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Search is huge these days, and for good reason. If we know what we’re looking for, search engines like Google are very good at finding it. And we expect every site of even medium size medium-or-larger site to have a big friendly search box waiting for us.

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  • Most users start by browsing.
    According to Jeff Sauro (a usability guru known for his rigorous quantitative approach), a meta-analysis of studies of 1500 users showed that “on average, about 14% of users started with search”. Other studies vary in their estimates of browsing vs. searching, but it’s clear that browsing is too common a behavior to ignore.

  • Browsing is even more likely if the navigation looks promising.
    Users make snap judgments when they visit a site. As Alan McFarland describes in this short article, if the site navigation seems to be clear, distinguishable, and offer a good range of choices, visitors are more likely to start with browsing.

  • Search only works well if we know what we’re looking for.
    As Laura Larsell succinctly states says in this Mashable article, “Search assumes a direct path between the seeker and the sought. Ironically, ‘search’ works best when you have a pretty good sense of what you are looking for. But most people, most of the time, do not have concrete ideas of what they really want.”

  • Even searchers need structure to orient themselves.
    As Jakob Nielsen says in this NN/G article on search, “users who get to a page through search still need structure to understand the nature of the page relative to the rest of the site. They also need navigation to move around the site in the neighborhood of the page they found by searching.”

  • And the list goes on...

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