June 30, 2008

Mike Moran Exits IBM, Joins Converseon

Mike Moran is leaving IBM after 30 years to take a position in the newly created role of Chief Strategist at social media marketing agency, Converseon. Moran will be involved in the development of Conversation Miner as well as provide consulting to Converseon clients.

“We’re thrilled to have Mike join us,” said Rob Key, Converseon CEO. “He brings to the table the perfect combination of industry-leading expertise with hands-on knowledge of how to internally adopt and promote these practices within complex, enterprise environments. As we often say, social media can be technically relatively simple, but culturally quite difficult. His experience will be invaluable as we help leading brands develop and execute innovative social media campaigns. He will also play a key role in consolidating Converseon’s position as a leading social media marketing and consulting agency offering end-to-end services, from listening to engaging to measuring.”

While at IBM, Moran led several search technology projects including IBM's OmniFind search and text analytics products, the first commercial linguistic search engine, and automatic categorization technology for business search at ibm.com. He has been granted multiple patents and is the author of Do It Wrong Quickly: How the Web Changes the Old Marketing Rules.

“With their focus on pushing the edges of innovation in reputation management, search marketing and social media, Converseon is the ideal fit for me,” said Mike Moran. “I look forward to working with their standout team and clients.”

Posted by Nathania Johnson at 12:42 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

SLI Rolls Out Learning Search Update with New Auto Complete Feature

On-demand search provider, SLI Systems has upgraded Learning Search, a hosted site search solution. The update will include:

  • Faster generation of results. Search queries will return results up to 50% faster.
  • Redesigned merchandising console. SLI says the new design will help customers more easily change the order of search results, create banner ads, and customize landing pages.
  • Auto Complete. This is a new feature which provides search suggestions.

Shaun Ryan, CEO of SLI Systems had this to say about the announcement:

"We're always looking for new ways to improve our search solutions, and to give our customers more flexibility in how they can maximize the functionality of our offerings. The newest enhancements help everyone, regardless of their technical ability, to make decisions about merchandising, and make changes themselves -- without having to rely on their IT departments."

Posted by Nathania Johnson at 12:11 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

May 6, 2008

SLI Systems Joins Bazaarvoice Radius to Help Marketers Execute Integrated Social Commerce Strategies

Bazaarvoice Radius is a platform that enables eCommerce sites to develop partnerships to facilitate social media campaigns. Today, SLI Systems, a provider of on-demand search services for eCommerce, has announced that they are joining Bazaarvoice Radius. The partnership hopes to accelerate social media adoption by marketers, vendors and agencies to participate in what is being dubbed as social commerce.

"Our research shows that customers find it easier to make a purchase when they can see how other people have rated certain products. As such, Bazaarvoice Radius is a great way for us to extend the benefits of our site search offering to deliver an even better customer experience by including user-generated content within the site search results," said Todd Watson, director of business development for SLI Systems. "By turning our intelligent site search engine into an intelligent social site search engine, we'll help retailers gain an even greater positive impact on conversions and revenues."

The integration of Bazaarvoice and SLI is expected to make searching easier for eCommerce consumers. Searches will be able to be sorted by product rating, and in the future SLI's Learning Search will be integrated with Bazaarvoice's answers platform. Basically, consumer-generated content will be searchable.

"Customer-to-customer conversations and user-generated content are top of mind for marketers -- in fact, nine out of 10 marketers plan to add Web 2.0 capabilities this year," said Brett Hurt, founder and CEO of Bazaarvoice. "The integration between Bazaarvoice's social commerce platform and SLI Systems provides marketers with a powerful new way to extend the value of their user-generated content to engage more customers and ultimately drive more sales."

Posted by Nathania Johnson at 12:40 PM | Permalink

January 31, 2007

Over in NYC: Biz Publishers Speak Up

We’re at the SIIA (Software & Information Industry Association) and its annual Information Industry Summit. This meeting assembles the who’s who of business publishers and expert content providers. What a change over the past few years!

Before, the concerns were about keeping things under lock and key. Now, the challenges center around making sure everyone finds your content, whether you make money from advertising, subscriptions or some combination.

In business information, the publishers are thinking about vertical search, user-generated content, and digital upheaval.

On Tuesday, the keynote was presented by Dow Jones CEO Richard Zannino. He’s not talking about being media agnostic anymore, but achieving 50% revenues from digital offerings asap. Of course, that’s not at the expense of newspaper declines, Zannino adds.

The media icons want to survive.

Posted by Deborah Richman at 6:39 AM | Permalink

January 24, 2007

Search Is The Ticket, For Movie Distributors

We thought that superior search would be a high priority for online movie distributors. They are feeling the competitive heat, right?

In reality, there seems to be a correlation between search expertise and how movies are delivered, sold, and a few other attributes. Let's review this entertainment landscape.

When buying or downloading a movie, you typically search title, actor and director. Sometimes you also refine the search by genre, year, MPAA rating or studio. Search results vary tremendously, due mostly to available movie inventory.

The Movie Retailers:

Larger e-commerce sites have set the bar, moving beyond basic search to recommendation engines. Amazon uses its own suggestion paths based on the movies themselves and your current session. When personalized, Amazon makes suggestions related to what you have browsed or purchased earlier. See more in this recent ReadWriteWeb summary.

Netflix and Blockbuster also take pride in their recommendation engines for movie customers. They both offer subscription plans for their large lending libraries. Netflix operates its Cinematch (tm) engine and seeks to improve through its $1 million search contest. Likewise, Blockbuster enables its own engine based on your interests.

The Movie Downloaders:

All the downloaders revert to basic search again. Distributors like Apple's iPod, AOL and MovieLink require customers to pay for each movie download. iPod and AOL offer movies from specific studios, while MovieLink appears to sell or rent more library selections. Regardless of the user interface and sizzle, all provide searches by title/actor and not much more.

When the business model changes, search practices become less consistent. Vongo and Netflix require customers to sign up for subscriptions. Vongo provides basic search, while Netflix uses its recommendation engine. Perhaps these practices reflect industry roots:

* Vongo comes from the TV world, and offers unlimited viewing on your TV or computer. Through a Microsoft deal, they are the exclusive movie provider for Windows Vista this year. Vongo promotes its first run and current movies from Starz.

* Netflix has roots in the e-commerce world, and now delivers online viewing through your browser. Engadget reports on how viewing time is pegged to monthly payments. Netflix plans to roll out thousands of library titles.

The Search Divide:

At this point, there's a dividing line between the searchers and recommenders. At least one stalwart, Lycos, believes entertainment and suggestion-based search matters. They even filed a patent lawsuit this month against Netflix, Blockbuster and Tivo. We don't think this literally places recommendation engines at risk, but goes after how these engines work. It will be important to monitor the outcome.

There's no question that you need differentiators when the movies are all the same, everywhere. If recommendation engines keep customers engaged and involved, there's a good chance that search will be a key factor in movie distributor success for now. With such a competitive field, we'll likely see some parity over time -- and maybe another search leap forward we haven't envisioned yet.

Posted by Deborah Richman at 2:05 AM | Permalink

September 13, 2006

Site Search Volume More Than Web Search Volume

There were two interesting articles on site search, searches done directly on a web site versus a web search engine, recently. The first was from Shaun Ryan where he estimated the search volume of site search compared to web search. He shows that web searches are performed about 200 million times per day. But based on his best guesstimation, there are more than 2 billion site search done per day. If that is the case, a new study from Lou Rosenfeld on how site owners view site search might be interesting to read. The study asked four questions and received 134 responses.

The most interesting question was "We're surprised at how few people and organizations analyze their own site's search queries. If you agree, why do you think it's so uncommon?" Top reasons were not having time or not having the right tools.

You can read all the responses at RosenfeldMedia.com, but I don't think you will be surprised by some of the responses.

Posted by Barry Schwartz at 8:59 AM | Permalink

August 7, 2006

Yahoo Launches Search Builder

During the Social Search Overview session, Tim Mayer of Yahoo announced the launch of Yahoo Search Builder. I haven't had much time to play with it yet, and probably won't until next week. But the Yahoo Search blog has a nice overview of the new product. Keep in mind, this seems very similar to Eurekster, based on my quick quick quick read of it. More on this later.

Posted by Barry Schwartz at 1:02 PM | Permalink

August 3, 2006

Rollyo Adds More Functionality

The roll your own search resource Rollyo adds more functionality to its services. If Rollyo has slipped under your radar it's a resource that allows you to create your own personalized search engine (hence 'roll your own') that will search up to 25 sites that you specify. They've improved layout, added blog search, added the ability to take an existing Searchroll and edit it to your own taste and added a 'Rollbar'. The latter allows searchers to incorporate Rollyo into the browser to search any site, add sites to existing Searchrolls on the fly and create new ones based on the site you're on at that point.

Lots of improvements - particularly with the Rollbar, since my use of Rollyo was always limited in inverse proportion to my laziness - I simply couldn't get around to editing my Searchrolls often enough to make them useful. This looks like it should overcome that particular problem. Looking good!

Posted by Phil Bradley at 10:40 AM | Permalink

July 14, 2006

Microsoft: "Enterprise Search Is Our Business" (It's Not) & Google Can't Have It (They Don't)

Microsoft to Google: Hands off enterprise search from News.com and a similar report from The Register both cite Microsoft Chief Operating Office Kevin Turner declaring "enterprise search is our business, it's our house and Google is not going to take that business."

Gosh -- I though enterprise search was Autonomy's business, Autonomy's house. This recent Investors Business Daily article had Autonomy as the "clear leader" in enterprise search, followed by FAST, IBM and then Google. Microsoft isn't even mentioned -- not once.

Other reports (InformationWeek, InternetWeek) talk about Turner saying Microsoft is strong in the enterprise space overall. Sure. But enterprise search as Microsoft's business? And Google's trying to take it? That doesn't wash.

Google's been providing a dedicated enterprise search product, the Google Search Appliance, since 2002. They also offered hosted site search solutions from before that. Enterprise search isn't something Google's suddenly decided to do, just because Microsoft is doing it. The same is true for other companies that fall under Turner's ire:

Those people are not going to be allowed to take food off of our plate, because that is what they are intending to do.

In reality, Microsoft seems to have no serious enterprise search house at the moment, and if anyone's trying to grab food off the plate, it pretty much sounds like it's Microsoft doing the grabbing.

Posted by Danny Sullivan at 9:36 AM | Permalink

June 7, 2006

Top Four & Two Percent Are Key For On Site Search Keyword Optimization

ClickZ has the details of a Patricia Seybold Group study which says that for e-commerce sites, the top two-percent of search queries conducted within the site are the most important. The top four-percent of search queries conducted on non-ecommerce sites are the most important. If you improve the searcher experience for those top 4 or 2 percent of your internal site searches, half of all searchers will be happier.

So if you can mine the top four-percent of your internal searches and start in order to make those results better, you can greatly improve your searcher's experience. Specifically with a site you are trying to sell on, if you can improve those top queries, you will more likely convert on a sale. Happy searchers are 2.7 times more likely to convert on your site.

Posted by Barry Schwartz at 9:34 AM | Permalink

May 17, 2006

Microsoft To Discuss New Enterprise Search & Social Networking Software

eWeek reports that Microsoft is going to announce an enterprise search application to compete with Google's enterprise search solution. And News.com reports that the next release of Microsoft's SharePoint will have "Knowledge Network." Knowledge Network is a feature that will "automatically builds profiles of employees and their areas of expertise." I didn't dig deeper yet, but it looks like the two items may be somewhat related. Hat tip, Gary Price.

Posted by Barry Schwartz at 11:16 AM | Permalink

February 15, 2006

Google Teams Up with BearingPoint to Increase Sales of Search Appliances

Google partners with BearingPoint from News.com covers a partnership that will enable Google to better support the Google Search Appliance and the Google Desktop for Enterprise software.

The deal will not only increase awareness and sales of the product but also enable Google to offer support contracts of $10,000 or more per year for "training and developer consultation" services.

Dave Girouard, general manager for Google Enterprise said that BearingPoint was the largest partner of Google's "Enterprise Professional Program" that enabled third party companies to support the products, since Google was not staffed to do so internally.

Google's official press release can be found here.

Posted by Barry Schwartz at 9:28 AM | Permalink

January 12, 2006

Google Offers New Versions of Google Mini Search Appliance, Fast Search and NY Times Company Announce Deal

Two enterprise search notes today. One from Google and the other from Fast Search and Transfer.

First, Elinor Mills reports that Google is offering two new versions of the Google Mini.

One of the new Google Minis will be priced at just under $6,000 and will be able to search up to 200,000 documents on corporate Web sites and intranets. The second will be priced at just under $9,000 and will be able to handle 300,000 documents, said Rajen Sheth, product manager of Google's enterprise division.

Next, Fast Search and Transfer has announced a few new clients for their enterprise search technology. We now learn that the company has just signed deals with The New York Times Company (all of their newspapers including the Boston Globe and International Herald Tribune) and the MediaNews Group (53 newspapers and sites including the Denver Post, InsideBayArea.com, Los Angeles Daily News, and Oakland Tribune). The NY Times deal calls for Fast search technology to be used across the organization including public web sites while MediaNews will use Fast for their public web sites. I blogged about several other Fast deals, including one with Citysearch, a few weeks ago.

Posted by Gary Price at 4:04 PM | Permalink

December 29, 2005

Holiday Period is a Busy Time at Fast Search and Transfer

A bit of enterprise search news. While many of us have been on a holiday break, the folks at Fast Search and Transfer have been very busy announcing licensing deals with some well-known organizations including one well known vertical, Citysearch. Quite impressive.

First, on December 27th, FAST announced a deal with Thomson Financial.

Four days prior to that announcement (December 23rd), word that Fast and Citysearch were inking a deal for FAST AdVisor technology to power the search and navigation on their site.

Finally, on December 22nd, Fast and Getty Images, the massive database of imagery, announced a licensing deal.

Posted by Gary Price at 2:48 PM | Permalink

December 8, 2005

Profile Of Connotate Enterprise Search Company & Fight Over Control Of FAST

The Deal.com's Lou Whiteman (via News.com), offers a profile of Connotate, a company that sees what "traditional" engines can't. The technology comes out of Rutgers University. Meanwhile, enterprise search company FAST is in a control fight.

Pause: Trivia break. Name another popular piece of web search technology (now part of a larger company) that was first developed at Rutgers. Stay tuned for the answer.

Now, back to our story: The difference between traditional search and Connotate's offerings is akin to the difference between finding the date the Civil War ended and, say, the current price of oil. Traditional search engines excel at returning static information such as historical dates, but they are less effective in retrieving updated and ever-changing data like energy prices.

The company also claims a deep web/Invisible Web/data mining angle saying that it can find material from a database of over 500 billion web pages including material from database. I'm hoping to demo Connotate soon soon and report back.

Others are doing work in this area real-time search, alert, and deep web arena. Fast Search and Transfer is one company that comes to mind.

Trivia Answer: Teoma was developed at Rutgers Univesity led by Dr. Apostolos Gerasoulis and purchased by Ask Jeeves in 2001. Teoma's technology now powers the AJ database and Dr. Gerasoulis is Vice President of Research and Development at Ask.

In other news, control of the just mentioned Fast Search and Transfer is an issue according to this Reuters report.

Finally, one of the best speakers about enterprise search is Avi Rappoport of SearchTools.com (a great site, btw). Avi is also a librarian. She's been doing a lot of speaking lately and has placed most of her presentations online. One presentation, "Enterprise Search Overview" was delivered to Dr. Marti Hearst's class last month at UC Berkeley. Webcast here. Others that have spoken to Dr. Heart's class include John Battelle, Sergey Brin, Bradley Horowitiz, Sue Dumais, Jan Pedersen, Peter Norvig and many other big names. Danny blogged about the class (all webcasts are still available) and I put together a post about Brin's appearance that includes a link to the webcast.

Posted by Gary Price at 10:22 PM | Permalink

November 22, 2005

Google Mini Security Issue Patched

Via WebProNews, Metasploit explains how it discovered flaws in the Google Mini enterprise search appliance that could be abused to do "cross-site scripting, file discovery, service enumeration and arbitrary command execution." The flaw was reported to Google apparently privately earlier this year in June, a patch issued August and news of the issue released yesterday. Metasploit praised Google for responding immediately and being helpful through the fix and testing process.

Posted by Danny Sullivan at 9:29 AM | Permalink

November 8, 2005

Google Giving Away Google Mini With Google Search Enterprise Purchase

So a correction to my earlier post in this spot (the original still below for those who care). Google's got a new deal going on now where those who purchase a Google Search Appliance to replace an existing solution are also given a Google Mini for free. That's basically a smaller scale version of the GSA (more on the difference is here). So not quite the potential sweetener to get people to dump their existing enterprise search solution that I thought before.

Original Post: Google gives so many other products away for free that I guess it shouldn't be a surprise it has decided to do the same with its enterprise search product, the Google Search Appliance. The company has just announced that anyone that wants to give up their existing enterprise search tool can get the basic version of the search appliance, the Google Mini. You've got to the end of the year to do so via this page. The real question will be, will they give anyone any version of the appliance for free next year, hoping somehow to make money off of ads shown on enterprise search. Wouldn't surprise me in the least.

Posted by Danny Sullivan at 12:53 PM | Permalink

November 4, 2005

Autonomy Buys Verity

The two largest players in the enterprise search market are now one. Autonomy is purchasing Verity for $500 million, according to this Red Herring story. The combined companies will have 16,000 customers, including those using Inktomi's former Ultraseek platform, which Verity acquired in December 2002.

Posted by Chris Sherman at 3:06 PM | Permalink

October 6, 2005

Google Enterprise OK For US Government Secrets?

Google: Fit for intelligence work? from Federal Computer Week looks at Google's enterprise search being used by some US government networks and some experts questioning whether the technology is "unfit" for classified work. But some Google enterprise "teammates," info tech firms trained to develop Google enterprise and bring it into security settings, say it's OK.

When one expert says, "For those things that Google does find, it will rank them based on popularity," it doesn't sound like they understand the enterprise product.

Yes, popularity is key in Google web search results. But it's not really an issue to my knowledge with non-web enterprise data. However, the point of Google enterprise not really being a tool for spotting patterns sounds right.

FYI, Gary noted last year that Convera has been tapped by agencies such as the CIA for search needs. The CIA tapped into Inktomi technology back in 2002. In 2001, CIA-backed In-Q-Tel picked Stratify to help spot patterns.

Posted by Danny Sullivan at 9:19 AM | Permalink

July 12, 2005

FAST Search and Transfer Technology To Power MapQuest

Every now and then I like to post an item or two about happenings in the enterprise search world. This is especially true when they have a consumer search angle.

News from Fast Search and Transfer that their Enterprise Search Platform technology will be used to power MapQuest.

This is the second time we've heard about AOL (MapQuest is a wholly owned subsidiary) announcing a deal with Fast Search and Transfer. In January, Chris mentioned that Fast Search and Transfer is providing AOL with a crawl of the web for their local web search tool.

Posted by Gary Price at 12:10 PM | Permalink

February 16, 2005

Four New Customers for Vivisimo's Clustering Technology

Vivisimo, the search company that plays in both the consumer search space with Clusty and in the enterprise search world has announced that they've landed four new clients for their crawler/federated search/dynamic clustering technology. These new clients include: + University of Pittsburgh Health Sciences Library System + FatWallet (it's already live on the this e-commerce site)

An article in the Pittsburgh Times: Vivisimo search gets four new clients, mentions that the company currently receives 70% of their revenues from enterprise search and 30% from Clusty.com.

Posted by Gary Price at 7:22 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

February 14, 2005

Yahoo Desktop Search for the Enterprise?

Desktop search tools to move from desktop to Intranet, is the title of a ZDNet article that includes comments from Peter Crowe, head of search at Yahoo Australia and New Zealand, about possibly offering an enterprise version of their desktop search application.

It is not hard to imagine the timesaving that will be available -- especially in larger organisations -- as people find their information more quickly. If that information is not being indexed and available for query then clearly you are not seeing the full picture. That is where a lot of people are heading -- it is clear that there is a great opportunity to provide a service with that type of execution," said Crowe.

Verity recently announced a partnership with Yahoo to include web search results (and sponsored links) when a searcher runs an enterprise search using Verity software. This is also another example of federated search. In other words, keeping materials in disparate databases and merging them together at the time of the search.

It's also worth mentioning that desktop search at the enterprise level was available long before desktop search wars broke out in 2004. X1, the technology that Yahoo Desktop Search uses, already offers an enterprise version. Coveo, dtsearch and many others also offer this type of technology.

Posted by Gary Price at 10:37 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

February 9, 2005

WebSideStory Acquires Atomz

Some breaking news this morning for those of you who follow the hosted site search space. Web analytics firm WebSideStory has announced that it plans to acquire Atomz (aka Avivo Corporation) in a stock and cash deal. A conference call is scheduled for later today.

Under the terms of the agreement, WebSideStory will issue approximately 3.1 million shares of common stock and options to purchase common stock and will pay approximately $4.3 million in cash, in exchange for the outstanding capital stock and options of Atomz.

This news release has more info about WebSideStory's plans.

Posted by Gary Price at 8:49 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

January 4, 2005

AOL Will Use Fast Search and Transfer Technology

Enterprise search player (and former owner of AllTheWeb) Fast Search and Transfer has started the new year much like it ended 2004, adding new big name clients. A brief news release (also picked up by Reuters) informs us that the America Online has signed a contract to use Fast ESP, "across multiple applications throughout the organization." Precisely where the technology will be used (internal databases or external, publicly accessible databases) was not disclosed.

About a week ago, Fast announced that their technology was licensed by Factiva, a fee-based news and info database that is owned by Reuters and Dow Jones.

Posted by Gary Price at 6:12 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

December 28, 2004

Site Search From Gigablast

We mentioned last week that Gigablast was offering a service that allows users to create topic focused search tools. Pandia has created a "search engine search engine" that queries a bunch of search-related sites including SEW.

Today, another new service from Gigablast. They've just announced a new service allowing you to quickly create a site search tool. You can search for pages from the main Gigablast index or "add your root url via the site search addurl page and it, and the pages it links to either directly or indirectly, will immediately be indexed at the rate of about one page every five seconds."

Posted by Gary Price at 12:24 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

December 17, 2004

Yahoo and Verity Announce Partnership

Some news that spans the enterprise and web search worlds. It's also another example of the increasing importance of federated search tools.

Yahoo! and Verity are partnering to create an application called Verity Enterprise Web Search. Web results will also contain sponsored listings. Verity will share the revenue from the sponsored links with Yahoo.

...with a single query - simultaneously search the high-value information in internal repositories as well as all of the relevant Web content indexed by Yahoo! Search...Search results from internal content repositories and the Web are merged and ranked for relevance, eliminating the need to submit multiple queries to internal sources and public search engines, then manually assimilating results to put the information into perspective.

More in the news release and this eWeek story.

Posted by Gary Price at 12:38 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

December 7, 2004

Convera Plans to Enter Web Search Marketplace

The Washington Post article: Agencies Find What They're Looking For, takes a look at Convera, a popular provider of search technology to many government agencies (CIA, FBI, etc.)

The article concludes with the news that Convera plans to enter the commercial web search marketplace next year.

"...Convera plans to make its Internet search engine available to regular computer users for free sometime next year. In that business segment, Convera would seek to profit through the sale of online advertising, which is growing. Convera's search results, based on proprietary technology, would be different from those provided by Google and Yahoo, [CEO Patrick] Condo said. 'We have applied technology we built for the intelligence community to an advanced development project to index the Web,' Condo said."

Posted by Gary Price at 8:19 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

September 29, 2004

IBM Releases New Product that Searches Disparate Sources Simultaneously

A couple of items from the enterprise search beat. IBM uncorks Masala special brew Source: Computer Weekly

IBM is releasing its DB2 Information Integrator software that will allow simultaneous searching of disprate sources (web, internal databases, proprietary databases).

>From the article, "In one fell swoop Masala [codename for the new IBM product] could solve three problem areas in managing enterprise-level searches: the rapidly expanding universe of data, the growing variety of mostly unstructured data, and the patchwork of databases and data stores...'What IBM will be able to do is offer a federated data model that brings together a number of disparate sources in one place so users can search, index and retrieve data without writing to individual data sources as they might have had to in the past,' said Stephen O'Grady, senior analyst at Redmonk. 'It is a fairly significant step up.'"

Another company (one of many) that offers similar technology, FAST Search and Transfer, continues to land clients. They just announced deals with the United States Army and AutoTrader.com.

Posted by Gary Price at 8:57 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

September 22, 2004

Tools For Enterprise Search

Google-mania' ignites search technology from Network World covers vendors and tips on making your enterprise searchable. And as always, a great resource for anyone interested in this topic is Avi Rappoport's Search Tools web site.

Posted by Danny Sullivan at 12:34 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack