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Thinking Outside the Search Box(Confessions of a Search Challenge Designer)by Carl Heine![]() As a researcher and a challenge game designer, I spend quite a bit of time searching outside the box. Sometimes this involves breaking the rules: not following the advice found in the Resource Kits. When designing a new challenge I usually enter a single term into Google (e.g., Broadway) and scan the results for something interesting. Anyone familiar with effective keyword strategies will recognize the value of searching with multiple words to narrow the results. Using a single word, a practice popular with digital natives, yields unexpected results, which works well for an exploratory search. I've done the same thing starting by selecting a single word in a subject directory and using it to springboard to another interesting word, and so on, until I arrive at something I think would make an appealing search. If you start out uncertain what you want to look for, the single word search works a lot like brainstorming: retrieving a wealth of information through discovery. This can be a very valuable exercise when looking for an interesting subject to research. The Kermit, Pump Price and Lego Builder Challenges all began this way. I break with another common practice by ignoring the search results on the first few pages. Web usability expert Jakob Nielsen reports, "Users almost never look beyond the second page of search results". Fewer still open the third page (results numbered 21 to 30). That almost invisible third page is where I like to start looking for unusual results. How Deep Do You Go? What's the deepest you've ever gone into the search results? How deep can you go? You may be surprised to learn that although Google says it found millions or billions of results for a query, you can retrieve--at most--only 800 to 900 of them. The list ends around page 85 (give or take a few) when 10 results are displayed per page. With 100 results per page the list stops at page 9. I imagine this helps speed up the retrieval process; besides, who ever looks that far down the list anyway? I tend to drive deeply into results only because there's often hard-to-find search material hidden there. Snagged by Strange Snippets Once an interesting snippet catches my eye, I try to create a query that will raise it to the first page of search results. This is easy to do with the right combination of keywords pulled from the first page of the obscure website. If the search challenge is about trying alternate keywords (nyms), I test the new words in a query to see what happens to the target page. If it still comes to the top, other terms are tried until the page is buried once again. This helps me create a list of words to use in the search challenge. This method requires repeated testing of keyword combinations, but because of the 1 in 5 Rule, a nyms search is relatively easy to create. Operator Challenges A search that requires operators is much harder to design. Most of the time, operators just aren't needed. Quotes are the exception and I don't create many of those searches. Once you recognize that a search challenge contains an exact phrase, it can be solved in seconds (the TV Challenge, the Poetry Challenge). Harder to recognize are a couple of keywords that must be kept together in the order given. Most of the time Google does a nice job without having to use quotes around word pairs. As long as the words are entered in the order they normally occur, it's practically the same as using quotes. The more common the words, the more helpful quotes tend to be. And then if you need to find a reversed word pair such as 'America North', quotes help to eliminate the more frequently used 'North America'. The hardest challenges to design are those that require OR ( | ) or NOT ( - ). Since there are so many ways to find something using words alone, operators simply represent one more way. Even though the Apollo 8 and Piranha Challenges can be solved by using NOT, I realize there are other, less efficient and even more elegant ways to solve them. Individuals who think outside the search box WILL find other ways. Because of this, I've concluded that the only way not to find something is by looking for the wrong thing from the start. How to Break Search Habits Here are a few more thoughts about getting outside the search box to find answers to Search Challenges and whatever else you need:
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