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Friday | 5 December, 2008
CIO
Treasure Hunt
A slew of new enterprise search options can be found at every price, including free. What do you really need to discover true value?
Galen Gruman 03 April, 2007 13:36:26

Centralize and Conquer

Many organizations have multiple search technologies in place, but they're not coordinated. At best, this wastes network and IT resources. At worst, it results in a fractured view of information across the enterprise, compromising product and service quality.

With engineers spread throughout the world, engineering consultancy Arup was concerned that a team working in one office might not know about design approaches being used in other offices, creating uneven quality across locales. So seven years ago, the company brought in a basic search engine. "We immediately drowned with information overload, and people questioned the search results' validity," says Tony Sheehan, group knowledge manager.

Arup tried again, this time using the high-end Autonomy search platform. The new system can tap into the company's databases, financial and human resources systems, and free-form content, either directly or via add-on software. This unified search platform made critical business sense, says Sheehan. The result: Engineers now share the same knowledge no matter where they are based, providing a consistent global level of quality, he says.

National Instruments faced a similar problem. "Our search tools grew over time as the company was learning what search could do," says Jeff Watts, the instrumentation maker's former search and communities manager. "With multiple systems, there's no source of complete information, plus you end up with specialized employees whose knowledge is lost as they leave the company or rotate to other departments," he says. When the company decided to standardize its Web presence across the globe — providing a single platform that could support multiple languages, local product catalogues and online customer self-service — it also took the opportunity to standardize its internal search platform using a high-end Fast Search & Transfer system.

Law firm Morrison & Foerster knew from the beginning that it wanted a centralized search platform to avoid just such fragmentation, says CIO Jo Haraf. So the thousand-member firm took its time to find a tool that met its needs, rather than deploy interim technologies, she says. The firm ultimately selected mid-range solution Recommind because it could do what Haraf calls "grey-area search" — that is, it has the ability to pull in results suggested by, but not explicitly within, the search query — which for a law firm provides a real edge in finding unexpectedly related cases.

Notably, Arup, Harris and National Instruments all realized that they needed to impose their own context and organizational structure to search results to better tune them to their business needs — even though the mid-range and high-end systems can infer context as part of their indexing. For example, National Instruments imposed structure and context on its information to help searches across multiple systems more easily find similar information. And Arup imposed its own categories on data — such as projects and people — to ensure that search results would be grouped in the mental baskets used in the company. Watts and Sheehan call the effort difficult but worthwhile.

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