
Intent matters. Search
marketing execs insist that's the key to successful campaigns. Turn on personalized search in Google, Bing or Yahoo and type a keyword phrase in the search query box. Hit "enter" to search. The engine
learns from the searches and serves up content that it deems worthy. But do you learn from the results, or does the query serve up the same old stale content?
Can you find new products
and services you don't know exist? As the old saying goes, "you don't know what you don't know until you know it." If a search engine knows me well, it returns content that I am familiar with. But
what if I want to learn about a new product or service? Or what if advertisers want to reach out to someone like me who is looking for something new? Search experts at the top three engines tout the
technology's ability to serve up new content on like items. I'm not so sure.
For me to find new items unrelated to past purchases or searches, I turn off personalized search, clear browser
cookies, or query content on an engine that is not familiar with my browsing history. I often turn to Bing to find new content, but on Wednesday the engine said it would now rely on "hidden context"
to improve its understanding of what searchers want -- whether it's picking a movie to see or figuring out the correct bus to take.
Earlier this year, the Bing engineering team began to work
out the kinks in personalized search by tailoring results based on physical location and the ability to pull in information from previously visited Web sites. On Wednesday, the Bing team began to roll
out Adaptive Search, which relies on previous searches to inform Bing on search intent. The more someone searches, the more Bing learns and uses the information to alter query results on the page. The
idea is to reduce ambiguity in search results.
Microsoft's Aidan Crook explains in a post on the Bing blog that someone might decide to search for information on Australia, most likely looking
for Web sites specifically about the country or travel information. But if recent searches have been about movies, the query results might include movies on Australia.
While some consumers
might like the change in personalized search, it will likely make the ability to boost rankings in organic search results a much more involved and complicated task. In fact, some SEO experts have been
tackling issues surrounding personalized search for more than a year.
In a detailed post about personalized search written in 2010, Dave Harry, Reliable SEO founder, describes how it operates,
some of the difficulties in ranking, and what it means for SEO experts. Some of his insights -- gained from mining information in patent filing -- keep the ideas fresh, according to some in the Dojo
Chat Room.