Search and you shall find “Magnus something-or-other”

At a party, it’s not rare to get to a point in the conversation where you are unsure of the facts. We can either sit and ponder for hours, or we can pick up the smartphone and find the answer. That’s how it should work at the workplace as well.

Mother, son and aunt Royal

Prince Sverre Magnus – Screenshot from the Norwegian Royal Families website.

Lately, there have been some parties. For example yesterday, when we celebrated the 17th of May – Norway’s day of independence. Then we sat down, after hours of parades and sausage eating and suddenly realized that we couldn’t remember the name of the youngest member of the Norwegian Royal Family. “Magnus-something-or-other” was the closest we came.

Then the solution was, as usual, to pick up the iPhone and search for “the Royal Family” on Google. Not only did we find out that his name is Sverre Magnus, but we also got to see pictures, his birthday, what his sister is called, and so on and so forth. Also the complete list of the royal family gave us new topics of conversation and maybe more answers then we did sought.

And why do I use the blog to share an uninteresting, private Royal-Family conversation I had at the 17th of May? Simply because I every day see how important good search is as a problem solver, and a way to find the answer we’re looking for.

In a workplace, we have lots of information available: both internal information and information through, for example, Google or Bing. How much time do we spend talking about things we cannot find the answer to? Or how much time do we spend sitting alone wondering? Or how much time do we spend digging through old documents, presentations, customer records, and so on.

If we have good internal search at work, we can quickly find answers, find richer answers then we were looking for, and find colleagues that can give the answer to us.

And the search should be as easy as my 17th of May-solution, to grab the phone out of my pocket.

What is your experience with internal search?

1 response to: «Search and you shall find “Magnus something-or-other”»

  1. [...] Søk og du skal finne “ett-eller-annet-Magnus”I et selskap eller på en fest er det ikke sjeldent man kommer til et punkt i samtale der man er usikker på fakta. Da kan vi enten stå og lure i timevis – eller vi kan ta opp mobilen fra lommen og finne svaret. Sånn bør det være på jobb også. Read this post in English [...]



Leave a response





XHTML: These tags are allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code class="" title="" data-url=""> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> <pre class="" title="" data-url=""> <span class="" title="" data-url="">

Page not found - Sweet Captcha
Error 404

It look like the page you're looking for doesn't exist, sorry

Search stories by typing keyword and hit enter to begin searching.


OSLO

Comperio AS
Øvre Slottsgate 27
NO-0157 Oslo,
Norway
+47 22 33 71 00
View map

STOCKHOLM

Search Provider Sverige AB
Gamla Brogatan 34
SE-11 120 Stockholm
Sweden
+46 8-21 49 00
View map