Why Most ORM Retainers Fail in Six Months

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Why Most ORM Retainers Fail in Six Months

I have been doing this work for over two decades. I have sat across the table from managing directors who believed their reputation problem was solved because someone was monitoring it. I have watched legal teams stall decisions for three months while the same damaging content ranked at position one, week after week. I have seen agencies do exactly what they were contracted to do — and still lose the client by month six, blamed for a failure that was never really theirs to own.

What I am going to describe is not a failure of execution. It is a failure of governance. And it happens, with remarkable consistency, across industries, geographies, and organisation sizes.

1 The First Few Months Are Designed to Feel Like Progress

When an ORM retainer begins, there is genuine momentum. Monitoring is centralised for the first time. Response protocols are documented. Someone — often a consultant or agency — is visibly doing things. Leadership sees activity and equates it with progress.

What is actually happening is simpler: the organisation has outsourced its anxiety. The uncomfortable questions that should have been asked before the engagement started — what does success look like, who has the authority to act, what are we actually trying to suppress or displace — are quietly set aside in favour of dashboards and weekly reports.

In two decades, I have never seen a retainer fail in month one. The early phase always feels controlled. That is the trap.

2 Around Month Four, Someone Asks the Wrong Question

It is rarely the CEO. More often, it is someone in sales, or a senior hire who joined recently and is looking at search results with fresh eyes. They ask something like: ‘Are we actually less exposed than we were six months ago?’

The honest answer, in most cases, is: not meaningfully. The monitoring is better. The response time is faster. But the content that matters — the review that shows up in position three, the forum thread that surfaces during due diligence, the news article that never quite drops off the first page — is still there.

That question changes the energy in the room. Not dramatically. But the trust begins to shift from the agency toward the problem itself. And once that happens, the retainer is on borrowed time.

3 Execution Gets Blamed. Execution Is Usually Not the Problem.

I want to be direct about something that most ORM practitioners will not say publicly: the majority of agencies doing this work are competent. They monitor the right platforms. They respond at an appropriate speed. They produce reports that accurately reflect what is happening.

The problem is that none of these changes what search surfaces if no one has made the decisions that actually drive displacement. Publishing positive content requires approvals. Engaging with a damaging review requires sign-off. Pursuing legal remediation requires someone to accept the risk and cost. Escalating a pattern as a commercial threat requires someone in the room with the authority to act on that assessment.

Those decisions are rarely made clearly at the start of an engagement. They are deferred. And deferral, at scale, looks like inaction — which looks like failure.

4 What the Kickoff Meeting Skipped

I have started asking organisations the same set of questions before I agree to an engagement. Most find them uncomfortable.

Who in this organisation has the authority to approve content that directly addresses a negative narrative — without routing it through three layers of approval? What does a reputational risk actually need to look like before someone here will authorise meaningful intervention? Which results on page one are you genuinely willing to displace, and which are you hoping will disappear without a deliberate effort? If this content is still ranking in twelve months, who owns that outcome?

These questions create friction early. They are supposed to. An organisation that cannot answer them in week one will not answer them in month five either — but by then, they will be looking for someone else to blame.

5 How Retainers Drift Without Collapsing

The failure mode I see most often is not a dramatic breakdown. It is drift. The agency flags a pattern. The internal team says they will discuss it. Legal says to hold. PR prefers the existing message. Leadership wants improvement without confrontation. Everyone is being reasonable. No one is moving.

The retainer continues. Reports circulate. The same issues appear in each one, framed slightly differently. Six months pass. The content that was a problem in month one is still a problem in month six, perhaps better documented but no less visible.

At that point, the organisation does not feel like the retainer failed dramatically. It feels like it drifted into irrelevance. And that perception — that the effort was real but the outcome was not — is almost impossible to recover from within the same engagement.

6 When the Commercial Signal Arrives, It Is Already Late

There is a specific moment in a failing ORM engagement that I have learned to watch for. It is when the reputational problem stops being a communications issue and becomes a commercial one.

A sales director mentions that a prospect brought up search results during a meeting. A senior candidate declines an offer and, when pressed, references something they read online. A partner relationship slows without explanation. An investor asks a question during diligence that would not have been asked a year earlier.

By the time these signals arrive, the retainer has already lost credibility with the people who matter. Not because the agency failed to execute. Because the organisation held onto indecision long enough for the market to notice.

7 More Activity Has Never Fixed an Ownership Problem

The instinct at a retainer review, when confidence is low, is to increase effort. More platforms monitored. More content published. More frequent reporting. I understand the impulse. It looks responsive. It feels like action.

In twenty years, I have never seen a volume increase solve a governance problem. It makes the same decisions more efficiently. It surfaces the same patterns more frequently. It does not change the fact that no one has been empowered to act on them.

What actually works — and it is not complicated — is forcing accountability before it becomes urgent. Thresholds. Assigning authority. The uncomfortable decisions while the situation is still manageable, not after it has become expensive.

8 The Retainers That Survive Past Six Months Look Different

The engagements that work do not generate more activity over time. They generate less. Early on, they are deliberately uncomfortable — structured to force decisions that the organisation would prefer to delay. The kickoff is not a capabilities presentation. It is a governance conversation.

By month three, if it is working, the team has made the decisions that most organisations avoid entirely. They know what content they are targeting, what interventions they are authorised to take, and who makes the call when something unexpected surfaces. The reporting becomes simpler because the direction is clear.

By month six, the organisation is not watching for signals of failure. They are watching for evidence that the strategy is holding. That is a fundamentally different posture — and it is only possible when someone, internally, owns the outcome rather than the activity.

The Honest Reason Most Retainers End

10 The Honest Reason Most Retainers End

Most ORM retainers do not end because the agency underperformed. They end because the organisation outsourced the activity while retaining the indecision. The work was done. The decisions were not made. And when the two-year contract comes up for review, it is easier to change the vendor than to acknowledge what actually happened.

I have seen these enough times that I no longer accept engagements without a governance structure agreed in writing before work begins. It is not about protecting the agency. It is about protecting the outcome. Without it, the work is real, the effort is genuine, and the failure is almost certain.

11 Where to Start

If you are evaluating an ORM retainer — or reviewing one that is stalling — the first question is not about the agency’s methodology or platform coverage. It is about internal ownership.

Who has the authority to make decisions when a risk threshold is crossed? Who owns the outcome, not just the activity? If that conversation has not happened, no amount of monitoring, reporting, or content will close the gap.

Six months is enough time to find out whether an organisation was ready to do this work. It is usually not enough time to recover if the answer turns out to be no.

If the governance question is one your organisation has not fully resolved, I am available for a direct conversation. No agenda other than clarity on what the problem actually is and whether it is solvable in your specific context.

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