Great Summit, but What Will We Call it Next Time?

This Monday, I was doing a workshop keynote for the fine folks at Intuit (thanks for the invite again Olivier) and I mentioned that search is interesting to a student of human behavior because it's an online crystallization of a basic human need, the drive to find information. Similarly, email and online chat are crystallizations of the need to communicate. Because these things have been reduced to their essence, they make for interesting observation. In cleaning up my back log of blog posts (hey..in my case, maybe that's what BLOG stands for...Back Log), I go back to a column from the spring Search Insider Summit, where after three days of talking, we realized that search was part of everything, even though few of the conversations were explicitly about search. By the way, planning is currently underway for the Fall Summit in Park City, Utah. We'll be striving to keep the conversations rolling! - Gord

Great Summit — But What Will We Call It Next Time?

Posted May 22nd, 2008 by Gord Hotchkiss

Less than 24 hours ago, my fellow columnists were sitting on a stage on Captiva Island, Fla., recapping the events of the three-day Search Insider Summit. It was Insider Aaron Goldman that first noticed the dilemma. “You know,” he mused, as he looked at his famous Summit Buzz Index list (more on this in Aaron’s next column), “I don’t see the word search in here.” We realized, together with the attendees, that in three days of earnest, thoughtful, engaged and even passionate discussion, we had talked about a lot of things: marketing, branding, conversations, engagement, intent, convergence, communities, mobile and local. But somehow, search remained implicitly rather than explicitly present in these conversations.

The Essentially Human Nature of Search

Perhaps we had outgrown search. But no, that wasn’t it. Search had outgrown us, or, at least, the box we kept trying to stuff it in. It went to something that I had touched on a few times over the past three days. Search isn’t a channel. Search is glue, search is ether, search is a synapse, a connection, a completion. Search is a fundamental human activity. Search isn’t a marketing tactic. It’s how we express ourselves.

Perhaps it’s the human need to categorize things. We tend to pigeonhole search and put labels on it. It’s direct response, it’s transactional, it’s pull rather than push. But search isn’t a noun, search is a verb. And it was only on the plane ride back that I started to realize how important that is.

Battelle’s Big Idea

John Battelle did a great job of poking at the import of this in his book “The Search.” But I’m not sure people realized how mind-boggling Battelle’s “database of intentions” is. It’s a vast concept, and that scares the hell out of most people. Similarly, Google’s goal to organize the world’s information can be as deep as you want to make it.  

Let’s dissect this a bit so we can start to put appropriate scope to it, and you’ll realize that Google’s goal is maybe the biggest, hairiest, most audacious corporate goal in history.

There are few things humans need on a daily basis. We are biomechanical machines, so we need oxygen, water, food and sleep. We are social creatures, so we need to communicate. And we are rational beings (or at least, we come equipped with the necessary equipment for rational thought) so we need information. Given that, organizing the world’s information sounds like a good thing, right? It makes our life easier. But whoever organizes the world’s information also controls access to it. We pass at their pleasure.

A Toll on Information

Recently I had the opportunity to cycle up the Rhine Valley in Germany. Dotted along the valley are dozens of castles overlooking the river. The castles exist because the Rhine was the primary navigation route of central Europe, and robber barons realized that if they could control even a small part of the river, they could exact tolls and become fabulously wealthy. But even as bold as the baron’s were, their plans pale in comparison to Google’s goal. Imagine the ability to impose a toll on every single bit of information that we, as humans, need on a daily basis.

In a remarkably short time, Google has created a connection to the biggest repository of information ever collected, and each day, the company adds to it. Each day, our ability to access the information we need to function relies more and more on search, which means it relies on Google.  For almost any decision we make, we need information. Sometimes, the information is at hand, but when it’s not, we have to search for it. And, we will take the easiest possible route to do so. That’s why for more and more of our actions and decisions, there are corresponding searches. Search is not a channel, it’s how we act on our intentions and aspirations.

Search Centered by Default

Gerry Bavaro, another Search Insider, said it best. If you truly put your prospect at the center of your marketing strategy, it can’t help but have search at the core. It’s a given. When your prospect reaches out for the information required to make a buying decision, it’s highly likely they’ll reach out through search.

So, as we tried to put the wraps on three days of high-level thinking about search, we realized we had actually unwrapped something bigger than any of us realized. I’m not sure what you call it, but one thing’s for sure. It won’t fit in any pigeonhole.


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Print | posted @ Wednesday, September 17, 2008 9:06 AM

Comments on this entry:

Gravatar # Brand Identity Marketing
by Linda P. Morton at 9/24/2008 10:59 AM

Search is what makes the Internet work for searchers and publishers. Google does provide a great service to the world with it's search features.

The problem is that it's getting harder for small business owners and bloggers to compete against the large companies who just send people to a sales page rather than to information.

I recently did a post on the Google's top ten search results for "brand identity marketing" I found that 7 of the top 10 were commercial sales pages or documents.

I've linked to that post above.

Gravatar # re: Great Summit, but What Will We Call it Next Time?
by heathrow hotels at 9/26/2008 9:10 AM

Search is still technology based - with plenty of limitations. Information takes many forms - We still can't search for a smell, a taste or an emotion yet these are all forms of information. If I want to buy a garment online I can't examine the texture of the material used and I can't try it on. The technology has a long way to go before it can compete with face-to-face human interaction

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