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Sharepoint 2010 : The Search User Interface - The People Search Page (part 3) - Expertise Search, The Preferences Page

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Expertise Search

SharePoint has one final and extremely interesting feature in SharePoint 2010 People Search. Users now have the ability to execute an expertise search for themselves with a special set of content. Expertise search, which is more commonly refered to as “vanity search,” is similar to “googling yourself.” In a strong effort to build out the social networking features in SharePoint 2010, when a user searches for his or her own profile, a few unique features are returned in addition to the standard People result content. These features can be seen in Figure 8.

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Figure 8. Vanity search result

When viewing your own People search result, you can find your About Me and Ask Me About “blurbs” to the right of the result. The “About Me” section is where you can provide a personal description of yourself. The “Ask Me About” section tells people about your interests, skills, responsibilities, and business specialties. Both of these sections are essentially an elevator pitch of yourself to all other SharePoint users. Keeping this information up to date is essential for organizations that rely on SharePoint to connect people with each other. If your profile is out of date, then other users may contact you about projects you are no longer involed with or may not be able to find you for the project you are currently working on. The content for both these sections can be edited on your MySite profile.

When returning your own People search profile as a result, you will also be presented with a uniqe box below the result. This box, conveniently titled “Help people find me”, contains a few helpful tools and information to aid other SharePoint users in connecting to your profile. On the left side of this box is a link titled “Update My Profile”, which lands on your My Profile edit page. Below this link are the statistics on the number of times other SharePoint users executed searches that returned your profile as a result. Statistics are presented for searches over the last month and the last week by default.

The right column of the “Help people find me” box is headed by another link to your My Profile edit page titled “Update My Keywords”. Just like document searching, keywords are structured properties that SharePoint uses to connect search queries to relevant results. Consequently, creating accurate keywords for your user profile will help other users return your profile in their search results when appropriate. Keeping your keywords up-to-date is an easy way to improve your profile's relevancy. To aid in this keyword creation, an overview of the keywords that other users have entered that led to your profile are presented below the “Update My Keywords” link.

The Preferences Page

The final link that can be selected next to the query field on both the All Sites and People search pages is the Preferences page. This page allows users to set user profile-specific settings for searching such as whether search suggestions appear and the languages that are used. The user-selected settings made on this site are applied to a user's entire SharePoint search experience, disregarding which computer the user uses to access SharePoint. Settings are tied to a user profile and not an IP address and are the same across all web applications. The Preferences page is accessed by clicking the Preferences link to the right of the search field (Figure 9).

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Figure 9. Preferences page link location

After clicking the Preferences link, the user is navigated to the Preferences page, shown in Figure 10. The Search Suggestions setting enables or disables search suggestions from the search box for the current user. This is especially useful if the user accesses the search box via the Internet on a connection with high latency. This would in some cases cause significant delay when showing search suggestions or otherwise disturb the user experience of the page—the reason being the round-trip between client and server is taking too long when entering text into the search box.

The Language setting in the Preferences page is used to define the stemmers and word breakers used for searching. Since different languages include different stemmers and word breakers, specifying the set that SharePoint utilizes, if more than one is available, can help to provide increased relevance to users searching on international installations.

 Note Manually selecting languages helps overcome the problem in MOSS 2007, where the current browser language setting would dictate which stemmer and word breaker were used. Modifying the preferences overrides the browser language setting, thus providing a solution to this problem.

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Figure 10. Preferences page

The user can turn search suggestions on and off for the logged-in user profile by checking and unchecking the check box. This setting is ignored if Search Suggestions are turned off on the Search Box Web Part. To specify specific languages to be applied to the search query, the user can select the radio button next to “Search using the following languages”. The user can select up to five languages to use during search for the logged-in user profile by checking and unchecking the corresponding check boxes.

Other  
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : The Search User Interface - The Advanced Search Page (part 2) - Picking Property Restrictions
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : The Search User Interface - The Advanced Search Page (part 1) - Keywords on the Advanced Search Page
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : The Search User Interface - Search Query Syntax - Property Restrictions
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : The Search User Interface - Search Query Syntax - Search Query Operators
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : Creating a Workflow Using SharePoint Designer
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : Creating a Workflow Using Visual Studio 2010 - Using the Visual Studio Workflow Designer (part 2)
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : Creating a Workflow Using Visual Studio 2010 - Using the Visual Studio Workflow Designer (part 1)
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : Creating a Pluggable Workflow Service (part 6) - Calling a SharePoint-Hosted WCF Service
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : Creating a Pluggable Workflow Service (part 5) - Calling a WCF Service, Receiving WCF Messages , Raising Events in a Workflow Service, Configuring Pluggable Workflow Services
  •  Sharepoint 2010 : Creating a Pluggable Workflow Service (part 4) - Using the ExternalDataExchange Attribute, Deriving from SPWorkflowExternalDataExchangeService
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