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With the advent of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies enabling services such as Alexa, Google search, and self-driving cars, the next generation of search is about AI-powered search. In the past, text entered in a search box produced similar results for most users. Now, developments in AI have made it possible to produce more-relevant results that are adjusted in real time based on factors such as browsing history, the intent commonly associated with the words used, and high-performing content from similar searches. AI-powered search has the potential to give your site users exactly what they want, which in turn, can contribute to helping you meet your business goals for greater customer satisfaction, higher conversion rates, and increased revenue.
But what, exactly, does AI-powered site search mean? And why is it important for businesses to pay attention?
With 74% of people likely to switch brands if they find a company’s purchasing experience too difficult, and with those who conduct searches twice as likely to convert, site search has become a crucial element of the customer experience. Simply put, a site search solution makes content on your site easy to find, which leads to greater customer satisfaction and higher user engagement with your company.
While excellent search has become a differentiator for companies, it’s a need that has grown in complexity. Thanks to sites like Netflix and Pinterest, consumers have high expectations for receiving instantaneous, personalized content. AI-powered search can help bridge the gap between users’ expectations and the search experiences that they find lacking.
Artificial intelligence is a branch of computing that mimics human intelligence and can learn from and adapt to data input. With AI-powered search, the platform learns from data on users to automatically generate the most accurate and relevant search experiences. This learning, done in real time, leads to the tuning of results in the background as the person searches. The refinement is based on multiple factors programmed into the AI system, such as the person’s past purchases, common spelling errors, and the intent behind the language in the query.
While many of these factors can be manually accounted for or coded into a search platform, the AI part reflects the ability of these tasks to be accomplished at scale without human intervention. In addition, intelligent machines can make system adjustments for accuracy and relevance, and improve — or learn like a human — over time.
AI-powered search is behind the scenes on sites such as Pinterest, where AI learns from millions of image-based searches that people conduct each month. With more than 320 million active users and billions of “pins,” the company has a wealth of data, which it feeds through a deep learning model to understand the intents behind searches and surface personalized results for each person. For example, a search for “diy kitchen cabinets” returns results ranging from “How to build your own cabinets” to “Before and after kitchen transformations.” As the user clicks on more pins, the model better understands their intent and their search results narrow.
When applied to search, AI usually refers to the subsets of machine learning and natural-language processing (NLP) to determine the intent behind a search and return what the user wants.
Understanding and appropriately responding to the ways humans talk is a huge challenge for machines because of the unstructured nature and diversity of human speech. In conversation, we use synonyms such as “hot chili” and “spicy chili.” We use ambiguous terms, saying things like “Who crushed it at the Grammys?”
With NLP, computers are able to detect language patterns and identify relationships between words to understand what people truly want. NLP is at the heart of voice assistants like Alexa and Siri, and it is why Google trained its AI to be more conversational by having the intelligence engine read 2,865 romance novels.
In order for computer programs to automatically act on their understanding of human language and provide responses that improve in time, machine learning is required. Machine learning is the science of getting machines to perform actions without explicitly being programmed using mathematical formulas. A machine analyzes data fed into the system and continuously finds patterns and connections in it using algorithms, performing tasks that would take a human team weeks or years. These tasks might include recommending books, based on similar users’ purchases, to someone who searches for “best political biographies,” and automatically detecting common spelling errors, such as the one in “easy zuchini bread recipe,” and then compensating for these errors in search results.
The ways people search and their expectations around interactions with machines are changing rapidly, and AI-powered search is playing a central role.
A search for “best hand sanitizers” in 2021 gets you recommendations for products effective against COVID-19 without your needing to specify anything else, which is vastly different compared with what you would have received in 2019. Understanding a searcher’s intent through the query’s contextual meaning, rather than relying on the exact words a person enters, is the domain of semantic search. As search engines get better at understanding the meanings of queries and people discover the ease of using search engines, their expectations are changing. AI-powered semantic search with NLP and machine learning means that a search can function independently and return even more relevant results.
Search is increasingly going beyond text-based input, with voice and visual search rapidly becoming the preferred way to search on mobile and opening up more avenues for using AI-powered search. Gartner predicts that 70% of customer interactions will start with speech through smart speakers and assistants by 2023. With advances in computer vision, coupled with machine learning, computers can interpret what they “see” in an image to perform a visual search.
The ability of computers to understand conversational language, which is largely what comprises voice search, is also quickly improving with AI. For example, you could ask your mobile device, “What is Justin Timberlake’s latest song?” and add “Play it” without needing to specify what you mean by “it.”
This trend is particularly evident among the Gen Z and Millennial populations, which are highly dependent on their mobile devices for ecommerce shopping. A ViSenze survey found that 62% of consumers in these groups want to be able to conduct visual searches (use images rather than text). And yet, according to another survey, 72% of marketers had no plans to optimize for visual search, and only 35% were planning to optimize for voice search in the next year, potentially presenting opportunities for companies that want to get ahead of their competitors.
Retailer Forever 21 took advantage of this trend, launching an AI-powered visual search tool that allows people to shop for clothing based on photos they’ve snapped. Among shoppers who used visual search, the company reported a 20% increase in conversions in the first month.
Visual and voice searching on mobile is likely to only grow in popularity. Companies that experiment now with supporting these modes through AI will be in a better position to serve their customers and reap the attendant financial rewards.
As more use cases and opportunities for AI in search become apparent, the benefits of AI-powered search for businesses in day-to-day interactions with users are becoming clear:
At Algolia, we want to see our customers provide their users with the best possible search and discovery experiences. We introduced Algolia NeuralSearch, an AI-native SaaS-based solution that allows you to take advantage of AI-powered search within your existing stack while retaining the flexibility to control and tailor the search experience in order to reach your business goals. Algolia NeuralSearch can improve your understanding of your users and their intents, and then utilize the data to deliver the most relevant, personalized search experiences.
NeuralSearch can help you:
Learn more about AI search in this ebook.
Embracing AI: Challenges and opportunities for the CTO
From keywords to conversions: Get ready for AI-powered search
AI-powered search: the next ecommerce growth drive
Editor’s note: This post was updated on May 30, 2023
VP Corporate Marketing
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