Search Like A Geek
by Jason OConnor
Published on this site: April 19th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Some people search the Web like a Neanderthal standing before the
Library of Congress steps grunting, "Me want food!" While
other, more sophisticated searchers, act more like a person actually
entering the Library of Congress, approaching the librarian, and
saying, "Pardon me, please lead me to your books on agriculture
and growing food, and while you're at it, please show me your books
on fine dining in the Washington D.C. area.". Who would you
rather be?
Back in high school there was the `in-crowd', often populated by
the jocks, and then there were the geeks, among other social clicks.
Today, many of those `geeks' are wildly successful; while some of
those unfortunate others are asking us if we'd like fries with our
burgers.
So it's not so bad being a geek today, especially since so much
of our lives and economy are dominated by computers, software and
the Internet. It is wise to learn how to use the Internet as best
you can. By understanding how search engines and directories work,
like many geeks already do, you will find the information you're
looking for more easily, quickly and with a lot less frustration.
Knowing how to pinpoint specific bits of information quickly will
give you an advantage over most other people who do not have these
skills. And this advantage can turn into big money by saving you
time in your day to day business. And learning about how to search
will help in your search engine optimization efforts if you run
your own website too.
So, I invite you to pull up your pants to make high-waters, apply
some masking tape to the bridge of your eye glasses, and insert
a pocket protector in your front shirt pocket, and join me in learning
how to search like a geek.
The more appropriate words you use the better. Let's say I want
to find tickets to a new Broadway musical show called Wicked next
weekend in New York City. If you just type the word `tickets' into
Google's search box, you'll get 99.6 million results, which is very
unwieldy. The first result is ticketmaster.com. It took 4 clicks
for me to get to their listing of Wicked tickets, but they were
out of inventory up to 6 weeks from now, so it was a dead end since
I want to go next weekend.
The next result was Tickets.com, and when I searched for Wicked
on their site I found tickets available to Wicked in Toronto only.
Another dead end, I need tickets to the NYC production.
The third result only sold airline and cruise tickets, not what
I'm looking for either. After clicking on another 4 websites, I
still hadn't found what I was looking for. I was getting frustrated,
impatient and was just about ready to toss my PC out my window and
give up totally.
If instead, I used a few more appropriate words in my search, my
results would have been much better. I tried typing the words `new
york city broadway wicked musical tickets' in the Google search
box and came up with 230,000 results instead of 99 million, which
is slightly more manageable.
The first result was www.musicalschwartz.com which offered`Ticket
Tips - Wicked on Broadway, Seating info'. So I clicked on that and
learned a number of things about purchasing Broadway tickets, NYC
travel tips and other information on Wicked the musical.
The next two Google results were href=http://www.eagletickets.com
and href="http://www.bestshowticketslasvegas.com
, and they both offered tickets for the Broadway musical Wicked
in New York City on the weekend I wanted. So by carefully choosing
appropriate words to search with and using more than one or two
words, I found what I was looking for much more easily and quickly
than just searching using the word `tickets'.
I am not suggesting you use lots and lots of words willy nilly.
The best method is to think of very specific words related to what
you're looking for, be a little creative, and watch what order you
put the words in. Searching for `broadway wicked musical tickets'
and `tickets broadway wicked musical' will give you different results.
Never search using one word. Avoid only using two words. Try to
use 3-7 words. This search rule follows the law of diminishing returns
however. So searching using 25 words will probably get you little
or no results. So there is a "sweet spot" you'll have
to discover for any given search, but it is almost always using
more than 1-2 words.
Use more than one search engine. When I search on the Web, I use
more than one browser and more than one search engine or directory.
The difference between the two is that search engines are run automatically
while directories are run by humans. Google is a search engine and
show search results of websites that no one has actually looked
at in advance. Directories on the other hand contain websites that
have actually been reviewed by a person. Therefore, the results
you get will differ. A good list of directories can be found at
http://www.directoryarchives.com.
Open up your browser and click on `File' in the top left of your
browser and select `New' > `Window'. Do this a couple of times
until you have three or more browsers open on your desktop at the
same time. Choose your search words carefully, use more than two
words and try the same exact phrase in Yahoo, MSN, Google, and a
favorite directory using a different browser for each. That way
you can compare results to find the best ones. You can also try
a new site I found called <a href=" http://yagoohoogle.com/
"> http://yagoohoogle.com/</a>
which lets you perform a simultaneous search on both Google and
Yahoo.
Use modifiers in your searches. Going back to the tickets example,
let's say I wanted to find airline tickets, but each time I performed
a search on tickets, most of the results had to do with sports and
theater tickets. I could weed out all those irrelevant results by
using the minus (-) sign next to the word `theater'.Bad search:
tickets Better search: tickets to New York Even better search: airline
tickets to New York theater
So if you are getting a lot of extraneous results in your searches,
try adding a minus sign to words you don't want showing up in your
results.
Another good tip is using quotes around your phrases. By doing
this you are telling the search engine to find the exact phrase
and in the order you are specifying. By adding quotes, you are being
much more specific. You'll get very different results using quotes.
If you searched for `2005 NBA playoff tickets' (without quotes)
you are asking the search engine to look for sites that have the
words 2005, NBA, playoff, and tickets associated with them. So you
will probably come up with airline tickets, football playoff information,
NBA history and so forth. If you put quotes around your phrase you'll
get much closer to what you want.
Use the `Find' function. Trust me; this one suggestion is worth
the price of admission alone. You will save lots of valuable time
if you do this. Ever get to a Web page that has a lot of text on
it, and quickly scanning the page doesn't immediately produce what
you're looking for? In fact, the scanning just makes you dizzy.
Try this: while holding down your `Ctrl' key hit your `F' key (this
works on PCs only). A `Find' dialog box should pop up. Simply type
the word or phrase you're looking for in the box and hit `Enter'
and it will immediately find each and every instance of it on the
Web page you're on. This will truly save you time if you remember
to use it.
One can get lost on the Net. There is so much information, and
almost all of it is not applicable to what you want at any given
time. If you use the Net for your business, pinpointing appropriate
and relevant information quickly will put you ahead of the pack
every time. By following these simple suggestions, you will find
more accurate results which will reduce your frustration, save you
time, and give you an edge over others who are still searching for
information like a caveman at the steps of a library.

Jason O'Connor is president of Oak Web Works (http://www.oakwebworks.com)
http://www.oakwebworks.com
Oak Web Works</a> where you can get a free webmaster newsletter
and he also runs Sports, Las Vegas & Broadway Show Tickets (http://www.bestshowticketslasvegas.com)
href="http://www.bestshowticketslasvegas.com"Broadway
and Las Vegas Show Tickets.

|