Do you have a default or manufacturer supplied profile for your monitor? If you reset the monitor and Adobe Photoshop to the same profile to start with for the display, then you can adjust via profiling or other variations.

For display on the web be sure to remember to 'export' the file in the correct (sRGB usually) from what you worked with. That way it will look good to you in the 'native' to your machine format and be the appropriate average for 'others'. There's going to be some differences but if it is way off it probably is merely getting Photoshop (from RAW to the regular workspace) to use the correct display format. The menu changes won't change your file!!

So experiment and keep notes of success and failures. Otherwise start with the default .ICC or .ICM for your monitor. .ICM is the extension for the color control from Microsoft drivers and .ICC are the industry wide standardized profiles.

If you have calibrated your system in anyway, be sure you know what the name of the file is that contains that information as Anebesol noted at the bottom of his screenshot. The profile might get renamed with an added extension or modification to prevent it from overwriting an existing file.

What else can we try and answer:idea: