
Twitter has been slowly transforming itself into a post-Google information company. In past few weeks alone it has unveiled expandable tweets, hashtag-based pages and other similar innovations. These embellishments to their core messaging offering show that it is Twitter, and not Facebook, that Google has to worry about.
Twitter’s search ambitions are becoming clearer with the people it is adding to its search team. For instance, it recently hired away John Wang, a well-known engineer in the search business from LinkedIn(s lnkd). In addition, the company added Ruslan Belkin as a Director of Engineering, Search and Relevance. Twitter has also made its search better, or at least faster, as it noted in a blog post. They have added related queries and spelling suggestions to their search.
Offering personalized search with more relevant results, surfacing related images and videos related to the query are somewhat reminiscent of the efforts made by Google on its search offering.
But just like Google’s idea of search was very different from the search offered by web directories such as Lycos and Yahoo(s yhoo), Twitter too has to re-imagine the idea of search.
The answer to that question for Twitter is its “discover” function. Honestly, discover could use a lot of help and improvement. On our touch-centric and voice enabled devices of the future, the idea of search has to be less textual. So Twitter as a company needs to be making it easy for us to surface all the information.
This post was updated at 12:44p.m. to clarify that Twitter recently introduced expandable tweets, not embedded tweets.
An insightful and even prophetic insight into the #postGoogle era.
Until I can search my own tweets archive for an earlier post, Twitter search remains horrible for me. And looking at how they sell archived tweets database for a price, I wonder if we would ever get that capability.
Yes. evening finding one’s first tweet is a nightmare.
hear, hear – I always have to Google to find my old tweets
Doesn’t twitter have to worry about trust(who’s who and whom do I trust, even if not follower), information value(how much value is added by any given tweet to any given context), how to identify context, pattern creation(to simplify pattern recognition). Fallout … discovery of related data in a given context by trusted providers.
Just wondering.
Ronald
I am not sure if you are making an observation or asking me a question. If it is the first, I think you do bring up some valid points for their search team to weigh in.
Sorry, you are right observation.
To get a group of people to solve an ‘unsolvable’ problem. I tend to ask questions on how to solve it without any details.
crappy search, limited to just a couple of days, nearly useless … better to use google
All signs point to them trying to improve improve their “search” experience. If things have not improved in 6 months, I would agree with you.
wrong frame with search but you it right near end with ‘discover could use a lot of help and improvement’.
Yup 😉
Steve
Thanks for the comment. Can you elaborate on the “wrong frame” phrase. Best
search at Twitter sucks (limited in time, words…) also TWITTER IS NOT evolving that much! the real power of twitter is the real time! they can add a bunch of other options to the platform to perform the UX read this http://imaginewnext.blogspot.com/2011/10/twitter-whats-next.html
They are young Adleine, when users want relevant and current feed about a topic, then #Hashtag to see what all the chatter is about. Very powerful, yet simple information stream!
just as Janet explained I didn’t know that a person can make $5701 in a few weeks on the internet. did you look at this web site (Click on menu Home more information) http://goo.gl/k9UcI
Love Twitter, so fast, so good, so addicting. *biztag
I really hope Twitter come out with their own search engine. Anything to break Google’s monopoly !!
I hope Twitter (and even Facebook) come out with their own search engine. Anything to break Google’s monopoly in search !!
Om, features like related videos and images are distracting frosting while lack of results more than 5 days old is anywhere from sad to a fatal flaw: event hashtags are dead merely a week after an event.
On the other hand, if you self-publish your tweets on your own domain and notify realtime updates with PubSubHubbub (PuSH) then Google’s “site:” site-specific search will return real-time and *comprehensive* results for your own tweets. That’s what I’d call “personalized search with more relevant results”.
-Tantek (tantek.com)