College Preparation

Reputation News

Starting at just $499.99The Internet and its increasingly social technologies have put more power into the hands of college admissions personnel. Social networking sites are becoming more and more popular on the web, and are an easy tool used to discover what a person is really like. You can bet any admissions officer will utilize that information to bring the finest quality students to their college. How then does a recent graduate take advantage of the power of the internet and the technologies that it provides?

Take Advantage of your Personal Brand

Let’s throw out all preconceived notions and start by looking at each individual as a brand, a personal brand. People, including college admission reps, can easily conduct a search of a person and get a wide array of feedback that may or may not reflect the content of your character. Our Reputation Builder service can identify the weaknesses in your online presence and turn them into positive reinforcement of your image.

Our Approach

RemoveMyName.org has a proven, systematic process in place to make sure that anyone who investigates your personal brand will find the information you would want them to see. Why leave your online reputation to chance? Call us right now at (347) 878-9327 and speak to either Zane, Rick or Sean. They will walk you through the entire process, find your brand weaknesses and systematically build your online reputation. College admissions representatives will be absolutely impressed and your dream college will be a serious possibility.

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imageCollege Applicants, Beware: Your Facebook Page Is Showing - WSJ

...A new survey of 500 top colleges found that 10% of admissions officers acknowledged looking at social-networking sites to evaluate applicants. Of those colleges making use of the online information, 38% said that what they saw "negatively affected" their views of the applicant...

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imageFacebook unveils privacy changes - CNN

...The company says the changes will help streamline privacy controls that have confused many of its 350 million users and were sprawled over six separate pages...

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