Reputation management stories
The acquisition gives marketers new tools to track brand visibility as AI-led discovery reshapes how shoppers find products online.
Shoppers are being urged to scrutinise online sellers after search data showed a sharp rise in queries for bought credibility signals.
Brands may need to rethink search spending as AI-driven visits from ChatGPT and similar tools convert almost three times better than Google traffic.
Marketers face new pressure to track brand presence in AI answers, as Conductor's suite helps enterprises monitor citations and sentiment.
Better online listings and reviews could help small businesses appear in AI recommendations as customers increasingly use chatbots to find local providers.
Brands risk losing search traffic as Trustpilot’s new tools track how recent reviews shape AI recommendations and rankings.
Inbox failures are leaving as much as 20% of email ROI at risk, as senders struggle to measure returns and improve deliverability.
Referral-led IT firms risk missing enquiries as local search can still be won with Google profiles, reviews and city-specific pages.
Enterprise buyers may never reach the sales call if a security firm is absent from search results, because digital authority now shapes trust and deal flow.
Poorly handled lunches can lose deals, as a psychologist says clients judge hosts on venue, manners and how they read the room.
Incorrect AI responses are already steering customers away, with Atlas finding factual errors in most brand profiles across major platforms.
For multi-location service brands, the new tool links surveys, reviews and listings to help lift ratings, retain customers and cut costs.
AI tools now favour recent, credible coverage over paid media, leaving B2B tech firms with a growing visibility gap in search results.
Only 21.1% of workers have had training, leaving many to rely on generative AI at work while still worrying about errors and poor output.
Businesses could save about 20% on breach costs if they prepare responses in advance, according to QBE and Atmos claims data.
Search visibility, trade coverage and peer mentions now shape which managed service providers make CIO shortlists in Australia.
For CIOs, independent coverage can reveal whether a vendor’s online prominence reflects real market traction or just polished marketing.
Pressure from regulators and Google is putting firms at risk of hefty penalties if they screen out unhappy customers before asking for public reviews.
Trusted vendors are more likely to be shortlisted, secure approval and command better pricing in complex enterprise deals.
Only 30% of New Zealand organisations have a cyber recovery plan, leaving customers and operations exposed if attacks cause prolonged outages.