When search becomes an enterprise applicationFebruary 14, 2006
BearingPoint is to launch a search solutions consultancy and is expected to work with Google Enterprise. BearingPoint's goal is to deliver search applications that can look deeper into corporate data networks and intranets. Google says it has already trained about one-hundred consultants at BearingPoint, in an effort to better deploy its enterprise search appliances. More consultants are training to work within the search practice, which will take its place alongside other focus areas at the firm, including CRM, ERP and security. BearingPoint believes the Google-driven search solutions will be especially sought after in certain vertical industries such as pharmaceuticals, banking, brokerage, high-tech and aerospace, BearingPoint Managing Partner Chris Weitz said. "We've been telling our clients in an advisory role that search is now an application, and if they understand that and start customizing and applying [it] in that way, the mind starts to wander to all the things that can be done," Weitz said. "We believe we'll be quite busy." The solutions likely won't involve the types of lengthy code-writing projects that earlier database search efforts might have demanded, Weitz said. "There needs to be some pointing to the data to make it work most effectively," he added. "We think we're uniquely positioned, given the work we do with enterprises already, to provide those services." For Google, the partnership is the latest element of a concerted, two-year effort to expand its footprint in the corporate world. Google said the business -- it does not break out specific revenue amounts -- doubled during 2005. The search company is clearly benefiting from the fact that Google has become synonymous with search on the Web, and that employees are familiar with the look and feel of Google's search platform. It has attacked the market, rolling out numerous search appliance products -- including the small-business-aimed Google Mini -- and last year opened a program to train partners and technology service providers to deliver its search solutions to enterprises. BearingPoint joined that partner program and increasingly ramped up its training levels before finally striking the partnership with Google. "We saw an opportunity to be an early mover here," Weitz said. "We're making a major commitment to this because we believe there's deep demand here." In most cases, Google's products can be up and running and returning results in a matter of hours, but the company recognizes that it is going to take more work to get to the point where enterprise searches are as vigorous as the Google.com Web search, said Dave Girouard, general manager of Google Enterprise. "There really needs to be a lot of thought to make that happen," he said. "In most cases, that involves a lot of legacy systems. Google just doesn't have the professional services capability to help every enterprise customer get to that point. "No top-tier consultancy has a search practice, so this is a big deal for the industry as well as for Google," he added. Many enterprise customers have had their notions of how search should function changed by the Web and by Google.com, Weitz said. This so-called consumerization of enterprise search can happen, but only through careful integration of legacy systems, customized application plug-ins and other on-the-ground assistance, he added. In the deal, the financial terms of which were not disclosed, Google gains a high-profile partner and almost instant cache within large enterprises, including the top 100 companies in key fields such as pharmaceuticals and financial services, where enterprises are eager to better leverage the data they already have. An example of a search deployment may be a pharmaceutical company that lets doctors conduct searches of its database, Weitz said. "They may be able to get to a point where a doctor can do a search by symptom type and find the various treatments." The practice is slated for a worldwide launch. "It's a fast ramp and a wide ramp," Girouard said. "We know the demand is out there already." "We want to get to a point where BearingPoint is able to train its own people," he added. "We recognize the rate we're training them at now may not be enough." Source: eCommerce Times
Increase your site traffic with a
paid inclusion
program
![]() Read Serge Thibodeau's daily blogs on search engines at Serge Thibodeau Live. We strongly suggest you bookmark our web site by clicking here. Get your business or company listed in the Global Business Listing directory and increase your business. It takes less then 24 hours to get a premium listing in the most powerful business search engine there is. Click here to find out all about it. Rank for $ales strongly recommends the use of WordTracker to effectively identify all your right industry keywords. Accurate identification of the right keywords and key phrases used in your industry is the first basic step in any serious search engine optimization program. Click here to start your keyword and key phrase research.
You can link to the Rank for Sales web site as much as you like. Read our section on how your company can participate in our reciprocal link exchange program and increase your rankings in all the major search engines such as Google, AltaVista, Yahoo and all the others. Sponsered by Link Rent Sponsored by Avantex Traffic stats by Site Clicks™Site design by Mtl. Web D. Sponsored by Press Broadcast Sponsored by Blog Hosting.ca
Home | SEO Tips | SEO Myths | FAQ | SEO News | Articles | Sitemap | Contact Copyright © Rank for Sales. Terms of use Privacy agreement Legal disclaimer Ce site est disponible en Français |