If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. So that you can read the latest updates about Web2.0 tools, Making Money Online, Tips in SEO, Ajax and many more. Thanks for visiting ProgramimiCOM!
Users love search for two reasons:
Search is a big deal: the usability of the search on intranets we have tested accounted for 43% of the difference in employee productivity between intranets with high and low usability.
Users often move fast and furiously when they’re looking for search. As we’ve seen in recent studies, they typically scan the home page looking for “the little box where I can type.” We’ve long known that users scan, and the implications are clear:
When I changed the useit.com home page to include a search box instead of a link, search engine use increased by 91%. Small change, big effect (as is often the outcome when implementing usability guidelines). (Interior pages may use a search link if they have a very simple design; complex interior pages should use a search box.)
Given that search is becoming old hat on the Internet, you might think users would develop advanced search skills. Not so. Typical users are very poor at query reformulation: If they don’t get good results on the first try, later search attempts rarely succeed. In fact, they often give up. We recently studied a large group of people as they shopped on various e-commerce sites. Their search success rate was:
| First query: | 51% |
| Second query: | 32% |
| Third query: | 18% |
In other words, if users don’t find the result with their first query, they are progressively less and less likely to succeed with additional searches. Many users don’t even bother: In our study, almost half the users whose first search failed gave up immediately.
There is no question that we need to develop methods to help users hone their searches. Probably the only long-term solution is for the school systems to teach kids strategies for query reformulation. In the short term, search interfaces could show users easy ways to extend queries.
Realistically, though, search design should assume that most users won’t be willing or able to refine their queries. Given this, the emphasis should be on increasing users’ success on the first attempt.
Another reason to emphasize early success is that users typically make very quick judgments about a website’s value based on the quality of one or two sets of search results. If the list looks like junk, they may abandon the site completely. At a minimum, they’ll forgo the site’s search in favor of external search engines like Google.
In our recent search study, the mean query length was 2.0 words. Other studies also show a preponderance of simple searches. Most users cannot use advanced search or Boolean query syntax. This has two implications for search design:
Scoped search lets users limit the search to results from specific areas of the site (the search scope). In general, this is dangerous. Users often overlook the scope, or they think they are in a different site area than the one they are actually searching.However, as websites continue to grow and offer multiple services in a single site, my attitude toward scoped search is changing. I now believe scoping can be sufficiently useful if you offer it in areas of the site that are both clearly delimitated and address specific problems.
If you choose to use scoped search, I recommend following a few basic rules:
Users almost never look beyond the second page of search results. It is thus essential that your search prioritize results in a useful way and that all the most important hits appear on the first page.Also, look through the most common queries in your search engine logs and determine the optimal landing page for each common query. You can then manually tweak the search engine to show these pages as the #1 hit.
Print This Post
Email This Post
Comments RSS
TrackBack Identifier URI
You must be logged in to post a comment.