Imagine a library with no computers and no card catalogs for searching the inventory. It would indeed be futile for anyone who is looking for a particular book or topic. The same is the case with the digital world: Businesses are flooded with internal documents and assets that are stored online in disparate systems. Ever since enterprise search engines came into play, retrieving information from humongous databases has become a cakewalk; but contextual relevance is still a question. This brings us to the enterprise-wide taxonomy which addresses this issue and ensures an effective and efficient search experience.
What is taxonomy?
Before we deep dive into how taxonomy has been a game-changer in the knowledge management world, let’s learn more about what taxonomy is. It is just another word for systematic classification enabling structured tagging and grouping. It refers to the set of metadata that are added to the content in order to make working with the humongous databases easier.
In taxonomy, there comes ‘Content Annotation’ which is nothing but the process of enriching the content by associating it with specific categories from the established taxonomy. It works hand in hand with taxonomy for a cohesive strategy.
Thus, we can say that if taxonomy is the systematic classification of the entities then Content Annotation is the process of doing so. Its underlying goal is to provide context to the content and precisely deliver results in a variety of ways.
The Global Market for Data Annotation Tools accounted for US$ 1,030 Million in 2021 and is anticipated to reach US$ 14,685 Million by 2030 with a CAGR of 34.5% from 2022 to 2030.
How important is taxonomy for enterprise search?
Imagine running a search query that leads you to another search: Frustrated with the mere thought of it?
Let’s say a healthcare community with an enterprise search software doesn’t integrate taxonomy. When an end-user runs a query with search keyword “vaccination”, hundreds of results would be produced onto the screen. The reason being that there are too many different classes of things relating to vaccination and typing in that one term doesn’t provide any context to the query. Now, you’ll have to scroll through the entire list to find the most relevant answer to your question.
To save you from this daunting task, taxonomy is at your service. It enhances the user search experience by tagging the content and creating new filters thus providing an organized search result. It also uses NER(named entity recognition) to extract information from the search query making it more relevant to the user.
Taxonomy enables you to add metadata to content, which further helps in contextualization. Once the context of content is in place, the findability of relevant information improves manifold. Additionally, there are ways by which taxonomy assures the mapping of synonyms and acronyms, leading to disambiguation.
What does taxonomy bring to the table?
The efficacy of data increases if both content and context are defined. Taxonomy does exactly the same.
- Entity Extraction: Unstructured documents with no metadata make it difficult for crawlers to retrieve anything meaningful from them. By incorporating taxonomy, cognitive search engines empower crawlers to identify and classify key elements from such documents. Once the structure of the data is in place with this process of entity extraction, search results become more relevant.
- Faceted Search: Only consistent and accurate metadata can help you build robust facets. By helping you add consistent metadata to the content, taxonomy enables faceted search. Additionally, it empowers you to customize the metadata as per your business’ requirements. This way you get to decide what shows up on the left-hand navigation as facets, not an algorithm. Apply filters and facets to your search for ease of navigation and precision.
It also allows the merging of different fields that require a unified facet offering solutions to presenting a unified view of the disparate information. - Enriched Vocabulary: The inbuilt vocabulary that comes with an enterprise search software is not familiar with your business jargon. Thus, a cognitive search without taxonomy fails to infer intent. Let’s say if you call a document “brochure” and the user looks for the keyword “collateral”, a message saying “No results found” will pop up onto his/her screen. But by mapping synonyms and acronyms with taxonomy, you can save your customers from the dreadful situation. Enterprise taxonomy helps you to train your enterprise search engine and deal with issues of the ambiguity of terminologies.
- Semantic Search: The main aim of semantic search is to understand the semantics of a search query and to extract the relationships between various entities. With its structured framework, Taxonomy provides an overview of the main entity and its related sub-entities in the content, making it easier for the semantic search to find relationships between them and understand the context. This helps the search engine to deliver more precise and accurate results.
- Smart NER: As we know, NER helps to identify and categorize the key information in the text, Smart NER goes a step further by using advanced algorithms to categorize and classify the entities even in a nuanced text. Taxonomy provides clear categories and relationships thereby guiding the few shots.
Taxonomy with its predefined categories and relationships assists smart NER in refining the extraction and classification of entities, enriching the metadata associated with the content.
Can enterprise search engines build taxonomy automatically?
Gone are the days when search engines could be easily tricked. Earlier the frequency of term occurrences led to machine-generated taxonomies; but now engines are technologically-advanced to recognize search patterns of users and define taxonomies accordingly. The AI and machine learning capabilities make enterprise search tools much more than a white box. For example, Entity Extraction helps in auto-categorization of the content and Natural Language Processing (NLP) leads to disambiguation by providing context to the content. All in all the pacing technology has made it possible to embed both manual and automated taxonomies.
Is your enterprise search platform future-ready? What’s the future of enterprise search?
A modern search engine is a lot more than the search box on your site or community. It is a platform, an underlying technology that further powers a number of apps that delight your customers. While making an investment in a search platform, make sure it’s future-ready. To know what a futuristic search platform should look like, download this ebook.