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The Perfect Profile: Paul M. Wilson on Why ORM Has Evolved Beyond Reputation Repair

15th Jul 2026
Online reputation management used to mean only one thing: fixing a problem after it appeared. A bad review, an unflattering article, a damaging search result that climbed to the top of page one. The job was to move it down and out of view. That reactive model still exists, but it no longer describes where the discipline is going. Increasingly, ORM is a proactive practice, less about cleaning up the past and more about deliberately building a presence that holds up over time. Industry practitioners such as Paul M. Wilson, who leads the reputation firm NetReputation, describe the change as a move from defense to construction. Understanding why that shift happened, and what it means in practice, is now essential for anyone whose name or brand is searchable, which is to say almost everyone. Where Reputation Repair Came From The first generation of ORM grew up alongside search engines. As soon as what appeared when someone typed your name became consequential, a market emerged to manage it. Early work was largely reactive: an issue surfaced, a specialist was brought in, and the focus was on addressing it after the fact. This responsive work remains extremely valuable, and it is still a core service at firms like NetReputation today, because there will always be moments when something needs a fast, expert response. What changed over time was not the value of that responsive work but the scope of what reputation management could do. Reacting to issues as they arose addressed problems once they appeared, but it left a separate question unanswered: what shows up when nothing has gone wrong at all? As more of life moved online, that question grew in importance, and the field expanded to meet it. Reputation management became a fuller practice that pairs responsive work with deliberate, ongoing effort to shape an accurate presence from the start. Why the Model Shifted Several forces pushed ORM toward a proactive footing. Search engines grew more sophisticated, placing a premium on genuine, authoritative, and consistent content. That raised the value of building a substantive presence over time, and made an established foundation an asset that complements responsive work rather than replacing it. At the same time, the stakes rose. As more of life moved online, the gap between someone's actual record and their digital footprint grew wider. A capable professional with a sparse or outdated online presence can lose opportunities to a less qualified competitor who simply shows up more prominently in search results. This highlighted a need that sits alongside responsive work rather than competing with it: building an accurate, substantive presence in the first place, so there is a strong foundation already in place whenever it is needed. Where ORM Meets SEO One of the clearest signs of the discipline's maturity is how thoroughly it has merged with search engine optimization. In practice, modern reputation management is inseparable from SEO. What people find is determined by how search engines rank content, so shaping a reputation means working with the same fundamentals that drive organic visibility: authoritative content, credible publishing platforms, well-structured owned assets, and consistency across every place a name appears. The two disciplines reinforce each other in both directions. SEO gives reputation work its mechanics, determining which accurate, substantive content earns a durable position in results. ORM, in turn, gives SEO a purpose beyond traffic, aligning what ranks with what is true about a person or organization. Wilson describes the combination as the difference between publishing content and building an asset. Content alone can appear and fade. Content built with search discipline behind it compounds, gaining authority over time and becoming harder to displace. For anyone investing in their reputation, that convergence means the question is no longer whether to think about search but how deliberately to do so. What Proactive Reputation Building Looks Like The proactive model starts from a different question. Rather than beginning with what has gone wrong, it begins with a question Wilson says every client should be able to answer: what is the image you would like to project about yourself? That answer becomes the blueprint. The work then measures the current public record against it, identifies where the gaps are, and closes them with accurate, useful, and discoverable content across the places people actually look: search results, professional profiles, owned channels, and credible third-party coverage. When done well, this produces a resilient presence. When a foundation is broad and substantive, a single negative item does not define the whole picture, because it sits among a great deal of accurate context. Wilson frames the goal not as controlling the narrative but as ensuring the true one is what people find. That distinction matters, and it is reflected in how reputation professionals increasingly talk about their work in the press and in video commentary on the field. Repair Has Not Disappeared None of this means reactive work is obsolete. Crises still happen, false claims still circulate, and there are still moments when an organization or individual needs rapid, expert intervention. Within that reactive work, it is worth drawing a distinction that is often blurred: crisis communication and crisis management are not the same thing. Crisis communication is about what is said in the moment, the statements, messaging, and outreach that shape how an event is understood as it unfolds. Crisis management is the broader discipline that contains it, covering how the underlying situation is assessed and resolved, how stakeholders are handled, and how the digital aftermath is addressed long after the headlines fade. A well-worded statement can win the news cycle while the search results tell a different story for years. Crisis management remains a core part of what reputation firms do, and serious firms handle both sides, because a crisis is not truly managed until what people find afterward reflects how it was resolved. The practical implication is that the best time to invest in reputation is before anything goes wrong. An entity with a strong, well-established presence enters any crisis from a position of strength, with existing credibility to draw on. One that waits until a problem appears is forced to build and defend at the same time, which is harder, slower, and more expensive. Proactive building, in other words, makes the occasional repair far easier when it is needed. What It Means for Businesses and Individuals The reactive and proactive models apply differently depending on who is being protected. For businesses, reputation is increasingly treated as a business function in its own right, with direct consequences for revenue, partnerships, hiring, and diligence. Prospective customers, investors, and acquirers all research a company before engaging with it, and what they find shapes deal terms, talent pipelines, and market perception. In that context, proactive reputation work sits closer to brand-building and corporate strategy than to damage control, and it belongs on the same planning horizon as any other long-term investment. For individuals, the calculus is different and, at the top of the market, more personal. Executives, founders, board members, and other high-profile professionals are evaluated the same way a brand is, by what a search reveals, but the stakes attach to a single name rather than a corporate entity. A chief executive's search results are scrutinized during fundraising, board appointments, media coverage, and litigation. At that level, reputation work resembles wealth management more than marketing: a discreet, ongoing discipline that protects an asset built over a career. Practitioners regularly share practical guidance through public channels such as industry Q&A forums, and the consistent message is to start early, stay accurate, and think in terms of long horizons rather than quick fixes. The Bottom Line If the first era of ORM was reactive and the current era is constructive, the through-line is a maturing understanding of what reputation actually is. It is not a score to be gamed or a problem to be managed only in emergencies. It is the accumulated, searchable evidence of how a person or organization genuinely operates. Managing it well means making sure that evidence is accurate, substantial, and easy to find, so that the version people encounter is the true one. That is a higher bar than reputation repair ever set, and it is where the discipline is clearly heading. Paul M. Wilson is the CEO of NetReputation, a Sarasota, Florida-based leader in online reputation management, crisis management, public relations, and digital marketing. He previously held senior revenue and growth leadership roles at iProspect, RKG/Merkle, and NetElixir, and founded the consulting practice Massive Growth Partners. Image Source: Unsplash.com

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