Web presence management is the process of establishing and maintaining a
digital footprint on the web. The three factors that are considered include the following:
where a person or business has web presence;
how each web presence represents its enterprise; and
what is published at a point of presence. Web presence management is the discipline of determining and governing: • the distribution of policy documents • which platforms are most appropriate (e.g. internal vs. external blog, YouTube vs. Vimeo) • the single inventory of personal or corporate web presence (e.g. partners or advocates) • where on the web a business and any relatable assets are represented • where on the web a business and any relatable assets are impersonated or pirated • web properties with the particular entities they represent • who has control over which web properties • new web properties which are not in the personal or corporate inventory (e.g. someone creates a new presence) • authorized and unauthorized changes to the creation (e.g. branding) of a web presence • a workflow for creating a web property that follows its corporate standards
Management system The purpose of a web presence management system is to manage the web presence of a person or business. This includes the collection of domain names, websites, social media, and other web pages where he, she, or it is being represented. The tool generally offers the following key functions: new presence discovery, inventory management, change detection, access control, stakeholder coordination, and compliance workflow. A web presence management system is meant to have a broader reach so that it emphasizes where a presence has been established, will be established, must be maintained, or must be remediated. An example of a web presence management system is the Brandle Presence Manager. In order to publish content to the various points of web presence, multiple
content management systems and sometimes even
social media management systems are often used. The primary focus of most content and social media management systems is limited to their specific web platforms.
Domain names Another aspect of web presence management is managing the collection of
domain names registered to the person or business. Any entity may register multiple domain names for the same property. As a result, they can link alternative spellings, different
top-level domains, aliases, brands, or products to the same website. Similarly, negative or derogatory domain names may also be registered. This is done to prevent certain domain names from being used against the person or business. It is common for a larger business to have domain names registered by multiple employees at multiple
domain name registrars, possibly a result of organizational or geographical requirements. Consequently, a web presence management system can be used to monitor all domain names registered by the business, regardless of the registrars used. ==Discovery==