Are You Finding What You REALLY Need?
Are You Finding What You REALLY Need?: Internet Searching
Techniques By: Janet L. Hall
Remember the game Hide & Seek? Just like the game, websites can
be hiding from you on the Internet while you try to seek out
particular information, services, or products. How do you find
what you are seeking?
The Internet is like the KING of all Libraries. Among the stacks
you seek. Among the librarians (search engines and directories)
you perform a query. But if you don't know the language, the
search criteria, or your way around, you can get lost playing
endless hours of hide & seek.
In order for you to locate the information or site you're
seeking, several things must have happened:
>> The site owner must register or submit their site with the
directory in which you are doing a search. Then a real person
goes and checks out their site and decides if the site is worthy
of getting listed in their directory.
>> The site owner must register or submit their site with the
search engine in which you are doing a search OR the search
engine's robots or spiders must have * crawled through * their
websites which will rank them by many different factors. The
most important factor is the use and weight of the site owner's
use of keywords.
When you do a search or a query, you type in a word or phrase of
words, right? Here is where you might not find what you are
looking for because the site owner or webmaster didn't put in
the keywords you are typing in the search window.
Therefore, the site owner or webmaster must determine what
keywords are important for each page on their website and what
word(s) you will type in a search window to find their site. The
words you type in might not be the webmasters keywords, so you
don't find what you are looking for.
To make matters worse, each search engine and directory can have
their own search criteria; however, most are very similar.
Using particular search strategies can help narrow your search
and hopefully find the stuff more relevant to what you are
seeking.
Seven Searching Techniques to try:
>> Read the help section of the search engine or directory
>> Put word(s) in quotation marks; tells most search engines
you're looking for that exact term
>> Type in lowercase letters; many search engines are
case-sensitive
>> Be specific - instead of typing in organizers, type in
professional organizers
>> Type in the plural form of the word
>> Type in the word(s) misspelled, such as organizers or
organisers or orgnaizers
>> Type in a longer variation of the word, instead of organize,
type in organizing.
Anthony Muller, President of Web Mercs, said in his article, *
How to Avoid the Most Common Myths and Blunders of Search Engine
Optimization *:
* There are hundreds of search engines, but only 20-30 main
ones, and just four-five of them account for 60-75% of the total
search engine traffic. For example, Altavista gets about 17% of
the total engine market and it equals roughly 40 million
searches a day; as opposed to Lycos or HotBot which each get
2-3% of the market. It would shock you to know Yahoo only gets
about 24%! *
My two favorite search engines to locate what I'm looking for is
dogpile.com and alltheweb.com
dogpile.com allows you to search through 14 search engines at
the same time! Type in your word(s), click on FETCH, and WaLA!
You've just worked a little smarter, not harder. At dogpile.com
you can choose to search through images, audio, auctions, news,
FTP, Discussion, and Small Biz.
At dogpile you can use advanced searching techniques, by using
additional syntax, that will help * you gain added control over
your search and weed out any unwanted results. *
Additional Syntax for Searching Techniques:
>> Type AND between words or the symbol + before a word thus
allowing a specific combination of words to be present in all
search results. Example: Home AND Clutter or Home + Clutter will
result in different search results.
>> Type NOT between words or the symbol - before a word Example:
Dogs NOT Cats or Dogs - Cats will result in sites when only dogs
appear but not cats.
>> Type OR to include both words. Example: Office OR Clutter
Not all search engines support these syntaxes in dogpile;
therefore, dogpile will only search the engines that support the
syntax you use, allowing a more tailored result.
alltheweb.com searches for documents on the Internet that
contain your search word(s). They offer a pull down menu to the
left of the search window where you can choose from different
syntaxes. They also offer an advanced search where you can
perform word filters, word(s) that should be included or
excluded from your search.
Here's to finding what you are looking for!
Smiles, not Piles, Janet L. Hall is the owner of OverHall
Consulting, an organizing firm for office, home, computer
clutter, and your life. Visit her website at
http://www.overhall.com Phone consultations and coaching are
available.
Copyright (c) 2001 by OverHall Consulting P.O. Box 263, Port
Republic, MD 20676 All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted to
reproduce, copy, or distribute this article so long as article
is kept intact, this copyright notice, and full information
about the author is attached.