Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
[google.com...]
Google may be testing this searchbox as a way of seeing whether searchers looking for Microsoft might benefit from having the Microsoft search right there.
Moderator note: TFL (Transport for London) is an OK example, as it's a government agency. Let's leave other specific company names out of this discussion, except for very large well-known companies like Amazon. We can discuss examples by size, though.
[edited by: Robert_Charlton at 6:22 pm (utc) on Mar. 4, 2008]
It does look a little perculiar on the normal Google serps
A horizontal ad link to the site followed by what would be their normal serp result with 8 sitelinks then underneath a windows style textbox with a ruddy great big grey windows button entitled searcgh www.examplesite.com. It looks really tacky and not very google.
To get the search box, you need to search for the company/ organization/ or agency name, or the domain name with the tld, not always the way you'd enter a site.
Also, this only seems to be affecting very large or very high traffic sites, and definitely not all of them. Eg, irs.gov gets a box, albeit site:irs.gov shows only about 69,000 pages.
On the other hand, site:webmasterworld.com shows roughly 3.2 million pages, and doesn't get a search box.
site:un.org shows roughly 2.3 million pages, and does, as noted above, get a box.
But there are many major corporations and ecommerce sites with page counts in the millions that don't show up.
For Microsoft in the US, which, as noted, does return a box, site:microsoft.com shows some 16-million pages.
But there are many major corporations and ecommerce sites with page counts in the millions that don't show up.
It does seem a bit random. I imagine that qualification is (at least partly) based on some actual site traffic data, either gathered from Analytics, the toolbar and/or search queries.
As a user I like it, but I'm not convinced that showing this for queries such as "Altavista" is appropriate. "Search altavista.com" doesn't really produce the results that I think most users would expect when they hit the button.
To get the search box, you need to search for the company/ organization/ or agency name, or the domain name with the tld, not always the way you'd enter a site.
Nope, I can see it for a quite generic term, think "blue widgets". My site comes up first, will see if it increases traffic, will be quite easy to spot, just look for site: in the logs.