|
|
 |
|
The Social Fabric of Search
February 1, 2007 |
Save to:
 |
You know the phenomena of Synchronicity, where once you become aware of
something it seems like everyone is talking about the same thing? You
can't turn a corner without seeing some reference to something that just
a week ago didn't even register on your social consciousness. For me
that was social search and the time was last week. While I was certainly
aware of social search before that, for some reason, last week was the
week where the knocking got so loud I had to pay more attention.
In looking at the referrer logs for my blog I noticed that Stumbleupon
seemed to have emerged as a major traffic source. Also last week, I was
on a panel with Danny Sullivan and he mentioned that we have to start
watching social engines like Digg and Stumbleupon as emerging trends in
the search space. Finally I did an interview with Larry Cornett, one of
the key usability people at Yahoo, and when I asked him what the
differentiating factor was for Yahoo in the future, he pointed to the
emergence of social search and gave me Yahoo! Answers as the current
example of that in practice.
There seems to be a lot of buzz around social search but exactly how is
social search shaping our search experience and why we should be looking
at it in the future? When Danny Sullivan mentioned that social search is
something to keep your eye on, I made the point that different types of
search engines lead themselves to different types of search activity.
Serendipitous Search
What I noticed Stumbleupon show up in my referrer report, I did some
investigation into what Stumbleupon is about. Stumbleupon is the
embodiment of serendipitous search. Its whole purpose is to help you
find new sites that you might think are interesting. And here's where
the aspect of social search, or community, comes in. Stumbleupon depends
on a network of like-minded people to earmark sites that would be of
interest based on your profile. It's based on the concept that great
minds think alike. Apparently, someone in the online universe had pegged
my blog as one that might be of interest in some particular niche and
suddenly dozens of other people were stumbling upon it, guided by their
online friends.
Stumbleupon is probably the best example of serendipitous search but
Digg is another one, albeit with a slightly different flavor. While
Stumbleupon helps you find sites, Digg connects you directly to new
content about specific topics. Like Stumbleupon, Digg uses a rating
system to allow community members to vote on whether a site or story is
noteworthy. Both Stumbleupon and Digg have emerged as significant
drivers of traffic in recent months so as marketers, we have to keep
these sites on our radar.
From the user's perspective, the aspect of social search becomes
interesting in these two examples because they help guide us to explore
undiscovered territory online. We're going where we haven't been before
and it helps us when people who share our interests can guide the way.
In each case, social search lends credibility to new sites with which we
have no previous experience.
The Wisdom of Crowds
James Surowiecki wrote a book called the Wisdom of Crowds. The basic
premise of the book is that crowds, given the right conditions, can be
amazingly intelligent. He cites a number of examples where a large group
of people, acting independently with limited amounts of information,
collectively came to decisions that were more valid than those of all
but the very smartest individuals within the group. The whole became
greater than the sum of its parts.
This is the basis of a new flavor of social search where the community
collectively builds the index of the search engine. Consider Yahoo!
Answers. You pose the question and Yahoo’s community kicks into gear to
provide the answers. These answers are aggregated and provide searchable
content that make up Yahoo! Answers. Based on my conversation with Larry
Cornett and recent comments by Yahoo CEO Terry Semel, it appears that
Yahoo Answers provides a clue into their strategy for going head to head
with Microsoft and Google. This concept of community building a better
search experience is key to Yahoo and a main strategic platform for the
future.
Another example of this variation of social search can be found in
Search Wikia, the new search initiative that "is going to change
everything" according to Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales. In Search Wikia,
it’s a case where the broad concept seems to be in place but the
specifics on how it's going to be executed still seem a little thin.
The biggest challenge with this variation of social search is that it
depends on the engagement of individual members of the community. Unless
you have volunteers that are willing to spend their time enhancing the
search experience, the scalability of the project breaks down. Anything
that depends on people to take time to tag results, to contribute or to
answer questions is dependent on the person's motivation to participate.
While that's present in a very small percentage of our population, it's
not a commonly found trait in most of us. It's generally been proven
that hardware is rapidly scalable, people are not.
However you define social search, the fact remains that the combination
of search and the very notion of an online community are inherently
aligned. Communities are all about connections, and nothing can connect
faster than online search. It will take us a while to smooth out the
wrinkles, but search is fundamentally social and communities are
fundamentally connected. These concepts will live together in the online
world. |
Gord Hotchkiss
President and CEO
Enquiro Full Service Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Positioning by Searchengineposition
Blog: www.outofmygord.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2007 - Enquiro Search Solutions.
This article can be reproduced in its entirety, if the author credit is
retained and there is a prominent source link to
www.enquiro.com.
Visit our technical and news site
www.searchengineposition.com. |
|