Incorporating multiple sources of content

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Jahangir147
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Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 6:36 am

Incorporating multiple sources of content

Post by Jahangir147 »

The index connector feature within Search & Promote allows you to define a third party xml feed, xml file, or comma/tab delineated file as an alternate source of content to be crawled.

The IT at Murdoch team were able to provide us an xml feed out of the A-Z index which allowed the Search & Promote crawler to include each entry/link within the feed in its scheduled crawls, together with custom mappings for each tag within the entries to predefined custom metatags;

Screenshot of the raw A-Z XML feed

Not only were we able to crawl the feed and include all the authenticated content as separate entries (‘restricted’ in the above screenshots), but we were able to alter the look and feel of the specific A-Z results within the wider search results, and account for a lack of description within the feed.

The side-effect that we hadn’t counted on, but worked to our turkey email list 5 million contact leads benefit, is that the A-Z index had entries for related non-Murdoch sites that were still of value to staff and students.

By having entries for the non-Murdoch sites in the A-Z as wayfinders, we didn’t need to crawl the actual sites themselves. This resulted in a significant reduction in the number of sites/pages we needed to organically crawl, while still providing our audience with a complete set of search results.

Using this same index connector functionality we were also able to incorporate the university’s campus directory listings via a new xml feed; whereas with the A-Z feed we only wanted to incorporate the results within the wider results set, we wanted results from the campus directory to always be the first results and be displayed in a table format, but more on the styling and positioning of these multiple content sources later.

Allowing for cyclical requests to ensure the most relevant results appear
In my previous post on Search & Promote, one of the key advantages the product had over its competitors was the ability to natively integrate with SiteCatalyst.

Via SiteCatalyst we already knew that our internal search terms follow highly cyclical patterns as our student (and staff) needs change over the semester. For example, the term ‘timetable’ is searched for throughout the semester, however the anticipated result changes as the semester progresses. At the beginning of semester, people are looking at for their semester timetable and towards the end their exam timetable.

In the past we’ve used custom coded mechanisms to help staff and students find what they’re looking for, however with Search & Promote we can take that to a whole new level!

Search & Promote allows you to define a data source within SiteCatalyst, in our case Global Production > Page Views, and then add ranking weight based on those values – the higher the weight, the higher the impact the SiteCatalyst data will have over your search results.

We defined s.prop41 under our Global Production suite in SiteCatalyst as SearchPromoteURL, and then used it to cross reference the Search & Promote crawled URLs with the associated Page Views data in SiteCatalyst;
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