7 Web Search Tips for Online Business Owners
Most online business owners are conducting fairly regular
web searches. Typically the kind of information that
they're seeking include local and national competitors,
keyword research, and searches for resources for a
particular topic. I recently tried to find a simple
tutorial to help my clients conduct better Internet
searches. Unfortunately, many of the tutorials that I
found were created by academic libraries and provided too
much detail and too many options for the simpler kinds of
searches that most of us do.
Below are some simple tips to make your online search more
effective. Since I do the majority of my searches on
Google, some of these tips are Google-specific:
1. Carefully select your search terms. Instead of using
broad or general terms that will return thousands of
possible sites, try to use terms that are very specific to
your topic. One way to narrow your terms is to review
relevant sites you've already discovered and identify
search terms from those sites.
2. Use quotation marks. If you're seeking a specific
phrase, like "Internet marketing coach", enclose the term
in quotation marks. Called a forced phrase search, this
tells the search engine to return only entries that contain
these words in this order. Sometimes searches without the
quotes return similar entries, but you could also get an
unrelated entry like, "...Internet that makes it easier on
marketing for the athletic coach.."
3. Use Boolean operators. Boolean operators are words
that allow you to combine search terms in most search
engines. The most commonly used ones are:
AND -- AND tells the search engine to find both terms on
the same site. For instance, entering "business AND
ethics" would instruct the search engine to find web pages
that contain both terms, "business" and "ethics." You can
also use the '"+" sign for this, as in "business" + "ethics"
OR -- OR tells the search engine to find one term or the
other. Entering "business OR ethics" would cause the
search engine to look for web pages that contain either the
word "business" or the word "ethics," but not necessarily
both words. If you use this combination, be prepared for
the search engine to return thousands of sites.
NOT -- NOT tells the search engine to find pages that
contain the first word but not the second. This
instruction is helpful when you know your search term is
likely to appear with another term that does not interest
you, like "golf NOT cart". You can also use the "-" sign
for this, as in "golf -cart".
4. Site search. This helps you search for a phrase on a
particular site. The command for this is site:URL
"keyphrase". So, if you wanted to search the Houston
Chronicle for mentions of Anna Nicole Smith, you would
enter the following: site:chron.com "Anna Nicole Smith".
5. Search within a URL. Many times as you're thinking
about buying a domain name, you want to find who may be
using a particular term as a part of their domain name.
Use the inURL code for this. For example, if you wanted to
find all the URLs that contained the word "career" in
Google, you would enter the following: inurl:career
6. Use a metasearch engine. Instead of trying to search
various search engines separately, use a meta search
engine. My favorite is Dogpile.com, which searches Google,
Yahoo, MSN and Ask.
7. Give yourself a time limit. I've started searches and
have had hours disappear in what seems to be minutes. Set
up a timer to notify you 15 minutes into your search. You
can then determine if you are wasting your time on a
particular search strategy, spending too much time or a
site, or assess if you need to refocus the search.
About.com provides a full Google Cheat Sheet with more
detailed search queries on their site:
websearch.about.com/library/cheatsheet/blgooglecheats
heet.htm
Web research doesn't have to be a time-consuming task. You
can find exactly the information you seek by using a few
simple shortcuts to get the best results.
About the Author:
Online Business Resource Queen (TM) and Online Business
Coach Donna Gunter helps self-employed service
professionals learn how to automate their businesses,
leverage their expertise on the Internet, and get more
clients online. To claim your FREE gift, TurboCharge Your
Online Marketing Toolkit, visit her site at
www.GetMoreClientsOnline.com . Ask Donna an
Internet Marketing question at
www.AskDonnaGunter.com .
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