Browsing Posts tagged metasearch

Today we discuss on an article published by the Search Engine Land blog, where the author is making a strong case for Search Computing.

The author says:

Business buyers use search engines throughout the entire research and buying process.

We couldn’t agree more. Next Generation Web Search will be a switch in user behavior paradigms: asRicardo Baeza-Yates and Prabhakar Raghavan state in the Search Computing: Challenges and Directions book:

… people do not really want to search, they want to get tasks done…

So, What are business buyers looking for?

…  According to a B2B survey conducted by Enquiro and Marketing Sherpa, buyers are primarily looking for:

  1. Pricing information
  2. Product information
  3. Reviews and comparisons

As buyers move into the research and comparison phases, they start to formalize their needs and evaluate alternatives. Product information related to features and functionality, technical spec sheets, buyer guides and comparison charts are valuable.

An holistic view over such a variegated type of information requires machineries able to query the Web and (meaningfully) join correlated data. This is one of the goals of Search Computing, and you may enjoy a first example of our vision by trying our first demonstration application.

LeapFish is a search aggregator that retrieves results from other portals and search engines, including Google, Yahoo, Live Search, Blogs, Videos etc…. It is a registered trademark of Dotnext Inc.

Leapfish is a type of metasearch site known as a search aggregator. Search aggregators compile and list the results taken from other search engines, in addition to providing their own content (generally in the form of advertising or result positioning based on internal algorithms.

In the case of LeapFish, the top results of any given search can be advertisements, where an individual or company can pay a registration fee to LeapFish to be positioned at the top of the result list in response to certain keyword searches.

[Surce Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leapfish]

[Website http://www.leapfish.com/]

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