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by kqr
777 days ago
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> Why do you care as a search engine? Wait, are you really asking why a search engine would care how well it finds what the user is looking for? Granted, there are a lot of search engines that sell themselves on other metrics ("it's fast!" or "it uses AI!" or "it's in the cloud!") but any serious search engine player strives to learn how good it is -- in practise -- at helping the user find what they are looking for. That's ultimately the purpose of a search engine. |
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While a useful metric, it's an unknowable metric.
1. You have no idea if the user even knows what they are looking for, so how would you know that they found it?
2. You have no idea if the user found what they are looking for, maybe what they are looking for isn't on the internet?
3. You have no idea if the user is even looking for something, maybe it was just a cat running across the keyboard?
The only way to learn the answer is to have humans talk to humans. You can't game your way through it by using metrics.
It reminds me of this one time the CEO asked our team to add a metric for "successful websites" (we were a hosting provider) and we rebuffed with "define successful." They immediately mentioned page views, which we replied "what about a restaurant with a downloadable menu that google links to directly?" and back and forth with "successful" never being defined for all verticals and all cases. It just isn't possible to define using heuristics.