The needs of a user searching on a mobile device are different than one searching from a PC.
Today, a search on Google from a PC generates a massive Web “crawl” and returns pages and pages of search results with rankings based on number of daily hits a website gets or paid advertisement placement. These rankings have little to do with the quality of the product or service.
In the mobile environment, such thoroughness can be the digital equivalent of using a shotgun to take out a housefly — way too much firepower for the task at hand. Mobile consumers are typically on the run and have little patience for pages of search results and no patience for ads. They want highly relevant and useful information.
By 2010, a growing segment will use wireless services to access the Internet 95% of the time.
Today about 1 billion people have PCs; about 3 billion have mobile phones and that number is expected to grow to 4 billion by 2010.
Search engines are trying to replicate a 20-inch experience on a 2-inch screen, and that's leaving them, inevitably, about 90% short.
Search engines that don't change could wind up following in AOL's famous footsteps. AOL in the '90s was an online juggernaut with a gold-plated brand name and more than 30 million subscribers. Today, it's a free service with a dwindling base of about 8.7 million customers.
Google is making a few accommodations. Instead of giving wireless users pages of search results, for example, it only offers "snippets" — Google-speak for the first few search results that appear at the top of the page. It's also limiting the number of ads to one or two per search.
They are also pushing the development of an open wireless operating system — dubbed Android — that would make it easier for consumers to use Google's mobile services. Android-loaded devices are expected to hit the market later this year.
Bottom line: Unless traditional search engines adapt, they will be come dinosaurs.
A lengthy article appeared in USA TODAY: http://www.usatoday.com/tech/products/services/2008-06-09-mobile-search_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip
Definition 6 helps clients with mobile marketing campaigns and can help you understand Web 2.0 and 3.0 trends.
Lynn Moss
Def 6 Client Manager
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