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Not All Federated Search Engines are Created Equal

DWT is focused on providing state-of-the-art federated search products and solutions which search, retrieve, aggregate and analyze content from web-based databases. ...

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Not All Federated Search Engines are Created Equal

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    Slide 1:Not All Federated Search Engines are Created Equal

    Abe Lederman, President and CTO Deep Web Technologies, Inc. Next Generation Library Technologies, May 7, 2008

    Slide 2:Who We Are

    Founded in 2002 Headquartered in Santa Fe, New Mexico 20 Employees Over $2 million in R&D funding DWT is focused on providing state-of-the-art federated search products and solutions which search, retrieve, aggregate and analyze content from web-based databases.

    Slide 3:Abe Lederman-Background

    Earned B.S. and M.S. Computer Science degrees, MIT Began work in information retrieval in 1988 Co-founded Verity Developed some of the first web-based applications that searched text-based content, 1994 Pioneered Deep Web searching in 1999 Founded Deep Web Technologies, 2002

    Slide 4:Some of Deep Webs Customers

    Department of Defense DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information Intel Corporate Library National Agricultural Library Scitopia.org Stanford University

    Slide 5:What is Federated Search?

    Federated Search is an application or service that allows a user to submit a search in parallel to multiple, distributed information sources and retrieve aggregated, ranked and de-duped results.

    Slide 6:In Other Words One Search, Many Sources

    Library Catalogs Blogs & Wikis Subscription Sources Public Web Sources E-Books News

    Slide 7:Benefits of Federated Search

    One-stop access to multiple information sources Users dont need to know where/how to search Saves researcher time and money Improves utilization of information sources Consolidated, ranked and de-duped results Important results are not missed

    Employees often asked, Why cant the Intel Library site work like Google or Yahoo? Federated Search at the Intel Library

    Geothermal Heating

    Slide 13:Why Arent all Federated Search Engines Equal?

    Quality of search results User Interface Results Delivery Administrative Console

    Slide 14:Quality of Search Results

    Thorough connector development Boolean and Fielded Searching Number of results retrieved from each source Relevance Ranking of retrieved data

    Slide 15:User Interface

    Intuitive navigation Rich feature set Display of results incrementally Integration with librarys website (supports multiple search pages) Powerful web 2.0 interface

    Slide 16:Results Delivery

    Aggregated, ranked results Clustering/grouping of results Analysis tools such as filters and sorts Results Export to RSS, Email, Citation manager Alerts

    Slide 17:Administrative Console

    Enable/disable connectors Create search boxes and search pages easily Metrics

    Source: Agricola Query: Corn Ethanol Sort By: Date

    Time to Deliver: 1 second

    Time to Deliver: 6 seconds

    Time to Deliver: 2 seconds Federated search engines have varying strengths and weaknesses. Select the federated search that is best for your organization. Bottom Line

    Slide 23:Recommendations

    for selecting the best federated search engine for your library.

    Basically, anything that results in a more enjoyable search experience, will lead users to spend more time with a particular federated search product and thus derive value from those highly relevant results, assuming they are easy to find. This is where a pleasant and uncluttered layout, intuitive navigation, and a good amount of Ajax to minimize page refreshes combine with highly relevant search results to create the perfect user experience. From The Federated Search Blog www.federatedsearchblog.com Sponsored by

    Slide 25:What Is Important (and whats not)

    Information Discovery Analysis Features Time-Saving Full-Text Access Quality of Results Intuitive Interface Elegant Presentation Ranking Internal Sources Premium Content Sources User Satisfaction Simplify Access Standards Clusters Facets Visualizations Metadata Alerts Real-Time Search Cost Administrative Interface

    Slide 26:Bringing Federated Search to your Library

    Clearly Define Your Organizations Requirements Create Evaluation Criteria Evaluate Vendors Test-Test-Test

    Slide 27:Narrowing Down Your Vendor Choices

    Slide 28:Clearly Define Your Organizations Requirements

    Compile your list of sources to federate Determine sources to search from each search page Licensed Product vs. Managed Solution Budget Staff Resources Timelines Determine features important to users

    Slide 29:Compile a list of requirements and features a vendor must provide. Add additional features you would like to have. Create a vendor checklist. Evaluate responses.

    Create Evaluation Criteria

    Slide 30:Sample Vendor Checklist: Company Viability

    Slide 31:Sample Vendor Checklist: Architecture and Integration

    Slide 32:Sample Vendor Checklist: Connectors

    Slide 33:Sample Vendor Checklist: Results Display

    Slide 34:Vendor Evaluation

    Demonstrations and Pilots Is a pilot necessary? How long of a pilot? Should we do multiple pilots? Conduct focus groups Fulfillment of requirements and features Remember: Federated Search is a long-term commitment to a vendor.

    Slide 35:Test-Test-Test

    Scripting your tests Test each engine against the same criteria (same queries, same sources) Break-dancing How sturdy is the engine? Vendor Response How quickly (or slowly) does the vendor respond to your needs?

    Slide 36:The Future of Federated Search

    Multi-lingual searching Personal libraries Automated source selection Integration with social networking tools

    Slide 37:Deep Webs Search Gallery

    Slide 38:Resources

    The Federated Search Blog www.federatedsearchblog.com Sample Vendor Checklist Email me: abe@deepwebtech.com Federated Search: Solution or Setback for Online Library Services Edited by Christopher Cox

    Thank You! Abe Lederman abe@deepwebtech.com
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