Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust

How to tap the power of social software and networks to build your business In Trust Agents, two social media veterans show you how to tap into the power of social networks to build your brand’s influence, reputation, and, of course, profits. Today’s online influencers are web natives who trade in trust, reputation, and relationships, using social media to accrue the influence that builds up or brings down businesses online. The book shows how people use online social tools to build network

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5 Comments on “Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust Reviews”

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  1. Robert Kehoe says:

    Review by Robert Kehoe for Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust
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    I’ve met Chris Brogan several times (who is impressive in person despite a penchant for thinking that foul language is cool), and I have a great admiration for Seth Godin, who enthusiastically praises and endorses this book. Trust Agents is well-written, and the authors certainly are leaders (i.e., trust agents) in social media. The problem is that the book reflects a disturbing philosophical shallowness within our society, as well as a mindless pursuit of celebrity. Hey, it’s a good book, and worth reading, but there is nothing profound within the covers. Trust Agents glorifies the current trend toward acquiring great quantities of snippets of relationships, and assumes that the value of quantity over quality in our relationships is the appropriate focus. Yes, this acquisition probably is the most effective means for business success now, however it ignores a fundamental destruction of the true fabric of our humanity. I am surprised that Seth Godin praises this book so highly, since it has so little to do with relationship quality, excellence, and the pursuit of remarkability.

  2. James Rea says:

    Review by James Rea for Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust
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    Chris Brogan and Julien Smith say they set out to write a business book. “Perhaps you’ve been noticing that the older approach to marketing, PR, advertising, business communication, and other activities on the web aren’t pulling as well as they used to…Trust Agents is the answer to the question: `What do I do now?’” Eventually, it suggests that its message can be more broadly applied. “You will get the job you want without a resume. This book will teach you how….By the way, this works with talking to attractive members of the opposite sex, too.” And finally, at the end, “Though we’ve written the book to be a business book about using the web, the skills of a trust agent relate to many offline possibilities.” Disclosing this so late may have been intentional. Or, seeing how the narrative develops, perhaps it was something the authors realized only after the whole thing had been written. Regardless, they’re absolutely correct.

    People will believe what tends to conform to their own social circles and the people that they trust. Generally, we trust our friends. And on the web, those friends can be everywhere. The ones who set out to gain our trust are called “Trust Agents.” “Trust agents use today’s web tools to spread their influence, faster, wider, and deeper than a typical company’s PR or marketing department might be capable of achieving, and with more interest in people, too. We need to become them and harness them…A Trust Agent builds networks almost reflexively by being helpful, by promoting the good work that others do, by sharing even their best stuff without hesitation, and by finding ways to deliver even more value on top of all that without asking for anything in return.”

    Business needs to cultivate its Trust Agents, some of which will be under company control, most of which will not. Personally, so do we all. I recommend this book for everyone, both business and personal.

  3. Big Daddy says:

    Review by Big Daddy for Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust
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    I was looking forward to reading this book as I work in social media and highly respect the authors. I’m always weary of reviews of social media books because, let’s face it, in general the authors know more about reviews/ratings and how to manipulate them more than authors of other books. Anyway, I was very disappointed in Trust Agents. I felt that it was similar to other social media books in that the authors are trying to create catch phrases or buzz words (e.g. “trust agents”) being that this is a new industry and creating a buzz phrase is a great marketing tactic. Despite the book’s description, this is more of a theoretical book and does not offer practical advice that can be used at the tactical level.

    It might not be a bad book if you’re new to social media, but if you’re experienced you’re basically going to hear the same old stuff with different jargon. Then again, if you’re new to social media you’re much better off reading Groundswell. You’ll get plenty of interesting supporting data there rather than anecdotal evidence of why certain strategies work.

  4. F. D. Soto says:

    Review by F. D. Soto for Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust
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    Why Bother with Social Media

    I’ve had a Facebook account for almost 2 years now. I thought that it was a great way to reunite with old friends and find out what they have been doing over the years, but I didn’t care too much to know that they were going to the mall, watching a movie with friends, or changing their children’s diapers; Nor, did I care to let my friends know what I was doing at every second of every day. The constant barrage of status updates and invitations were of no value to me, and quite honestly annoying. Time is what I value most in life, and I was not about to waste it.

    I purchased Trust Agents on the recommendation of bloggers that I admire, and upon reading the first few pages I was met dose of reality: I have been wasting time for 2 years. Whether you like it or not, social media is the new revolution in communicating and getting things done. Relationships that you build through major social networking sites are not empty; Rather, they are an amazingly effective way of gaining knowledge, building your professional reputation, and creating an army of like-minded individuals that can help you to syngergistacally achieve your goals.

    cover to trust agents for the book review

    Relationships Are the New Market

    Before the social media, entrepreneurs and big businesses marketed themselves like battering rams at the gates of your potential patronage. They would hammer away via commercials and advertisements that told you of their greatness and how you needed their product like a fish needs water. Now, these same people – through the advent of social media – are no longer high and mighty intelligentsia looking for a buck, but are like-minded individuals in the same boat as the rest of us. Producer and consumer now have a new relationship of sorts – one of pseudo-friendship (and sometimes real friendship).

    By taking social media seriously, within a matter of 2 weeks I have connected with several successful entrepreneurs and business professionals that I would have never communicated with before such as Guy Kawasaki (who folows me on Twitter. How sweet is that?), Jun Loayza, Jenny Blake from Google, and others. Under old media marketing, these folks would view me as a potential sale. But under the new social media there is a relationship of mutual purpose, respect, and a sense that we need each other to achieve our goals. Would I buy products from these people, almost without hesitation. However, it is not because they convinced me of how great their gadget was, but because I trust them.

    Getting Things Done Via Social Media

    The beauty of social media lies in its efficient means of simultaneous action by multiple individuals. Since reading Trust Agents, I have had a variety of instances in which I have been able to leverage the knowledge and actions of others to do things that would otherwise take hours or even days. Whether it is requesting book recommendation or asking friends to take action on a particular project of mine, the results have been astounding. For example, just this week I sent an email to my pastor asking if I could redesign his parish’s shabby website. After I sent off the email, I let my friends know what I had done. I now have a multitude of very persuasive God-fearing ladies poised to mention to pastor the that the Church’s website needs a facelift, and that they know just the guy that can do it.

    Summary

    Overall, the book is a great introduction to the power and the possibilities of social networking. I highly recommend it to anyone, who like me at one point, finds the whole concept confusing or not worth using. Like those who witnessed the birth of radio and television and refused to take advantage of their respective potential, those who ignore the new social media will find themselves one day chasing after a wagon that long left them behind.

  5. Paul A. Baker says:

    Review by Paul A. Baker for Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust
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    Brogan and Smith address Trust Agents to marketers in particular. As marketing professionals themselves, they critique many common practices of the profession and propose enlightened alternatives.

    Trust Agents embody six qualities, and each receives its own chapter:

    They make their own game (enjoy experimentation, learn from trial and error)

    Are `one of us’ (spend time with us, are genuine)

    Use the Archimedes effect (leverage one success to create another)

    Act as Agent Zero (bring networks together and build relationships long before business needs transacting)

    Are human artists (good at `people skills,’ empower others)

    Build an army (work with their networks to achieve monumental tasks)

    Clever Trust Agents `make their own game’ by sizing up the system, the status quo. They identify its underlying assumptions and then decide which rules can be broken. They jump the gate; they hack the system; they do something unique. At the same time, and this is crucial, Trust Agents do not take advantage of people. People are real, they have feelings, and deserve respect. Trust Agents watch their own ego. They promote others more often than they promote themselves.

    They encourage readers to keep experimenting, keep trying new things. If you stumble, learn from the experience. It’s part of creating your own game.

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