Ask Questions? To Help Find The GOLD
Here's another great idea that the gurus are
using to create high profit online products.It's called an 'ask page' and is designed to let the
potential customers tell you what they want to buy.
Your Cover Letter MUST Ask This Question
Imagine receiving a letter from a salesman who wants to sell you an exciting new widget. The letter focuses on all the reasons why this is such a great item.
Network Marketing Tips: 7 Must Ask Questions
There are boat loads of home based business franchise opportunities on line today, many of them seem like they could be good deals. But what should you really be looking at? They all seem to say they have 'the best comp plan in the industry'. How can they all have the best one? Many have celebrity endorsements. Most have incredible products. One of the best network marketing tips I have received are these 7 home based business franchise review questions are crucial, and the answers can vary greatly. One thing to remember is to never succumb to aggressive marketing tactics or 'limiters'. If the opportunity is really as great as it claims to be, it will definitely be there tomorrow, otherwise what's the point?
ABCTarget Helps Visitors Choose a Retail Store Fixture with New 'Ask a Question' Feature
A new feature on ABCTarget means web visitors can ask a question about products and get answers directly on the site.
Invite Questions to Boost Your Sales
Do you invite your prospective customers to ask questions ..
How to Ask Questions to Arm Yourself With Complete Information
Writing can be so easy if you know what your topic is all about You will find yourself constantly writing for certain ideas that fit with your subject
Tips On Investing Into The Miami Real Estate Sector
Miami has become a hot spot for tourists as well as a place for retirement for the older generation. Well, with its warm environment and pristine beaches lining up the coast, who would not want to? This is also why the demand for Miami real estate is constantly on the rise.
Got A Meeting Planned? Ask This Question
Meetings – they are a fact of our business lives. And while the number of meetings and the amount of time you spend in them may vary based on your job title, it is hard to argue that they are a significant part of business life today.
5 Must Ask Questions About Airsoft
If you've read about airsoft, heard about it from a friend or seen it on TV, you may be itching to get started yourself But before getting into the action, you probably have a bunch of questions to ask about the exciting sport of airsoft ranging such basics as getting hold of your first gun all the way up to joining airsoft games
Ask Your Question – Get what You Desire
"Questions get answers, advice, opinions, beliefs, impressions, stories, and more questions. Questions are about life, people, careers, achievements, facts, and faith.
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Search First, Ask Questions Later
Searches are an extremely important feature for most sites, as the first step of every user task is finding where to begin. A well-implemented text search generally does a good job when people know exactly what they want, but it's much less effective if they don't. To help these individuals, it's best to start with the assumption that your users are human.
Computers love precision. So if you know the name of the product you need, almost any website will quickly retrieve it. But most people need a little more flexibility, and they often have only a broad idea of what they want. So what should your website do if the user can't provide enough information to make a perfect match? The same thing a human would do: ask a question.
I need to buy a lamp. It needs to hang from the ceiling, be silver, with contemporary style to match the rest of my living room, and cost less than $200. If I went to a store, my conversation with a salesperson might look like this:
?I need a modern lamp.?
?Do you want a pendant, a sconce, or a floor lamp??
?Pendant.?
?Bronze, Silver, Wood, or Brass??
?Silver.?
?How much are you looking to spend??
?Two hundred dollars.?
?Okay, here's five lamps that might work.?
Your website can do the same thing. Your users input a general search and receive a list of results. Alongside or above those results, your site can provide a set of categories (e.g., color) with options (e.g., bronze, silver, wood, brass) that allow users to refine their search by selecting the features important to them. You've probably used something similar. Web people call this a faceted search because users narrow their results by choosing specific attributes or facets.
Advanced Search Is Not Faceted Search
But why wait until after the search returns results? Putting the categories and options into an interface with the search box, so users select the attributes they want before they search, is also a common tactic: generally, this is called an advanced search. Such features certainly look advanced, their interfaces bristling with checkboxes and dropdown menus, but they have three big problems.
1. Those fancy controls tend to scare away most users. All those extra buttons and gadgets say this is complicated and most individuals would rather take their chances with the unadorned text search, which is familiar and easy to use. Faceted searches usually present options as simple links, so users are never confronted with a complex interface. Further, faceted searches refine results after a single click, providing instant feedback that encourages risk-free and easily reversible experimentation.
2. When users choose options before they search, they have to guess what the results will be. For my lamp example, do I need to specify color, style, type and price, or will that give me too few options? If I don't select a color, will I get too many? Refining after the search allows users to see exactly how many products each option represents, so they always remain in complete control of the filtering process.
3. If users guess wrong with their options, the advanced search returns no results. The user must then go back to the interface to guess again, and there is still no guarantee that their second attempt will work. Your users might try a third time, but competitor sites are just a click away. Faceted searches, however, are based on the returned results, so it's impossible to choose an empty filter.
What Does It Take?
To create a faceted search, you'll first need to categorize the data (products or documents) by appropriate attributes. There's an entire science for this kind of classification, called taxonomy, but the process doesn't have to be intimidating or complicated. Content can be categorized by attributes already contained within your database, often called structured facets (for lamps, these could be designer, manufacturer, year designed, price, etc.) and by less well-defined attributes that would need to be assigned, known as unstructured facets (for lamps, these could be style, reviews, popularity, etc.). The best searches combine both types.
Next, you'll need a well-designed interface. Generally these look similar, with categories presented beside or above the search results, but there are challenges that need to be addressed. Users will need to immediately understand what the categories and options represent, and how to manipulate them. And with the results and categories competing for space on the same page, an intelligent design will be necessary to avoid overwhelming the user.
Finally, you'll need quality programming to ensure the results are retrieved quickly and to ensure the system is scalable to handle future content.
So, Do I Need a Faceted Search?
Not all sites require a faceted search and creating a good one does take a certain amount of work. But if your website returns an unmanageable number of results to broad or inexact search queries, you might want to consider a faceted system that is optimized for people instead of computers. Assuming, of course, that your users are human.
As a Lead Web Developer and Designer for Orbit Media Studios in Chicago IL, John drafts, designs, and builds the consumer facing side of client websites. John's expertise in back-end programming affords him a unique perspective in designing sites which maintain usability and visual appeal. In addition to his interactive and programming work, John is proficient in print and Flash development. He holds a BA from the University of Virginia.
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