Insights
- We need to acknowledge site location/context for the search far, far more than presently, when most things default to a whole-of-site search.
- Collections are powerful, not only for grouping results, but also to power contextual searching.
- We need to internationalise more of the key pages, then use the key cookie settings to display the correct 'version'.
Questions
- Should we continue to use the 'promoted results' for courses, or transition to subjects? Or degrees?
- Should we be adding key words to subjects and/or subject areas? Can a subject area 'inherit' the keywords of it's component subjects?
- How do we strike a balance between what the user wants to see and what we want the user to see?
Links and notes
- Planning enterprise search strategy: 4 pillars of a search strategy are:
- Context: Knowing more about the user and their needs is the key to giving better results.
- Content: More is not better, rather relevance is what matters.
- Metadata: Enterprise search requires more and more precise search terms than external search, due to vastly smaller number of searches. Could be used to eliminate noise (in a personalised way)
- UX
- Developing an enterprise search strategy: Base it on relevance by:
- Creating user requirements centered on knowledge, not information
- Focusing business objectives around enabling employee proficiency, not efficiency
- Develop an Enterprise Search Strategy:
- People want information (or even knowledge), not just documents: A report on the information demanded placed 'subject matter areas or knowledge areas first, with 'people' second. See next reading result.
- White paper on people search at IBM. An interesting read, especially to inform staff profiles and the 'People' collection.
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