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Locator: NIE Home / Publications / Enterprise Search Newsletter / Volume 2 Number 6 / Article 2

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Enterprise Search Matrix

By Mark Bennett - Volume 2 Number 6 - June 2005

It's Not Always About Size

Chances are good that if you work for a company large enough to purchase and operate any of the leading enterprise search vendor software, you're familiar with the famous Gartner 'Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Search ' which search vendors and prospective customers consider to be an annual report card on search each year.

We find the Gartner report useful, and we would not claim to have anywhere near the insight into future growth that Gartner brings to the table. But we have implemented search using many of the Gartner quadrant vendors at Fortune 500 companies, and we have our own real-world opinion of the products in question. It's not that any of the largest vendor products are poorly designed; rather, we feel that customers should buy a solution that fits their current and anticipated needs, fits their budget, and fits the technical skill level of the people tasked with implementing and maintaining the solution.

To this end, we are introducing the 2005 New Idea Engineering Search Capability Matrix, which we don't claim is complete, but which, based on our experience, may help you select the right engine for the job - a process we discuss elsewhere in this month's newsletter..

The Search Capability Matrix

We present the matrix using two diagrams in a similar format. Both organize items into four columns. From left to right: low-end, mid-level, high-end and 3rd-party. “Higher-end” is a composite property that relates to properties like 'capabilities', 'complexity' and 'cost'.

The first chart shown in Figure 1 is a summary of core features that many enterprise search engine customers are concerned with. For brevity, we've consolidated some related feature sets, and omitted some of the less common ones.


Figure 1

As you move to the right, we're referring to higher capabilities, complexity and/or cost. The vertical position on the chart approximates the “commonality” of the feature, or where in the process customers tend to think about each item. The number of documents, for example, is a much more common concern than “federated” and “faceted” search capabilities, both of which we discuss at greater length below.

The second chart in the matrix, shown in Figure 2, lists our approximation of where each vendor lives, with relation to features described in the first chart. As you move to the right, vendors offer more and more features, but at a higher cost and often requiring more technical resources to implement and maintain. The top of the chart lists the 'big players' in the industry, followed by some of the newer candidates, and then by some of the more specialized offering.


Figure 2

Let's take a look at how to read the charts.

Vendor / Feature Matching

Other Sources

Gartner 'Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Search ' is quite well known and respected in the industry, with a focus on 'vision' and 'execution' of product-lines as a whole, versus our focus on specific key features and deployment. Vendors you will see in their discussions which we have not addressed here include Open Text, Thunderstone, iSys, Hummingbird, ZyLAB, Intelliseek, Mercado Software, Entopia, Recommind, iPhrase, Convera, Kanisa, InQuira and EasyAsk.

Hosted Solutions

With regard to hosted search, we see FreeFind, Google, Atomz and Mondosoft. We've made the choice for our site as we mentioned earlier, but all of these vendors can handle many public web sites. And of course, Google and Mondosoft also offer software that can be used within the intranet in the form of a hardware box (Google) or software (Mondosoft).

Third Party Tools

With regard to 3rd party vendors, those selling cross-vendor add-on tools targeted at search engines, we've not seen too many vendors yet. If you've read our newsletter in the past, you know that New Idea Engineering offers cross-vendor search analytic and promotion products. To be fair, some of the web log analysis vendors are starting to address search analytics as well.

Off the Scale

Every now and then we get questions about other vendors, either new players, very small companies, or offshore companies that enjoy market share abroad. Some of them make absolutely outrageous claims, although you never know - a few of those claims might actually turn out to be true. We find most enterprise customers looking for a more stable corporate track record when they select vendors. Nonetheless, some of these players can be very charismatic and convincing, so if they do manage to chat with one of your pointy-haired bosses, you may need to at least sit through their pitch. When in doubt, insist on local references, full evaluation tests, and get the help of an independent business consultant to help you with the selection.

A Note About Lucene

Lucene is an amazing piece of open source search technology created by search guru Doug Cutting. The main site is http://lucene.apache.org, but a search on your favorite engine will return many other links. There is also a related project, Nutch.

However, Lucene is a “toolkit”, not a finished shrink-wrap product. If you or your staff are not Java programmers, this is not the engine for you. Lucene is best suited as an embedded search engine, to be part of another product. It competes with “APIs like Verity's VDK, Ultraseek's XPA and Hummingbird's Fulcrum-based APIs. It is not a stand-alone enterprise search solution, at least not at this time. This is really only marginally an enterprise search solution, and only then for very specific applications.


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