Marissa Mayer Talks Social Search

Friday, February 1, 2008 by Mistlee


Can't see any images? - !




Click to Play

A Few Comments on Commenting
For some, blogging is not as easy as it may sound. Whenever you break it down to issues such as how to get readers to your blog, how to get them to comment, and...

Recent Articles

MySpace Still Most Popular, Facebook Gaining
Hitwise has some new numbers about social networking sites. Though down, MySpace is still gets the most traffic with 76% of visits in 2007. It's actually down. Number two, Facebook is up 51%. They monitored 53 different...

12 Web Marketing Ideas To Jump Start Your Business
You know those "new" episodes of your favorite TV show when a character gets hit by a car, and then all their friends gather by their bed side and retell their favorite stories through a series of clips? Welcome to my...

15 New Years Resolutions...
...for your 2008 Website: I will get connected so I know it when I get a lead. I will syndicate an RSS feed that originates at my Domain. I will become an authority for my area and/or niche topic. I will rank on the first...

Customer Experience, Loyalty And Search Engine...
Gordon Hotchkiss wrote a blog post called, Why Do We Keep Buying from Bad Businesses, in which he describes a situation many of us may be familiar with. Do you shop at stores where the prices are too high or the environment...

Wikipedia, Yahoo Answers & Answer Sharing
Web users rely on community-contributed-content sites such as Wikipedia and Yahoo Answers. These sites enable you to communicate directly with an engaged audience. But contribute to the conversation with care.

What’s So Scary About Usability Reviews?
My initiation into usability was cruel. Looking back, however, I think the experience taught me how sensitive web site owners are. Some may want to let the air out of your car tires in exchange for your honesty. Janna.


02.01.08

Marissa Mayer Talks Social Search

By Jordan McCollum

VentureBeat talked to Google's Marissa Mayer, vice president of Search Products & User Experience, about Google's future: specifically about their future in social search.

VentureBeat notes that as recently as August, Mayer "said social search hasn't shown much promise, but if it does, Google would be in a good position to incorporate it."

VB's reporter asks some pretty good questions (which he admits he had help on), although he didn't ask about the progress that Google has already made in creating social networks in Gmail and Google Reader.

Perhaps most interesting from her comments is a brief history and potential forecast of social search efforts at Google. However, there is one part that privacy advocates are sure to jump on (bolded here).

One thing we have tried...is labeling - have users annotate the search results they see and have those annotations be shared with people on their social network or with people of like mind and interest. We did that in the form of Google Co-Op... We've seen success there in things like health. There have been a few topical areas that have had a lot of traction, but overall the annotation model needs to evolve.

...Another classic thing to try is "other users like you," where you build implicit social connections between users who are like each other, much like Amazon does with books. Examples: "Other users like you also searched for" or "other people who did this search also did searches." It works to give you related queries, but again it doesn't fundamentally change the social experience or capture that movie or restaurant recommendation request that would be one of the classical examples of verbal social search.

Try a Better Way Today. Try WebEx PCNow

I think there is the possibility of taking a social network and combining some element of annotations and searches done. For example, if I have 400 friends on Facebook, and I knew 10 of them all searched for one topic today, that might interest me. So aggregate statistics might work. In truth, there are a bunch of things you could try. You can take the annotations that people enter through something like Google Co-Op and broadcast the annotations. Presumably when someone is writing a search result, they don't mind if other people see it and read it. [Oh, right, which is why all these people who googled how to murder their spouses turned to you.]

PageRank itself relies on the link structure of the web to try to find the most authoritative pages. For example, it's clear that people would attribute more authority to the pages that their friends have visited. So if we took Web History and allowed that data to influence rankings, such that pages that your friends have visited were now bumped up in your search ranking, that that might be a good augmentation to something like personalized search. In essence, it's a fusion of personalized and social search. In this case, what we would do is say: This Gmail account which maps to Marissa Mayer then maps to these other friends, allow those friends to influence this ranking... But no, we have not done anything like that to date.

Mayer also notes that Google probably wouldn't partner with a third-party site like MySpace or Facebook to find relationships between people and alter search results based on that, saying that it "would be non-intuitive." However, "You can imagine us [Google] forging connections on our own, you can imagine us asking users what connections currently exist that they would like to use. Each of those are viable options."

Is Google headed toward social search? Maybe eventually, but it looks like the official word is still "not now."

via

Comments

About the Author:
Jordan McCollum is a staff writer for the popular marketing blog Marketing Pilgrim. She has worked in search engine optimization with clients including 3M, Little Giant Ladders and ADP. After graduating from Brigham Young University, Jordan joined the SEO copywriting team at the Internet marketing firm 10x Marketing. After 10x closed its doors in December 2006, Jordan became a freelance writer and Internet marketing consultant specializing in SEO. She also has extensive experience with web analytics, conversion rate enhancement and e-mail marketing.

About WomensBizNews
WomensBizNewz delivers news, opinion and hands-on expert advice by women and for women in business. It's about Women In Business Achieving Success.

WomensBizNews is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
CareerNewz.com InvestNewz.com
eCommNewz.com WebsiteNotes.com
AdvertisingDay.com ManagerNewz.com
SearchNewz.com CRMNewz.com

-- WomensBizNews is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
2008 iEntry, Inc. All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy | Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article


Unsubscribe from WomensBizNews.
To unsubscribe from WomensBizNews or any other iEntry publication, simply send an email request to: support@ientry.com

Women in Business Achieving Success WomensBizNews News Archives About Us Feedback WomensBizNews Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums Jayde iEntry Advertise Contact

0 comments: