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The Independent Urologist just came up with some great tips about how to protect your online reputation. I thought I should add my suggestions to the useful list:
Be patient. I had 15 readers a day in December, 2006. Now I have 1-1500 visitors a day. It takes time and effort (I wrote almost 1000 posts in 2 years).
Create a LinkedIn profile and manage your blog properly (e.g. construct a nice about me page).
Google loves self-linkage… Build your page rank professionally.
Summerize your ideas in Google Docs and collect your favourite links on Del.icio.us so it will be much easier to write a proper review later on a specific subject.
Be fair and open to new ideas. Join respected groups like the DNA Network or contribute to blog carnivals.
See my Behind The Scenes of Medical Bloggers series. Publish your slideshows and ideas so people will certainly find you.
Or use Google Alert to receive automated alerts about who and why mentions your name on the web.
Get a HONcode (Health on the Net Foundation) accreditation.
Contact the members of the Healthcare Blogger Code of Ethics group or check the service of Webicina.com out.
And here is a slideshow I presented at the Medicine 2.0 Congress about building an online reputation.
Your visitors see on average 1 page from your site and spend 1 second on it…
No, they do not. See this: http://www.sitemeter.com/?a=stats&s=s29ncurse
Great advice list especially with the growing medicine 2.0 community much more conscious of their online web-presence: See this – http://www.uic.edu/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/2161/2026
Great list of site hits form sitemeter.com – also another resource is cubestat.com: see http://www.cubestat.com/www.scienceroll.comseries of sitestats
Sandnsurf
Great post Berci, as always! This is great advice for anyone looking to establish an online presence. It’s hard work, but well worth the effort.
Great post Berci!!!!
I also want recomend you to post articles in Google Knol and become a wikipedia editor.
Carmen, thank you! But I’ve been a Wikipedia administrator for 2 years now.
Another point:
Get yourself a LookupPage
Scienceroll used to have 15 visits a day only?!! :-O
You sure have gone a long way