern, use “Live in 5 days, not 5 months.”
If pricing is opaque, try “Transparent pricing, no hidden fees.”
If enterprise readiness is questioned, lead with “Trusted by 500+ enterprise customers.”
If ease of use is a concern, emphasize “No training required, start today.”
The competitive differentiator
Don’t just state features, state features your competitors don’t have or can’t match. This is especially critical for comparison queries where you know competitors are showing ads. Examples include:
“Only platform with native [unique integration].”
“Industry’s fastest performance, verified by [third party].”
If you can’t identify any unique features or USPs, that’s a signal to improve your product positioning or capabilities. Without clear differentiation, PPC alone won’t drive sustainable conversions.
Social proof stacking
Combine multiple types of social proof to build credibility quickly. Don’t just pick one element, stack them. Try
“4.8 stars from 10,000+ reviews. G2 leader 5 years running.”
“Join 50,000+ companies. Featured in Forbes and TechCrunch.”
“Winner: Best [category] 2025. 98% customer satisfaction.”
Sending all brand traffic to your homepage is a missed opportunity. Different branded queries represent different user intents and concerns, and your landing pages should address those specific intents.
Feature-specific pages
When users search “[Brand] + [feature],” send them to dedicated pages that explain the feature in detail, show it in action, and provide clear next steps.
Include a hero section explaining the feature in one sentence, a video demo or animated screenshot, technical specifications for enterprise buyers, integration details if relevant, and customer examples using this specific feature.
Comparison pages
Create dedicated comparison landing pages for each major competitor. Be honest about differences while emphasizing your advantages. Include side-by-side feature tables, pricing comparisons if advantageous, and customer testimonials from switchers.
Acknowledge competitor strengths without being dismissive, highlight 3-5 key differentiators where you excel, and offer migration assistance or switch incentives. Make your CTA clear and prominent, offering a trial or demo.
Trust and validation pages
For review and reputation queries, create dedicated pages that aggregate social proof rather than linking to your G2 profile or hoping users browse scattered testimonials.
Display aggregate ratings prominently (average of G2, Capterra, etc.), place video testimonials above the fold, show recent reviews with verified badges, make reviews filterable by industry, company size, and use case, include case studies with concrete metrics, and highlight third-party awards and recognition.
Monitoring and optimization: The ongoing battle
Brand protection isn’t a set-it-and-forget-it strategy. The competitive landscape constantly evolves, new competitors emerge, third-party sites adjust their strategies, and user search behavior shifts. You need systematic monitoring and rapid response capabilities across three time horizons.
Weekly monitoring
Review:
Search term reports to identify new query patterns.
Auction insights for increased competitor presence.
Impression share metrics to diagnose declining performance.
Lost impression share breakdowns by budget and rank.
Manual searches of your top 10 brand queries to see what ads are showing.
Quality score checks for brand keywords to diagnose landing page or ad relevance issues.
Monthly deep dives
Analyze conversion paths to understand how brand search fits into the broader customer journey.
Review assisted conversions since brand campaigns often contribute to non-brand conversions.
Audit landing pages for relevance and conversion performance.
Gather competitive intelligence on what landing pages competitors use for brand conquesting.
Test new ad copy variations focused on emerging objections or competitive threats.
Analyze search impression share by device and location to identify gaps.
Quarterly strategic reviews
Audit your complete branded query coverage to identify missing categories or query types.
Assess whether your coverage across the four query categories remains comprehensive.
Conduct competitive conquest analysis to determine which competitors most aggressively target your brand.
Evaluate ROI of different brand campaign types to optimize budget allocation.
Review third-party aggregator presence for new sites bidding on your brand.
Advanced tactics for sophisticated brand protection
Dynamic keyword insertion
For validation queries like “is [Brand] good” or “does [Brand] work,” use dynamic keyword insertion to echo the user’s specific question in your ad copy, creating higher relevance and click-through rates. Try headlines like “Yes, {KeyWord:[Brand]} Is Excellent” or “Absolutely, {KeyWord:[Brand]} Works.”
Geo-modified campaigns
If you have location-specific offerings or competitors vary by geography, create geo-modified brand campaigns. Users searching “[Brand] New York” or “[Brand] enterprise” may have different needs than general brand searchers.
Audience layering
Apply audience segments to brand campaigns to adjust bids based on user quality. Users who’ve visited your pricing page before should get higher bids on brand searches than first-time visitors. Similarly, prioritize users who match your ideal customer profile demographics.
Trademark enforcement
While Google generally allows competitors to bid on your brand terms, using your trademarked brand name in their ad copy is often prohibited.
Monitor competitor ads and file trademark complaints when they use your brand name in headlines or descriptions. This is particularly effective against smaller competitors and affiliates who may not realize they’re violating policy.
Problem/solution queries
Capture queries where users are researching whether your solution addresses a specific problem. These are often high-intent and represent clear use case alignment.
Target queries like:
“[Brand] for [problem].”
“How to [solve problem] with [Brand].”
“[Brand] [use case] solution.”
“Can [Brand] help with [challenge].”
Budget allocation and ROI considerations
How much should you invest in brand protection versus acquisition campaigns? The answer depends on three factors:
Competitive pressure.
Brand strength.
Customer lifetime value.
If you operate in a highly competitive category where multiple well-funded competitors actively bid on your brand terms, invest more in brand protection. Run auction insights weekly to monthly to quantify competitive presence.
If competitors show in 40% or more of your brand auctions, this is a high-threat environment requiring aggressive defense. Stronger brands with dominant organic presence can afford to spend less on core brand defense because their organic listings provide natural protection. This doesn’t apply to reputation and comparison queries where third-party sites rank organically.
High LTV businesses should invest more aggressively in brand protection because the cost of losing a customer to a competitor or having them influenced by negative review sites is substantial. If your average customer is worth $50,000 over their lifetime, paying $50 per click to defend against comparison queries is economically rational.
For most B2B SaaS and high-consideration products, allocate approximately 15-25% of total paid search budget to comprehensive brand protection. Within that allocation, dedicate 40% to core brand defense (exact match), 25% to competitive comparison defense, 20% to reputation and review queries, and 15% to feature and niche question queries.
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Brand protection as competitive moat
Brand protection through PPC isn’t just defensive marketing. It’s a competitive moat. When you control the narrative across branded search contexts, you ensure high-intent users see accurate information instead of competitor ads or third-party pages monetizing your brand equity.
The brands that win treat this as strategy, not maintenance. They segment branded queries by intent, build landing pages to match, monitor threats continuously, and defend high-value search real estate aggressively.
Start with an audit using the four-category framework. Close coverage gaps, align campaigns and landing pages to intent, and commit to weekly monitoring, monthly optimization, and quarterly strategic reviews.
If you don’t own your branded searches, someone else will.
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Online reputation management (ORM) is the practice of monitoring and improving (when necessary) how your brand is perceived on the internet. In practice, this means responding to negative reviews, suppressing negative search results or comments, and addressing any misinformation about your company.
There are a lot of misconceptions about online reputation management. Some people think it’s just social media monitoring, while others believe it has something to do with public relations, and still others have no idea the impact it can have on sales.
The truth is that online reputation management aligns most closely with digital public relations (PR) with a slight twist. Whereas digital PR focuses on proactively building your online brand, online reputation management focuses on protecting your online image.
When you look at the definition of ORM, it’s easy to see why it’s essential for businesses of all sizes. In today’s marketplace, where smartphones alone account for 80% of retail website visits, it’s safe to say that how you’re viewed online is critical to business success.
In this guide, I’ll explain the role of online reputation management in today’s digital age, explain why it matters, and outline six ways to improve your brand’s online image.
Key Takeaways
Your online reputation is what shows up when people Google you. ORM is the act of monitoring mentions and reviews, responding fast, and making sure that accurate, trustworthy content dominates page one.
Monitoring needs layers. Use Google Alerts for quick, free coverage, then add tools like Mention or Brand24 when you need more comprehensive monitoring across social, blogs, forums, and news, especially if volume is high.
Reviews are a conversion lever. Treat them like support tickets. Respond the same day on high-visibility platforms like Google and Yelp. Stay calm, human, and non-defensive. Apologize when you’re at fault, and move it offline when back-and-forth is needed.
You can’t delete most negative content, but you can outrank it. Suppression requires SEO, content, and distribution. Publish stronger assets (site pages, PR, profiles, testimonials) and promote them until they push negative content off page one.
Make ORM a repeatable process. Assign owners for monitoring mentions, responding to reviews, and publishing positive content. Track KPIs monthly (ratings, review volume, sentiment), and address the underlying business issues driving complaints.
Why Does Online Reputation Management Matter Now More Than Ever?
20 years ago, the internet was very different. Companies didn’t engage customers; they just sold (or tried to sell) to a passive audience. People could not express their voices powerfully, and the overall communication landscape was very “top down.”
However, the situation has radically changed. Today, websites are no longer static brochures, and user-generated content is a must. Regular interactions on social networks are vital to a business’s success. This is becoming even more important as Google begins to highlight community forums like Reddit within AI Overviews at the top of search results pages (SERPs).
No matter the size of your business, people are talking about you, including prospects, customers, clients, and their friends. They are posting about your latest product or filming review videos for TikTok and Instagram.
If you think you can skimp on reputation management, or if you think you can succeed without listening to people’s voices, opinions, and reviews, think again.
Today’s Brands Must Be Transparent
One of the most important business commandments is “be transparent.” What does being “transparent” mean? Here are some examples:
Allowing employees to talk about products and services publicly
Establishing a one-to-one communication channel with your audience
Asking for feedback from customers/your base
Addressing criticism publicly rather than hiding it
That said, these tactics are easier said than done. Most small and medium-sized companies invest little in brand communication and struggle with this concept. As a result, their efforts are usually incorrect or inconsistent. Improving transparency across the board begins with building a consistent method to talk on behalf of your brand, then opening and monitoring channels where there may be discussion about the brand.
Online Reputation Management “Failures”
Being open does not come without a price. If you and your brand accept feedback, customer opinions, and so on, you must also be ready to address them promptly.
Consider these scenarios:
What if your product/service sparks too much criticism?
What if your employees are not social media savvy?
What if your competitors take advantage of this?
These are just a few reasons you need a proper online reputation management plan in place before embarking on a transparency journey.
Burger King UK’s “Women belong in the kitchen” commentary didn’t go off the way the brand planned. The company made this comment on X to promote a new scholarship program for female chefs. They went on to explain their original intent in the comments, but most people were focused on the insensitivity of the original post. It also didn’t help that the content team planned this to go out on National Women’s Day .
Gap tried to unite the country after the 2020 election season. Their video of a half-red and half-blue Gap hoodie being zipped up to “unite” the U.S. after months of divisive rhetoric among political parties did not land well.
Robinhood spent $5 million on a Super Bowl ad touting the tagline, “We are all investors”. A heartfelt, unifying message on the surface, but the ad aired at a time when Robinhood was in legal trouble for limiting average investors on its platform.
Bioré launched an influencer campaign for their pore strips, collaborating with an influencer who went to college on the campus of a recent school shooting. The influencer was addressing the mental trauma of the tragedy in a video where she was simultaneously using/promoting Bioré pore strips. The campaign was well-intended, but mixing skincare promotion with weighty mental health issues turned out to be a recipe that didn’t mix well.
The lesson here? Pay attention to your online reputation, think twice about how your audience might receive a post or online campaign, and always respond kindly to poor reviews. Don’t let your ego get in the way of being professional. Remember, you aren’t just responding to the person who left a review; you are showing everyone else online who your brand is.
Key Components of Online Reputation Management
Monitoring Brand Mentions and Reviews
You can’t fix what you don’t see. Set up a simple monitoring system for brand mentions, executive names, product names, and common misspellings. Watch Google reviews, Yelp, industry sites, Reddit, and social comments, and pay attention to patterns (the same complaint appearing in multiple places usually means it’s real).
It can be a challenge to be everywhere all at once, but you can accomplish this by setting up Google Alerts (although this won’t cover everything) or working with a third-party digital PR company to watch your brand for you.
For moving beyond Google Alerts, tools like Brandwatch, Sprout Social, Talkwalker, and Meltwater assist with social listening, helping you follow the overall sentiment and specific statements online at scale.
Social media listening allows companies to gather public online content (from blog posts to social posts, from online reviews to Facebook updates), process it, and identify whether something positive or negative is being said, and determine whether it’s affecting their reputation.
Monitoring works best when you set up layers of different options rather than a single tool.
A few practical tips that make monitoring actually useful:
Track high-intent queries like “Brand + reviews,” “Brand + refund,” or “Brand + scam.”
Create separate alerts for locations if you’re local (“Brand + Austin,” “Brand + Brooklyn”). This ties directly into your local SEO visibility, since Google Business Profile reviews and local results can make or break conversions.
Assign one person to check alerts daily, and label mentions as positive, neutral, or negative so patterns are obvious.
Review Generation/Requests
Monitoring reviews is great, but what if you don’t have a lot of review to monitor in the first place? There are ways you can go about incentivizing additional reviews, but you have to be careful in how you do so:
Make it easy to leave a review. Send customers your direct Google review link. Add a QR code at checkout. Drop the link into follow-up emails. The easier it is, the more reviews you’ll get. Just remember: reviews have to be real. No incentives. No discounts for edits or removals.
Remind customers at the right time. Ask when the experience is fresh—right after a purchase, appointment, or delivery. A simple, direct ask works.
Stay conversational, not promotional. Don’t use review replies to push offers. Reinforce their experience instead. Thank them. Add context. Invite them back naturally.
Value all feedback. A mix of positive and negative reviews builds credibility. Five-star streaks with zero criticism can look suspicious.
Personalize your responses. Use the reviewer’s name. Sign with yours. That small touch makes a big difference.
Flag policy violations. If a review breaks Google’s rules, report it. But don’t try to game the system. Focus on delivering better experiences instead.
Responding to Customer Feedback (Positive + Negative)
Fast, thoughtful responses show that you’re present and accountable. In fact, 87 percent of customers are more likely to trust brands that respond to feedback and provide excellent customer service.
Thank people who leave positive reviews (it nudges more customers to post). For negative feedback, respond publicly with empathy and a clear next step, then move the resolution offline. The goal is to resolve the issue and demonstrate to future buyers how you handle problems.
Suppressing Negative Search Results
Sometimes, a negative article or outdated complaint ranks for your brand name. Suppression means pushing those results down with stronger, more relevant content. This usually requires a mix of search engine optimization (SEO), fresh content, and distribution (through either DPR, email, paid ads, or social media).
Let’s look at NFL quarterback Dak Prescott as an example. In an interview, Dak suggested that it was okay for fans to be critical of NFL referees. Sports Illustrated took these comments and published a negative article around them. At the time, if you searched Dak’s name, the negative Sports Illustrated article would show up on the first page of Google (the red arrow):
Suppressing this content would mean using the tactics we mentioned above to get the more positive results listed here to overtake the negative article, pushing it down the rankings and off page one. For example, work with your digital PR team to create new articles with Sports Illustrated to outrank the current piece. Alternatively, build links to other Sports Illustrated pieces to help outrank this one.
Create more positive “assets” that can rank and spread like customer stories, case studies, founder interviews, press mentions, YouTube videos, and social proof pages. Consistent publishing, combined with smart promotion, makes the positive narrative easier to find—and harder to ignore.
Customer Stories and Case Studies Don’t just collect testimonials. Interview your best customers. Ask what problem they had, what almost stopped them from buying, and what changed after working with you. Use real numbers when possible.
Publish these as dedicated case study pages. Optimize them around problem-based keywords, not just your brand name. Then promote them in email, link to them from your product pages, and share them across social channels.
Founder Interviews and Thought Leadership Pitch podcast hosts, industry blogs, and local publications. Offer real insight, not a sales pitch. When the interview goes live, embed it on your site. Create a recap post. Turn key quotes into short-form social clips.
One interview can become five or six pieces of content if you repurpose it properly.
Press Mentions and PR Wins If you land media coverage, don’t let it sit on someone else’s site. Create a “Press” page. Link to each mention. Add context about why it matters.
You can also proactively pitch stories. Tie your company to trending industry data, original research, or a strong founder story. Journalists need angles. Give them one.
YouTube and Video Content Video ranks. A lot of reputation-driven searches surface YouTube results.
Create videos that answer branded queries directly:
“Is [Your Company] legit?”
“How does [Your Product] work?”
“Customer review of [Your Brand]”
Optimize titles, descriptions, and tags. Embed those videos into related blog posts to strengthen both assets.
Social Proof Pages
Build a dedicated reviews page on your site. Pull in testimonials, screenshots, awards, and certifications. Structure it clearly. Add internal links from high-traffic pages.
Then promote it. Link to it in proposals. Add it to your email signature. Use it in retargeting campaigns.
Here’s the key: publishing isn’t enough.
Distribute every asset:
Share it with your email list
Run paid amplification on high-performing pieces
Repurpose it into short-form clips
Link to it internally from relevant content
When you consistently create and promote positive assets, you control more of what shows up in search results. Over time, that positive narrative becomes easier to find and much harder to ignore.
How to Handle Reviews and Mentions
Reviews and brand mentions are public receipts. You don’t get to control what people post, but you do control how you show up after they post it. That’s why a real strategy matters. One sloppy reply can turn a one-star review into a screenshot that lives forever.
Keep Your Tone Calm and Human
Write like a real person, not a legal department. Stay calm. Don’t argue. Don’t blame the customer. Even if they’re wrong, your job is to look reasonable to the next person reading the thread. A simple “Thanks for flagging this—here’s what we can do” goes further than a paragraph of defense.
Respond Fast (Google and Yelp Reward Speed)
Speed signals that you’re paying attention. Set up alerts for new reviews and mentions, and assign an owner internally (support, marketing, or location managers). Same-day responses are ideal for high-visibility platforms like Google Business Profile and Yelp, where people are deciding in minutes.
Handle Negative Reviews the Right Way
Apologize when the issue is real: delays, billing mistakes, poor service, broken products, etc. Own it and explain the next step. Take it offline when you need personal details or a back-and-forth: “Can you email us at [support] with your order number so we can fix this?”
If the review is abusive, spammy, or clearly fake, keep your reply short, and report it through the platform.
Turn Positive Reviews Into Marketing Assets
Don’t let five-star feedback just sit there. Screenshot it for social, add it to landing pages, pull quotes into sales decks, and turn longer customer testimonials and reviews into mini case studies. This is also where you can build a repeatable system by embedding easy ways to collect testimonials into your process.
Online forms and phone surveys are popular ways to collect reviews but make sure you time them correctly. You want to ask for a testimonial when your customer’s positive feelings toward your brand are at their highest. For realtors, this may be at the closing table after their clients have just signed to buy the home of their dreams. For a contractor, it might be right after he solved a nagging home improvement problem for his client. Look at your overall process and determine when your customers are happiest. That’s your opportunity to ask for a testimonial. Then, reuse the content whenever possible.
What to Do if Your Company Is Subjected to an Online Reputation Smear Campaign
The first thing most companies wonder is, “Can we call the cops?” I get it; being unfairly targeted feels illegal, but in most cases, online comments are not a legal matter.
Article 19 of The Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that:
“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
Everyone has the right to express their voice about your brand. There are, however, certain boundaries that need to be respected. Some of the negative content online actually is illegal. Why?
It uses defamatory language
It reports false information
It is aimed at damaging the company’s reputation
How do you react to all of this? How do you defend yourself or your company from this kind of illegal behavior?
Depending on the scope of the problem, there are several paths that you can pursue to restore your online reputation:
Aggressive SEO: Suppressing negative search results (like we talked about earlier) is one of the first things that you or your online reputation management company should do. We talked about some of the best tactics, but the main goal is to devise a search marketing strategy to increase the rankings of positive content, whether owned by you or third parties. The search engine landscape is too important to be ignored, and it is the first step in restoring your image.
Review Removal: Did a user claim something false about your company? Is that review clearly aimed at destroying your reputation rather than providing feedback? Does it contain improper language? You may have grounds for legal action and removal if so.
Use owned media to control the narrative: Publish a clear, factual response on your blog, issue a press release if warranted, and create short video content that explains the truth in plain English. Then distribute it across social and email.
Earn trust signals from reputable sites: Get featured on authoritative publications and industry sites. Those mentions plus high-quality backlinks help your positive pages outrank the negative content in search.
Plan for LLM visibility: Publish a single “facts” page with common FAQs, add basic schema (Organization/FAQ), keep your about/press pages current, making sure the tone and info align with other online profiles (LinkedIn, Google Business Profile, key directories). The more consistent, authoritative sources you have, the less likely AI answers are to repeat the negative sentiment.
You usually can’t “delete” bad content from the web, but you can bury it by flooding page one with stronger, more credible assets that Google and customers trust more.
How to Build an Online Reputation Management Strategy
Your online reputation is your reputation. In the digital era, nothing protects your brand from criticism. This is good from a freedom of speech perspective, but bad if your company has been defamed and attacked.
To help you stay on top of your reputation, here are six practical tips that sum up what we have covered in this guide. The world of brand reputation will change in the coming years, but following these simple tips will help you maintain a good image.
1. Proactively Build Your Reputation
Online reputation management is easier when you’re not always playing defense. Step one is building credibility so customers (and Google) trust you by default. Google calls this “E-E-A-T,” which stands for “experience, expertise, authority, and trust.”
Publish helpful content on a cadence you can sustain. Answer questions buyers Google before they convert: pricing, comparisons, “best for” use cases, FAQs, and common mistakes. This demonstrates expertise and gives search engines more quality pages to rank.
Make proof obvious. Add customer testimonials to your homepage, product/service pages, and pricing page. After a clear win (great delivery, successful onboarding, resolved ticket), ask satisfied customers to leave a review while the moment is fresh.
Boost authority with press. Even small hits like local news, niche blogs, podcasts, partner newsletters have value.
Stay active on social in a real way: share behind-the-scenes photos, customer stories, or quick tips, and respond like a human. Do this consistently, and negative mentions will get less attention while trust compounds over time.
2.Start With a Simple Reputation Audit
Before you “fix” anything, you need a baseline. Here’s a quick audit you can do in 20 minutes.
Open an incognito/private window (so results aren’t personalized).
Google your brand name, plus common variations: “Brand + reviews,” “Brand + pricing,” “Brand + scam,” and your founder/CEO name if relevant.
Scan the first page closely. What shows up? Your website pages, third-party articles, Reddit threads, forum posts, or old press?
Check review platforms where decisions happen fast: Google reviews, Yelp (if you’re local), and Trustpilot (common for ecommerce/SaaS). Look at the overall rating and the most recent 10 reviews.
Search social platforms for brand mentions and complaints (X/Twitter, LinkedIn, TikTok, Instagram comments).
For monitoring, start simple: Google Alerts for your brand and key people. If you want more coverage, tools like Mention can pull in social and web mentions.
Pro tip: Take screenshots and track your findings in a spreadsheet to measure improvement over time.
3. Set Clear Goals for Your Online Reputation
ORM only works when you know what you’re aiming for. Otherwise, you’re just reacting to whatever pops up this week. Start by defining what “better” actually means for your business, then measure it.
Here are common goals that are specific (and realistic):
Get more positive reviews on Google, Yelp, or Trustpilot to increase trust and conversions.
Reduce one-star feedback by spotting repeat complaints like shipping delays, support waiting times, or billing issues, and fixing the root cause.
Improve your average star rating (for example, from 3.8 to 4.3) by building a steady review-generation habit.
Bury negative search results by pushing stronger, more relevant pages to the top of the SERP (your site pages, PR, social profiles, and fresh content).
The key thing: ORM isn’t just about damage control. Done right, it’s a proactive trust-building system with more proof, better visibility, and fewer surprises.
Pick 1–3 goals and tie each one to a metric you can track, like review volume per month, average rating, response time to reviews, share of page-one search results you control, or suppression of negative search results. If it’s not measurable, it’s not a goal; it’s a wish.
4. Assign Ownership Across Your Team
ORM falls apart when it’s “everyone’s job.” Make it someone’s job and designate a clear backup, so reviews don’t sit for a week and mentions don’t get missed.
Who Usually Owns ORM?
ORM is very much a team effort for an organization, but different departments tend to specialize in different areas. Here’s a quick breakdown on what duties generally go to what professionals.
Marketing: Monitor search results, brand content, testimonials, press, social proof
Support/Customer Success: Review responses, issue resolution, patterns in complaints
Social team: Review and respond to DMs, comments, tagged posts, influencer mentions
PR/Comms: Send out media requests, journalist outreach, manage any crisis responses
You don’t need a big team. You need a clear chain of command.
Create a Simple Response Playbook
Write a short playbook with:
tone rules (calm, non-defensive, human)
response time targets (same day for Google/Yelp)
when to apologize publicly vs. move it offline
templates for common situations (shipping delay, billing issue, fake review, praise)
Assign Specific Owners For 3 Areas
Monitoring tools: who checks alerts daily and flags issues
Responding to reviews: who replies, who escalates, and who closes the loop
Publishing positive content: who collects wins and turns them into posts, testimonials, and case studies
When ownership is clear, your reputation becomes a system—not a scramble.
6. Track Progress with Real Metrics
If you don’t measure your reputation, you’ll end up guessing, and guessing is how small issues become big ones. The goal is to spot trends early and make smarter decisions month to month.
Start with a few KPIs that actually reflect trust:
Average review score (by platform and location, if relevant)
Number of new reviews per month (volume matters as much as rating)
Brand sentiment (are mentions trending more positive, neutral, or negative?)
Then set up a regular cadence to review what changed, what caused it, and what to do next. Most ORM platforms include reporting. If you’re early-stage, a custom Google Sheet can be used to track ratings, count reviews, measure response times, and identify any “top complaints” themes.
The most important part: don’t just track. Adjust. If billing complaints spike, fix the process. Metrics are only useful when they drive action.
FAQs
What is online reputation management?
Online reputation management (ORM) is the process of shaping how your brand is perceived online. It encompasses monitoring reviews and brand mentions, responding to feedback, improving what shows up on Google’s page one, and promoting trust-building content like testimonials and press. The goal isn’t to “hide” reality—it’s to earn trust and make sure accurate, positive info is easy to find.
Why is online reputation management important?
Trust influence conversions, so a single bad review or negative search result can kill a sale before you ever get a chance to pitch. ORM helps you catch issues early, respond fast, and build credibility so that small problems don’t spiral. It also improves SEO, click-through rates, and customer confidence, especially when buyers compare you side by side with competitors.
How do you do online reputation management?
Start by auditing what shows up when you Google your brand (in incognito mode). Then set up monitoring (Google Alerts, Mention, Brand24). Respond quickly to reviews with a calm, human tone. Fix recurring issues driving negative feedback. Publish helpful content and add testimonials to key pages. If negative results rank, create stronger pages and distribute them so they outrank the negatives.
How do you improve online reputation management?
Systematize it. Set one to three goals (rating, review volume, response time, page-one results) and track them monthly. Create a response playbook and assign owners for monitoring, replying, and publishing positive content. Ask happy customers for reviews at the right moment, and turn your best reviews into testimonials, case studies, and social proof. Then adjust based on patterns in complaints and sentiment.
Conclusion
Managing your online reputation starts with listening to what your customers have to say and finding ways to connect with them. Actions like replying to online criticism and building an SEO strategy are crucial, but they might not be enough to protect your brand from smear campaigns. As business continues, you may want to consider ways to strengthen your reputation further, like launching a brand Wikipedia page. If those steps don’t fix the issue, those cases, it might be time to get professional help.
http://dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/dubado-logo-1.png00http://dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/dubado-logo-1.png2026-02-27 06:29:002026-02-27 06:29:00How to Use AI for Content Marketing in 2026
The February 2026 SEO Update by Yoast is part of our monthly webinar series covering the latest developments in search and AI. In each session, we review the most important news from the past month and explore how it affects your search strategy.
Hosted by Carolyn Shelby and Alex Moss, this month’s update focused on AI-driven shifts in search, emerging agentic workflows, and Google’s latest core updates. Below is a recap of the topics discussed and what they mean for your strategy.
Watch the full recap on YouTube to hear Carolyn and Alex dive deeper into these topics, answer audience questions, and share real-world examples.
SEO and AI news from February 2026
Search engines expand AI reporting and website controls
Google and Bing introduced new tools for publishers to manage AI interactions. Bing’s AI Performance Report shows how often Copilot cites your site, including citation counts and queries. Google now allows publishers to control AI access via robots.txt using Google-Extended.
Actionable takeaway:
Monitor AI citation reports in Bing Webmaster Tools to track visibility
Review your robots.txt and AI access settings to align with your strategy
Debate over Markdown, AI agents, and machine-readable content
Simplify your site’s structure to make content more accessible to AI agents
If your site is overly complex, explore Markdown or structured data alternatives, but prioritize fixing underlying issues first
Is Google cracking down on self-promotional listicles?
Lily Ray identified a pattern of sites losing visibility due to self-promotional listicles (e.g., “Top 20 SEO Agencies in the US,” with the publisher ranked #1). Google appears to be penalizing manipulative tactics.
Actionable takeaway:
Avoid self-serving listicles. If creating comparison content, use objective criteria and transparent methodology
Microsoft’s vision for a sustainable agentic web
Microsoft outlined its approach to agentic search, emphasizing structured data, concise content, and publisher compensation for AI-driven traffic. The shift from human clicks to AI-driven retrieval was highlighted as a major trend.
Actionable takeaway:
Optimize for machine-readable actions (e.g., structured data, clear CTAs)
Prepare for AI-driven monetization models (e.g., compensation for citations)
Meta’s Avacado agent and OpenClaw integration
Meta is testing Avacado, a new AI agent integrating OpenClaw and Manus for workflow automation. This reflects a broader push toward omnichannel AI interactions.
Actionable takeaway:
Ensure consistent messaging across all platforms (website, social, email) to reinforce AI comprehension
ChatGPT rolls out ads
ChatGPT began serving ads to free users, with OpenAI charging advertisers based on ad impressions rather than clicks. The move mirrors traditional search ad models but raises concerns about user experience.
Actionable takeaway:
Monitor how AI-driven ad placements impact user engagement and brand visibility
WebMCP is a new protocol for AI agents
Chrome introduced WebMCP, a protocol that enables AI agents to interact with websites via machine-readable actions (e.g., form submissions). Early adoption is limited, but it signals a shift toward agent-first web design.
Actionable takeaway:
Audit your site’s underlying code for clarity (e.g., semantic HTML, structured data)
Proceed cautiously. WebMCP is experimental and could pose security risks if misconfigured
Bing Webmaster Tools launches AI Performance Report
Bing’s AI Performance Report now shows how often Copilot cites your site, including queries and cited pages. The tool bridges traditional SEO metrics with AI-driven search.
Actionable takeaway:
Set up Bing Webmaster Tools if you haven’t already
Compare Bing’s AI data with Google Search Console to identify gaps
Google AI Mode introduces UCP-powered checkout
Google’s AI mode now supports UCP-powered checkout, allowing agents to complete purchases on behalf of users. Early adopters include Etsy, Wayfair, and Walmart.
Actionable takeaway:
If you’re in e-commerce, prioritize structured product data and fast load times to capitalize on agentic commerce
OpenClaw, OpenAI, and the future of AI agents
The rise of OpenClaw and OpenAI’s advancements underscores a shift toward websites exposing capabilities (not just pages) to AI agents. Early experiments show agents interacting with sites via machine-readable actions.
Actionable takeaway:
Focus on clear site structure and consistent data to ensure reliable AI interpretation
What to focus on in 2026
The February SEO Update by Yoast highlighted four key priorities:
Optimize for AI-driven search: Use structured data and markdown to improve AI comprehension
Build brand authority across channels: Ensure consistent messaging for AI agents to reinforce
Prepare for agentic commerce: Prioritize structured product data and fast load times
Avoid low-quality AI content: Google is cracking down on manipulative tactics like self-promotional listicles
Sign up for the next SEO Update by Yoast
The next SEO Update by Yoast is on March 24, 2026, at 4 PM CET / 10 AM EST. Sign up here to join the live discussion or receive the recording.
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Inbound marketing is a method of growing your business by building lasting relationships with consumers, prospects, and clients through “pulling” tactics such as SEO, content marketing, social media, video marketing, and more. These practices inherently build more trust than outbound “awareness style” marketing and, as a result, create 54% more leads.
What’s even more interesting is that consistent inbound marketing (over a period of about 5 months) can drop your overall lead cost by 80%. These stats are powerful, but they barely scratch the surface of why it’s important to understand inbound marketing and do it well.
To start, you need to understand that inbound marketing is generally divided into four stages: attract, convert, close, and delight.
The four stages of this process are powerful because, when done right, they create “pull power.” Instead of advertising to the customer, as traditional outbound marketing does, inbound marketing focuses on creating reasons for the customer to come to you.
You can do this by publishing helpful content or personalizing your social media pages and website copy. Almost all marketers (93%) say incorporating some level of personalization improves lead quality or purchases. And, with the help of AI, it’s easier for brands to personalize the customer journey now more than ever.
Big brands like HubSpot, Airbnb, and Slack are experiencing success with these strategies. By creating educational content in-house or leveraging user-generated content (UGC) across socials, these big names have boosted bookings and conversions by building trust and showing their audience how relatable and authentic they truly are.
Let’s talk about what inbound marketing is, the most effective inbound marketing strategies, and how you can use these to grow your business or startup.
Key Takeaways
Inbound marketing wins by “pulling,” not pushing. You attract people with SEO + helpful content, then convert them with clear CTAs, forms, and email nurture—value first, sale second.
Tie inbound goals to revenue outcomes, not traffic. Track things like qualified leads, demo requests, and repeat purchases so you’re building a pipeline, not just pageviews.
Match content to intent across the journey. Use TOFU to earn attention, MOFU to build trust, and BOFU to prove you’re the right choice, because one blog post won’t close the deal.
AI is collapsing the funnel, so your content must “prove,” not just educate. Make buying questions easy to answer fast with comparisons, case studies, pricing info, and strong proof points.
Measure what matters and iterate. Watch qualified leads, conversion rates by step, cost per lead, and assisted revenue over 30–90 day trends, then adjust content, offers, and distribution accordingly.
What Is Inbound Marketing?
Inbound marketing is a marketing strategy that attracts customers and clients to you. One of the most popular ways of attracting and retaining visits is through valuable content. Marketers who focus on providing high-quality content consistently may notice growth in repeat visits and user engagement.
For example, if I work in graphic design and want to attract people who need assistance in that field, I’d focus on creating content relevant to them. That could include design how-tos, YouTube videos about the best design practices, or a niche subject newsletter.
One of the best things about inbound marketing is that it can work across business sectors. These strategies are great for:
Established enterprises: Inbound scales across teams with consistent messaging and evergreen content.
Service businesses (agencies, consultants, local pros): Educational content, reviews, and case studies pull in leads who are already looking for help.
E-commerce brands: UGC or email flows can turn “window shoppers” into repeat buyers.
B2B companies: Educational content like thought leadership pieces and webinars, and nurture sequences, build trust across long buying cycles and multiple stakeholders.
SaaS and subscription brands: Product-led content (templates, playbooks, onboarding emails) attracts users and increases retention.
What Is the Purpose of Inbound Marketing? Why is it Important?
Inbound marketing reduces the need for you to go out and seek new users. When customers come to you organically, you no longer have to spend a lot of time and money chasing potential buyers.
This strategy can also increase customer trust. Almost three-quarters (72 percent) of customers conduct online research before deciding what to buy. If you present your company as an authoritative source in your industry, users may be more likely to pick you.
Inbound marketing is important because it builds trust before the sale. Instead of meeting prospects with a pitch, you meet them with answers via guides, tools, and examples that help them decide on their own terms.
It also scales better than relying solely on paid acquisition. Ads stop the moment you pause the budget. A strong content and SEO foundation keeps generating traffic and leads over time, which typically lowers your cost per acquisition as it compounds.
And it’s especially valuable for long buying cycles (common in B2B and higher-ticket services). You can educate stakeholders over weeks or months with email sequences, webinars, and case studies, so you’re the obvious choice when they’re ready. The key is tailoring everything to your target audience. When your content matches real questions and intent, inbound works whether you’re a startup or an enterprise team.
Practical Inbound Marketing Examples
Let’s come back to our brand examples from earlier. Here are how three big brand names used inbound marketing to improve their already-stellar results:
HubSpot
They didn’t just talk about inbound — they built an engine around it. HubSpot pumped out helpful guides, templates, and blog content that pulled in a massive audience, then funneled that traffic into leads through smart offers and forms. The result: more people engaging with lead capture pages and a big jump in conversions.
Airbnb lets customers handle much of the marketing for them. By spotlighting real guest and host stories, photos, and reviews, they made the brand feel trustworthy and “real.” That kind of user-generated content works like social proof on steroids, helping drive more bookings and repeat engagement.
Slack focused heavily on education to remove friction. Webinars, tutorials, and onboarding resources helped teams understand the value quickly, which sped up adoption. Once people “got it,” Slack’s product spread inside companies through internal champions and word of mouth.
Inbound and outbound marketing techniques differ in how they approach the customer. They also produce different results.
Outbound marketing requires proactively reaching out to potential customers to gauge their interest in your products. For example, you may launch social media sale campaigns, engage in door-to-door sales, or cold-call people.
Inbound marketing, on the other hand, focuses on bringing the customer to you. Like we discussed earlier, this can include creating content that resonates with your desired audience.
Once brand awareness and long-term trust are established, people may be more likely to buy from you.
Here is a handy table to remember the difference between the two:
Inbound Marketing
Outbound Marketing
Focuses on high-quality content
Focuses on sales campaigns
Generates brand awareness for building long-term relationships
More focused on converting new users
May take less time
May take more time
Saves money spent on marketing costs
Requires money for sales campaigns
As you can see in our table, outbound marketing is still relevant. Think of outbound as getting your audience’s attention, and of inbound as what helps make them long-term customers. Using the two together is the best way to drive ideal marketing results.
The Stages of Inbound Marketing
Understanding the stages of inbound marketing can help you improve your website copy and attract the right customers faster. The four stages are: attract, convert, delight, and engage.
Attract
The first stage of inbound marketing is Attract. This stage is all about finding and attracting your target audience. An example would be creating a how-to guide as a blog. You would implement an effective SEO strategy by using relevant keywords in that blog, and then strategically share it on social media to attract people to your brand.
Ultimately, ask yourself: How do you help people find your website? Do you add a lot of relevant keywords in your blog posts? Do you use targeted hashtags?
Answering these questions and adapting accordingly can help you rank higher in Google search and be more visible in your desired audience’s social media feed.
How can you use inbound marketing to convert users?
sign-up forms
effective calls to action (CTAs)
incentivizing signing up for your newsletter
For example, look at this section of Nike’s homepage. It reminds visitors of a challenge they’re hosting and gives them the options to start a run or a workout using buttons at the bottom.
This CTA may prompt a casual viewer to sign up and become a part of Nike’s community.
Close
In some cases, converting a user isn’t as straightforward as offering a sign-up form and hoping they join your community.
One of the many ways you can enter the closing stage is by using automation. For example, automated emails that remind users of their abandoned carts can prompt a busy customer to return to your site and complete their purchase.
It works, too. Forty-five percent of abandoned cart emails are opened, and 50 percent of the links within are clicked. Such findings show how the “close” stage of the inbound marketing strategy can be equally if not more important.
Delight
The last stage of the inbound marketing strategy is the delight phase, wherein you reward customers for buying from you.
It could include actions like sending a thank you message, personalized follow-up emails, offering discounts, and more.
Here’s an example of a thank you page from Codica:
Not only does this add a personal touch and some appreciation to Codica’s funnel, but it also includes an opportunity for further engagement. Pointing visitors to additional articles and case studies gives Codica’s audience the opportunity to deepen their relationship with the brand.
If you choose to include surveys and feedback forms at this stage, you can also receive helpful comments and gain insight into potential problems to fix early on.
Inbound Marketing Strategies to Drive Business Growth
Now that you know what is inbound marketing and how it works, let’s dive into the best strategies for inbound marketing for startups.
1. Define Your Goals and Target Audience.
The first and most critical part of creating compelling content is understanding what your target customers want to learn. You need in-depth knowledge of your market to react quickly.
From there, get specific about what you’re trying to achieve. Inbound goals should tie to business outcomes—not just “more traffic.” For example, are you trying to improve lead quality, generate more demo requests, or drive repeat purchases?
Once you’re clear on the goal, define exactly who you’re trying to reach and what they care about. What problems are they trying to solve? What questions do they ask before they buy? When you align your content to those answers, you attract the right people—and make it easier to turn that attention into revenue.
2. Survey Your Current Customers and Leads
The easiest way to get to know your target market is through a survey.
This doesn’t have to be complicated. If you already have an email list, you can send them a simple form through SurveyMonkey.
To make this work, you only need to ask one question: “What is your biggest struggle?”
Your goal is to understand the problems they’re facing so you can create compelling content that targets their deepest interests.
3. Map Content To The Buyer’s Journey
When it comes to content, one blog post won’t close the deal. You need to consider a buyer’s entire journey, from discovery to purchase, and reach them at multiple touchpoints until they’re ready. Here’s what that looks like in practice:
Top-of-funnel (TOFU): attract attention with blogs, checklists, short videos, and beginner guides.
Middle-of-funnel (MOFU): build trust with webinars, templates, comparison posts, and email nurturing.
Bottom-of-funnel (BOFU): help people decide with case studies, demos, pricing pages, and customer proof.
And now AI is compressing the funnel. Search engines and AI answers can skip the “browse” stage and send someone straight to a shortlist. So your content can’t just educate—it has to prove. Make every stage easy to act on: clear next steps, strong proof, and pages that answer buying questions fast.
4. Choose the Right Channels for Your Audience
Choose channels the same way you choose content: based on how your audience actually behaves:
B2B buyers often want depth. SEO content, LinkedIn, webinars, and email nurturing work well because decisions take time and involve multiple people.
E-commerce shoppers tend to bounce between discovery and purchase. Lean into SEO, paid retargeting, creator/UGC, and lifecycle email/SMS to capture and re-capture demand.
Service businesses win locally with search, reviews, Google Business Profile, and case studies that prove outcomes fast.
Niche audiences often live in communities—Slack groups, Reddit, Discord, industry newsletters—where trust is built through participation.
The goal isn’t “be everywhere.” It’s about picking 2–3 channels you can execute consistently, then connecting them with clear next steps so attention turns into leads and revenue.
If you create generic, self-serving articles and videos, you’ll never see success.
No matter how hard you promote this content or how you designed it to rank well in search engines, you’re going to struggle to find new clients and customers.
The best-in-class content marketers work tirelessly to adapt their content to the target audiences they want to attract — and where that audience is in the customer journey.
Understanding the customer journey and their needs is critical to making great content, but it’s not the only strategy you’ll need to draw in new customers and leads.
Optimizing your content headline is the most important strategy to do that. It’s what will drive the most clicks and draw in new traffic.
You should spend lots of time crafting a headline that appeals to your most targeted customers.
One of the best ways to do this is to include a bit of negativity, but you shouldn’t always have negative headlines.
But if you have a list of mistakes or talk about the worst strategies that could hurt your customer, this can be an effective way to drive traffic.
According to the Martal Group, companies with blogs generate 13x more leads per month than those who don’t.
If you’re going to produce this content, you need to make sure it works to its best ability.
For your content to appeal to your ideal readers, make sure there’s more to it than just large blocks of text. Humans love visual content.
Including lots of images, charts, and graphs is a technique I use to make my content more appealing, and I’m not alone.
The more visual your content, the more likely it is to improve your inbound marketing efforts.
Length is another focus area where you can improve your inbound marketing. Instead of writing short posts, you should be doing extensive research and producing in-depth content.
You should be writing articles that are a few thousand words long and supported by lots of data and analysis.
This is not only better for your SEO rankings, but it’s also more helpful for your customers.
The better your content, the more likely your readers are to share it with friends, recommend your site to others, and implement what you say.
Just because you base your content around data and analysis doesn’t mean it needs to be dry and academic.
You should work to produce the opposite type of content. You want to create articles that tell a story.
Using storytelling in your content (from sales pages to social media posts) is a way to create an emotional connection with your audience.
Storytelling has another powerful function. It creates brand recall.
Creating a personal, emotional narrative around your brand can boost brand recall up to 70%.
Why?
Because connecting with your audience on an emotional level literally rewires their brain. Compelling stories create new neural pathways linked to trust and personal connection, making you stand out far and above competitors in your target audience’s mind.
But, how do you implement this tactic in your startup? Look for opportunities to weave in stories when talking about your product or business.
Sure, your benefits and features are great, but the emotional connection you create with storytelling will close the sale and help grow your startup through inbound marketing.
This is because it provides you with backlinks, authority in the space, and relationships with key influencers.
But most people go about it the wrong way. If you aren’t using smart strategies to spread your startup’s message through guest posting, you might as well not do it.
If you want to reap the benefits of guest posting, you need to write consistently.
This is how the most successful startup owners have made guest blogging work well for them. Instead of a few posts, they wrote prolifically and gained ground quickly.
If you do a Google search for guest posts by Danny Iny, you’ll find dozens of pieces of content across the web.
This massive, consistent guest-posting strategy allowed him to grow his business Mirasee into the powerhouse it is today.
On his homepage, he displays an in-depth list of all the sites where he has been featured.
Dedicate some of your time to creating compelling content for other blogs to reach as many customers as possible.
Dedicate some of your time to creating compelling content for other blogs to reach as many customers as possible.
Another problem I see with entrepreneurs who want to use guest posting as an inbound marketing strategy is that they don’t look for sites that will give them much ROI.
The truth is that every guest post requires work, and that’s work that needs to give you a distinct benefit in visitors or leads.
If you post on a blog that has a dead audience, you won’t get any benefit, and you’ll have wasted your time. Look at the comments people are leaving on sites where it makes sense for you to guest post.
Not only will this give you content ideas, but it also tells you the readers are engaged, and a blog post here might result in readers clicking through to my startup’s website and purchasing from me.
6. Maximize Your Results from SEO with Keyword Optimization
You need to understand SEO to achieve any success with your startup in today’s search-driven marketplace.
The most important things to focus on are basic on-page SEO and backlinks for your site and your content.
How do you do that? Keyword optimization.
You want to find specific long-tail keywords which you’d like to use for targeting your content.
The more specific someone is in their search, the more likely they know what they want and are close to converting into a customer.
7. Promote Your Content to Build Backlinks
Backlinks still matter for SEO—but not in the “collect as many as possible” way.
At the simplest level, backlinks are links from other sites to yours. Search engines treat them like votes of confidence, especially when those links come from relevant, trustworthy websites. A handful of high-quality links can beat hundreds of low-quality ones.
The best way to earn backlinks today is to create something worth citing, then promote it the right way. Think: original data, strong opinions backed by examples, free tools, templates, step-by-step guides, and “definitive” resources people reference in their own content.
Then focus your promotion on modern link-earning plays:
Digital PR (pitch your data, angle, or story to journalists and editors)
Outreach to relevant creators (not random “influencers”)
Unlinked mention reclamation (turn brand mentions into links)
Partner and community placements (where your audience already hangs out)
The number of backlinks you need depends on the competition, but quality, relevance, and intent alignment are what move the needle.
Not sure where to start? Use my free backlink checker to see who’s linking to your competitors, and what’s realistically earning links in your niche.
8. Acquire Inbound Marketing Leads with Free Content
When it’s time to convert your visitors into leads, you need bulletproof strategies to get people to give you their email addresses.
The best method I’ve seen is to offer free content in exchange for this contact information.
If your startup is in the B2B sector, or if you appeal to customers who want or need in-depth analysis before purchasing, you can make an effective lead magnet from a report.
This is a great way to get leads because the comprehensiveness of your work seems like a great deal for an email address.
HubSpot’s list of marketing statistics includes a pitch for their “State of Inbound Marketing” report. This is a detailed guide with massive amounts of high-quality data.
But they aren’t giving this away for free. To receive the report, you need to provide a detailed amount of information that HubSpot will use to follow up with you on their products.
This is an effective way to drive your visitors into your sales funnel and reach them even more effectively.
9. Host a Free Webinar
One of my favorite inbound marketing techniques for startups is free webinars that encourage customers to learn in real-time.
This is great because it lets them see your face and understand your personality. Besides, lots of people will download a guide and never read it.
But if someone signs up for a webinar, you can see if they watch the whole thing.
I have used this kind of training on my homepage in the past. I didn’t call it a webinar, though. I just used the term “training.”
This is a great way to increase your leads as visitors must enter their first name and email address to access the training.
Since this is such a valuable teaching piece, people who come to my website are happy to provide their email address to learn SEO better.
10. Launch an Email Course
There’s another form of content you can create that will drive new customers.
Even better, it won’t require the extensive research that a report demands or the complicated backend software necessary for a webinar.
That strategy is to create an email course. This is a simple way to provide extra value without spending tons of time creating something with design elements or video.
If you’re currently giving away an e-book for your startup and you’ve found that it isn’t converting well, consider breaking down the content into sections.
Then use each section as a separate email. You may find that an email course or a masterclass converts even better than an ebook.
11. Start an Influencer Marketing Campaign
According to a survey by Influencer Marketing Hub, 75 percent of brands have a dedicated budget for influencer marketing, and 90 percent of respondents believe it’s an effective form of advertising.
If you do this the right way, it can be a free or paid method to get people excited about your brand.
First and most importantly, you need to make sure you’re appealing to the right influencers.
This is easy to get wrong, as the people you think you’re appealing to may not be persuasive to your target audience.
The earlier research you did on your audience should be a great starting place to understand who they pay attention to, but you might need to do even more work than that.
How do you find the right influencers for your startup? You can:
Google phrases like “top [niche] influencers.
Browse hashtags on Instagram related to your niche.
Use Influencer platforms to connect with creators.
Search key phrases on Ubersuggest to find blogs that appeal to your target audience.
12. Make Your Website Convert Like Crazy by Making it Mobile Friendly
Ultimately, the goal of much of your inbound marketing strategy is to drive people to your startup’s website.
If you’re not converting people once they arrive, however, what’s the point?
You need to make sure your website is ready to convert your traffic into leads and customers.
It’s the only way to make your startup grow with the traffic you’ve worked so hard to acquire.
The first and most important way to ensure you’re getting the conversions you deserve by focusing on your website’s conversion rate optimization (CRO).
If your startup’s site doesn’t load quickly or has a confusing layout, you’re going to struggle to convert the traffic you’ve worked so hard to drive there. You need to evaluate your site’s user interface (UI) and user experience (UI) through the lens of your target audience. What can you do to make your site simpler and drive visitors into your funnel?
The vast majority of websites aren’t maximizing their CRO, and they aren’t putting in the work they need to make these changes.
Instead of actually converting their customers, they’re losing out on valuable traffic. Don’t let that happen to you. Your site is more than just the place your leads land. It can be one of your most powerful strategic assets if you focus on CRO and use it well.
Inbound Marketing Tools
Inbound marketing strategies can be pretty effective, but they can be challenging to figure out initially. To help you make the transition from outbound to inbound marketing smoother, I have compiled a few inbound marketing tools to help you strengthen your marketing plan.
These tools can be helpful, but at the end of the day, they’re just tools. It’s you as a marketer who can use them effectively for the best results. Having a deeper understanding of how inbound marketing works can help you strengthen your marketing plan for better reach.
Jotform
Jotform is a free form builder with attractive templates and a ton of desirable features. It’s easy to set up, forms can be designed and edited in minutes, and the results can embed in most content management systems in a click.
Tools like Jotform can help you design beautiful forms for newsletter sign-ups, e-book downloads, service subscriptions, and other inbound marketing practices.
Mailchimp
While tools like Jotform can help you secure sign-ups, you need efficient email marketing and distribution to operate inbound strategies like a lead-generating newsletter. That’s where Mailchimp comes in.
Mailchimp offers free and paid email distribution features. You can customize how your email looks, when it’s sent, what it includes, and more. Mailchimp also lets you create personalized email campaigns unique to each set of subscribers.
Customizable features like these can help you create effective email campaigns to generate, capture, and nurture leads.
Buffer
Social media management is a crucial aspect of inbound marketing. Tools like Buffer can help you improve the effectiveness of your social media marketing plan.
Buffer lets you schedule social media posts to publish content when your target demographic is most active. As a result, no one has to stay awake at odd hours to post content at strategic times.
This tool also automates most of the social media management, so you save time and money. So if you’re a startup with a tight budget, this can help give you a leg up.
Inbound Marketing Metrics To Track
If you want inbound marketing to drive growth, you need to measure the stuff that actually impacts revenue—not vanity metrics like raw traffic or impressions.
Here are the numbers that matter most:
Qualified leads: Track MQLs/SQLs (or whatever you call “sales-ready”) so you know you’re attracting the right people, not just more people.
Conversion rates: Measure conversion by step—visitor → lead, lead → opportunity, opportunity → customer. This shows where you’re leaking results.
Cost per lead (CPL): Even “organic” inbound has a cost (tools, content, labor). CPL keeps you honest and helps compare inbound to paid channels.
Assisted revenue: Inbound rarely gets the “last click.” Track how content and email influence deals—especially in B2B or high-consideration purchases.
The big rule: watch trends, not one-off spikes. Review these metrics monthly, spot what’s improving (or slipping), and adjust your content, offers, and distribution. Inbound works best when you treat it like a system you constantly tune.
Inbound marketing is the process of attracting customers by helping them first. You publish useful content, optimize it for search, and use conversion points (forms, CTAs, email nurture) to turn visitors into leads and customers. The goal is simple: earn attention with value instead of buying it with interruptions.
What are the types of inbound marketing?
The core types are: content marketing (blogs, guides, videos), SEO (ranking for intent-based searches), social distribution (sharing and community), email nurturing (education and follow-up), and conversion optimization (landing pages, CTAs, offers). The best inbound programs combine these so each channel reinforces the others.
How do you create an inbound marketing strategy?
Start with a clear business goal (pipeline, revenue, retention), then define your target audience and their buying questions. Build content for TOFU/MOFU/BOFU, add conversion paths (lead magnets, demos, trials), and set up nurture sequences. Pick 2–3 channels you can execute consistently, track results monthly, and double down on what drives qualified leads.
How do you develop an inbound strategy?
You need to know the purpose of your content, your target audience, and how your content fits in with the buyer’s journey.
How to measure inbound marketing?
Measure what ties to revenue: qualified leads, conversion rates by funnel step, cost per lead (including content/tooling costs), and assisted revenue (how content influences deals). Ignore one-week spikes. Look at trends over 30–90 days, identify drop-offs, and iterate on content, offers, and distribution.
Is SEO inbound marketing?
Yes, SEO is one of the biggest inbound channels. It brings in people who are already searching for answers, solutions, or comparisons. But SEO alone isn’t the full strategy. Inbound includes what happens after the click, too: content that builds trust, pages that convert, and follow-up that nurtures leads into customers.
Inbound Marketing Strategies Summary
Inbound marketing is the most effective way to increase visitors, leads, and buyers.
To attract customers, you need to understand their needs, aspirations, and struggles. Using that data, create great content that draws them in like a magnet.
You’ll need to include SEO best practices so that customers can find you through search engines.
Once you have the traffic, convert those visitors with free content and influencer marketing that drives leads.
With a compelling email campaign and a high-converting website, you can grow your business like never before.
http://dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/dubado-logo-1.png00http://dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/dubado-logo-1.png2026-02-24 20:00:002026-02-24 20:00:00Inbound Marketing Strategy: How to Grow Your Brand