Why Google Yourself?
Well, your on-line image is important, and it’s easy to lose control of it. If you’re in business, “Yourself” also means “Company.” It’s important to monitor what people see when they Google you.
Google is Clever
The trouble is, Google tries to give you the best result for you. It uses everything it’s got, and bends the results to favour things it thinks you want to see. This is usually fine when you search for a restaurant or another business, but not when you search for yourself.
You need to see what others would see.
Browse Privately
Web browsers these days have a Private Browsing mode. At the end of this post we’ve included some hints on how to turn it on in different browsers.
Private mode means your browser neither uses, nor keeps, a history of the pages you visit. It won’t leave cookies or any other local files, no trace of your presence on the computer you use. Use Private Browsing:
- when you don’t want to leave a trail on someone else’s computer;
- for banking transactions;
- to check your real position in search engine results;
- to buy your spouse’s birthday present.
Beware: You’re still leaving some sort of trail behind on the search engine’s server, so if you want total privacy you need to look further than we can tell you.
But that’s not the end of the story!
How to Google Yourself
- Start your web browser;
- Don’t use a mobile device, like your phone or tablet, because they tell search engines too much about you and your location; the search engine will skew your results;
- Open a private browsing window (see below for how to do this with your favourite web browser).
- Make sure you’re logged out of everything: Facebook, LinkedIn, Trip Advisor, Trade Association – everything;
- Especially make sure you log out of all Google apps, like Gmail, YouTube, Picassa…
Almost ready: tell the search engine where want to be for your experiments. In this Google example, it knows I’m in Portishead so it might show me results for this area when I don’t want it to.
Click “Search tools” (1) and then use the drop-down (2) to choose the location you want. The default location is that of your ISP’s server. Ours is in Guildford, Essex, so it isn’t much use for my local searches anyway.
You can enter a post code, county, city, or UK. Google will tell you if it doesn’t recognise the area you’ve chosen.
- Search for your name, or the name of your business;
- Try common misspellings;
- Now do an Image search, and Maps – see right.
Now What?
Did you like what you found? Yes? That’s OK then.
If you didn’t, then it’s time for a chat with your marketing guys!
And finally, don’t forget to Bing yourself, and Yahoo yourself too…
How to Start Private Browsing in Different Web Browsers
Most browsers support the shortcut, Ctrl-Shift-P. Here’s a selection of other ways to start it. They all open a new window or tab.
Firefox
Click the Firefox button, then Start Private Browsing. If you’re using the menu bar, it’s under Tools.
Internet Explorer
Click the Tools icon, then Safety>, InPrivate Browsing. It’s also in the File menu.
Apple Safari
Curiously, Apple has it under the Edit menu, though it does just the same as in other browsers.
Opera
Opera button, Tabs and Windows; now choose New Private Window or Tab.