Tuning Up Site SearchBest Practices for Making Site Search Usable
Information Architecture Summit 2007 - March 25, 2007
Introductions
Chris Farnum - Senior Information Architect
Enlighten | Ann Arbor, Michigan
Introductions
Topic: Site Search [not SEO, SEM]
My Target Audience: Those NEW to search IA
NOT site search veterans
Today’s Presentation
Intro
The Value of Search
Understanding Users
Strategies for Improving Search Four Strategies
Closing/Questions
Intro | The Promise of Search
Search is supposed to just work – automagically.
Intro | The Predicament
Does this sound familiar? Just turning it on with default settings doesn’t work out so
well… It’s either all or nothing - zero results or thousands The first 10 results for your search are often all marked
with the same relevance score – it’s hard to tell what content is best.
Your search often displays redundant results; the results list contains lots of links to identical content.
Intro | The Predicament
…continued Your results page doesn’t show anything more than a
document title or a cryptic filename for each item, not much for users to go on when deciding which results to investigate.
Your site statistics show that many users try a few searches then exit the site without any other action.
Users who found something useful by browsing on a previous visit can’t find it again when they return and use search. They are especially frustrated because they know the page exists.
Intro | The Predicament
Search failure isn’t pretty…
From bad to worse – a misspelling of “Althlon” takes the user way off track
Intro | The Value of Search
Corporate Brand Sites – the impact of negative search experiences
Undermines brand trust and satisfaction
Lost opportunity to achieve your site’s objectives
Estimate - Up to 20% of the gains in user experience during a site redesign can be attributed to search improvements - Laura Ramos of Forrester
ForeSee Results includes user ratings of site search as a key factor when measuring overall online customer satisfaction
Intro | The Value of Search
Ecommerce Site Search
Poor search = lost revenue Users who conduct site searches are almost three times
more likely to purchase something while visiting a site – (WebSideStory study)
Users who had SUCCESSFUL site searches are twice as likely to convert (Enlighten study)
Half of all add-to-cart actions happened after a search. (Enlighten study)
Users who had NULL-RESULTS site searches were three times as likely to leave (Enlighten study)
Intro | The Value of Search
Enterprise Intranet Search Cost of poor search adds up quickly - affects productivity
According to a study by usability guru Jakob Nielsen:“Poor search was the greatest single cause of reduced usability across intranets we have seen, aside from the general lack of executive support and budget. Search usability accounted for an estimated 43% of the difference in employee productivity between intranets with high and low usability.”
Lost opportunities to share and build upon organizational knowledge
Duplication of effort when one employee doesn’t find out about knowledge that is already documented
Understanding Users | Search Analytics
Diamonds in the data
A great place to start improving search is with past search behavior. Site logs and path tracking
When do users initiate search? Do they exit the site from the results page?
Search engine’s own logs or reports Most common searches vs. the long tail Null results – e.g. “swim suits” on a site that only uses the term
“swimwear”
See Messrs. Rosenfeld and Wiggins for more on search analytic techniques…
Understanding Users | Live Research & Testing
User Testing Provides Context Powerful especially when combined with search analytics
Contextual / exploratory user research to evaluate features
Task based testing with live system or prototype – mix known-item with topic/research questions
Ask users to “think aloud” when filling out the search form, evaluating results
Measuring success: Did they find the right answer? How many tries?
How do they modify searches on subsequent attempts?
Satisfaction with results – trust
Strategies for Improving Search | Key Questions
Gut check - Does your current search solution meet your site’s interactive objectives?
Is it fast enough?
Are the results accurate enough?
Is the way results are displayed on the page complete enough?
Does it integrate well with the rest of your systems?
Does it fit your business goals and deliver on your brand’s promise?
Are users finding what they need?
Strategies for Improving Search | Key Questions
Don’t Panic! You don’t necessarily need a new search system Find out what you can do with what you’ve got, i.e. try a
tune-up Some are easy to turn on and configure, others take effort
and need regular updates Powerful options – often overlooked
Find out what your search system can do…
Strategy #1 | (Re)Configure your site search engine
Does your search engine platform offer… Search suggestions
Ways to adjust relevance scores and sort order
Best bets
Stemming / alternate word endings
Synonyms
Narrowing
Highlighted search terms
Stop word lists
Strategy #1 | (Re)Configure your site search engine
Example: Search Suggestions – Did You Mean…
Spelling suggestions – Can you modify the dictionary?
A graceful save when a product name gets misspelled.
Strategy #1 | (Re)Configure your site search engine
Example: Synonyms
Car
Warning, some effort required!
Search analytics hint: Seed your list with terms from search logs that people really use. Remember those null-results terms?
AutomobileTruckStreetcarSedan…
Strategy #1 | (Re)Configure your site search engine
Example: Best Bets Associate keywords with specific results for your most frequent
searches and most important pages
Best Bet
Strategy #1 | (Re)Configure your site search engine
Example: Narrowing options
Fast platform allows narrowing according to tagging and site structure
“more from…”
“Search within…”
Strategy #2 | Improve the Search UI
Just like any other page component, search should be easy to understand and use
Search AND Results screens require excellent layout and readability so they are not confusing
Search should be well integrated into the navigation and design of the site
Tactics: Provide a next step, especially on the null results page
Tips & Examples
Results page layout – let users refine their searches
Strategy #2 | Improve the Search UI
Search Results Bare Minimum Guidelines
Display the query & let them modify it on the results page
Make it easy to begin a new search
Show at least 10 results at a time
Show the total number of results and make it clear which range the user is viewing
Make it easy to navigate between results pages
Avoid dead-ends - provide USEFUL tips and help on the Null-Results page
Each result should include USEFUL information
Strategy #2 | Improve the Search UI
Example: Accenture - a good use of best practices
Synonym suggestion
Best Bets
Editable query Good site integration including key calls to action
Links to alternatives and tips
Descriptive results w/ highlighted keywords
Clear count & page nav.
Too much scrolling?
Tells search terms and search zone
Strategy #3 | Make Your Content More Findable
Just tag it!
The quality of your search is directly related to the quality of your content and the way it’s organized, including the content’s metadata
Enhancing your content with metatags, rich textual descriptions, and taxonomies means that your search has more to go on when assigning relevance
Metadata can also let you give the user more options for searching and displaying results
Search Analytics hint: Search Logs can provide insight into the attributes users care most about
Strategy #3 | Make Your Content More Findable
Example: IBM - Metadata tagging enables narrowing options.
Geography – especially important for international sites!
Product/Service Taxonomy
Strategy #3 | Make Your Content More Findable
Include Audience-Oriented Language in Your Content
When writing content for your site include the kinds of keywords and search terms that your users would use to search
Especially important when you have content that is heavily peppered with jargon and marketing-speak Will your users really search for the “Dyna-whiZZZ” ???
Accompany with rich, descriptive copy
Including descriptive ALT tags for graphical content
Search Analytics Hint: Search logs are a great source for not only individual terms but overall language tone
Strategy #4 | Customize to Take Search to the Next Level
Custom modifications are justified when search is truly a core service.
Customization means adding new functionality that extends beyond what came with the search engine you purchased
Can be a serious investment whether you build or buy – must be justified by business goals + user needs
Difficulty to implement depends on your search platform
Strategy #4 | Customize to Take Search to the Next Level
Example: ProQuest – Tagging + Data Mining + Custom UI
Special features: Search alerts
Complex algorithms suggest index terms
Many ways to limit, filter & narrow
Marked List – like a shopping cart for results and full text.
Strategy #4 | Customize to Take Search to the Next Level
Example: Kayak – Uses Ajax to filter and sort “on the fly”
Sortable columns
Checkboxes offer instant ways to refine a search
Slider tools offer an intuitive way to adjust criteria
Strategy #4 | Customize to Take Search to the Next Level
Example: Kartoo – Visual, interactive search results (Flash)
Terms show semantic connections
Map layout let users visualize content and concept clusters
Strategy #4 | Customize to Take Search to the Next Level
Example: www.msdewey.com – a search “experience”Flash 9 video animated character – with xtra attitude
Mouse position controls scrolling
Certain searches cause entertaining video sequences
Results courtesy of MS Live Search
Design courtesy of Evolution Bureau
In Closing…
The perfect search is a moving target…
Quick-hits vs. long term improvements A good first step is to find out if you are capturing
analyzable data (in server logs or search logs) then examine it
Ongoing maintenance - “best bets” and metadata tagging are not one-time fixes
If you DO need to replace your search engine - find out what each particular search engine does best (and worst) Forrester Wave report on Enterprise Search Platforms Enterprise Search Report available at CMS Watch
In Closing…
Questions?
White Paper: Tuning Up Site Search
Available for download at http://www.enlighten.com
Contact: Chris Farnum, Senior Information Architect
EnlightenInteractive Marketing | Web Development | Strategic Consulting
Ann Arbor, Michigan | www.enlighten.com
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