IT Week: As managing director of enterprise search vendor Exalead,
how do you ensure that your company stands out in what is in an increasingly
competitive market?
Raymond Bentinck: We realised that enterprise search is currently too
complex, expensive and hard to deploy. We took our inspiration from Oracle’s
three-tier model [database, application server, client], which allows third
parties to add applications in a way that is simpler to maintain and less costly
to deploy. We see ourselves as doing to the search market what Oracle did to the
database market. We also developed a whole new language, which means we can put
the technology in very quickly, and a large proportion of our customers don’t
need professional services from us. Most of the capabilities are out of the box,
but the products can scale from the smallest to the largest implementations an
unlimited number of documents, queries or servers and are all based on one
platform.
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What is the difference between web and enterprise search?
They are different models and the key to this difference is the authority of
the content. On the web you form an implicit judgment of the content based on
the URL or source. When dealing with enterprise search, you take the content at
face value, but when you are searching with only one or two terms, as people are
conditioned to do, it’s quite a tall order [returning relevant results]. We try
to hold a dialogue with the user so that we present them with the results but
then give them all the facets of that information too.
What are customers looking for in an enterprise search
engine?
The amount of information is growing. Their internal content on servers and
desktops is increasing and they have requirements beyond the firewall, to
connect to third parties and to have a universal way of searching for it. They
also want different views for different users or groups of users. Another driver
is business intelligence (BI), as it doesn’t provide firms with the flexibility
that search does.
How can search help firms maximise their BI investments?
BI never really lived up to its potential but search allows people to run the
reports they need and put all the intelligence at the back end. The data
warehouse is really just an index, but in our indexing environment it takes
about a month to build, rather than 12.
How important is security to enterprise search?
It’s vital. Basically, you have various repositories email archives,
databases and so on and access to them is secured at various group levels. You
should never be presented with search results that a particular repository would
normally not allow you to see, because you could infer meaning even from the
search result.
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