What is ecommerce merchandising? Key components and best practices
A potential customer is about to land on the home page of your ecommerce platform, curious to see what cool ...
Search and Discovery writer
A potential customer is about to land on the home page of your ecommerce platform, curious to see what cool ...
Search and Discovery writer
By now, everyone’s had the opportunity to experiment with AI tools like ChatGPT or Midjourney and ponder their inner ...
Director, Product Marketing
Search has been around for a while, to the point that it is now considered a standard requirement in many ...
Senior Machine Learning Engineer
With the advent of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies enabling services such as Alexa, Google search, and self-driving cars, the ...
VP Corporate Marketing
It’s no secret that B2B (business-to-business) transactions have largely migrated online. According to Gartner, by 2025, 80 ...
Sr. SEO Web Digital Marketing Manager
Twice a year, B2B Online brings together industry leaders to discuss the trends affecting the B2B ecommerce industry. At the ...
Director of Product Marketing & Strategy
This is Part 2 of a series that dives into the transformational journey made by digital merchandising to drive positive ...
Benoit Reulier &
Reshma Iyer
Get ready for the ride: online shopping is about to be completely upended by AI. Over the past few years ...
Director, User Experience & UI Platform
Remember life before online shopping? When you had to actually leave the house for a brick-and-mortar store to ...
Search and Discovery writer
If you imagine pushing a virtual shopping cart down the aisles of an online store, or browsing items in an ...
Sr. SEO Web Digital Marketing Manager
Remember the world before the convenience of online commerce? Before the pandemic, before the proliferation of ecommerce sites, when the ...
Search and Discovery writer
Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer just the stuff of scary futuristic movies; it’s recently burst into the headlines ...
Search and Discovery writer
Imagine you are the CTO of a company that has just undergone a massive decade long digital transformation. You’ve ...
CTO @Algolia
Did you know that the tiny search bar at the top of many ecommerce sites can offer an outsized return ...
Director, Digital Marketing
Artificial intelligence (AI) has quickly moved from hot topic to everyday life. Now, ecommerce businesses are beginning to clearly see ...
VP of Product
We couldn’t be more excited to announce the availability of our breakthrough product, Algolia NeuralSearch. The world has stepped ...
Chief Executive Officer and Board Member at Algolia
The ecommerce industry has experienced steady and reliable growth over the last 20 years (albeit interrupted briefly by a global ...
CTO @Algolia
As an ecommerce professional, you know the importance of providing a five-star search experience on your site or in ...
Sr. SEO Web Digital Marketing Manager
May 20th 2020 product
Relevant search results are paramount for creating a rewarding search journey that feels personalized and thoughtful. Today’s users search from many different devices with different restrictions, so having a strategy to get users the best results as quickly as possible is key. With many people searching on the go, search tools and features that serve the unique needs of mobile users are particularly important for reaching business goals and improving the user experience.
In this article, we’ll discuss the ways geo search or location-based search can bring increased relevance to the search and discovery experience on your site or app.
Geo search, also referred to as location-based search or local search, gives users specific results based on a particular location. A person may use location-based search to find nearby businesses or services, often through sites like Google or Yelp. Alternatively, businesses can enable geo search on their sites or apps to allow users to find relevant results based on the user’s location.
From restaurants, social media, and search engines to entertainment, banking, and personal care sites, many businesses benefit from providing users with location-specific results.
As Google Maps, Apple Maps and other services have become standard for seamlessly locating things, location-based search has become a user expectation.
Additionally, with the huge increase in online shopping, consumers often start shopping from mobile devices. Using the phone as a browsing tool, they then proceed to make purchases in brick-and-mortar stores. For other use cases as well, people use geo search for research purposes with the intent to take action in person.
Google’s own research makes a strong case for the link between geo search and mobile use:
If you have a business with both a physical location and an online presence, you need to have geo search. Customers want to know what products and services are close and readily available, and geo search bridges the gap between your online presence and physical location. If your business doesn’t provide this, you are missing out on capturing valuable business.
Implementing geo search on your internal search depends primarily on your search provider.
If your search-as-a-service provider is Algolia, it’s as simple as adding the `_geoloc` attribute with the given latitude and longitude:
"_geoloc": {
"lat": 40.639751,
"lng": -73.778925
}
If you don’t have a search provider with geo search available out-of-the-box, you may need to obtain a third-party wrapper. Unfortunately, this will likely be a tedious implementation process as the vendor will need to model your data, and you might need to drastically change the schema of your database.
Here are two key ways you can use geo search in your overall search and discovery strategy:
Forward-thinking brands know the importance of integrating and connecting the customer’s experience across different platforms and locations, including apps, brick-and-mortar stores, sites, and anywhere else consumers can interact with the brand. A comprehensive omnichannel retail strategy is all about creating a unified experience, and geo search is a great tool to help you bridge these different platforms.
For an e-commerce retailer, this might look, but is not limited to, allowing online users to search for products at locations near them. The possibilities for implementing geo search in your omnichannel strategy are only limited by your creativity and knowledge. The better you understand how your users prefer to shop and what you can add to improve their experience, the better the experience you can provide. Serving location-based results strengthens and expands their engagement with your brand.
Whether it’s rentable scooters and bikes, food delivery, rental car pickup and dropoff, or something else entirely, real-time data is paramount for some business models. Customers need relevant and accurate geo data to figure out where to find what they need, and businesses need to be able to track valuable assets.
Often companies like car rental services have trouble updating and maintaining databases of car location data. With a geo search tool that’s part of a robust search engine, this whole process can be seamless. Data is updated quickly, and customers and business users can search with a speed and agility that keeps operations running smoothly.
Geo search can be a great tool to supercharge your search strategy and layer location-based context on search results. If you’re fine-tuning your search geostrategy, you need a partner who can work with your use case. From geo search to Instant Search, Algolia provides the UI and backend search components you need to create an effective search out-of-the-box without using significant development resources.
To learn more about designing a search that meets and exceeds your users needs, read our eBook “7 ways to get more out of Algolia search.”
Assess your search experience in less than 5 minutes.
Powered by Algolia Recommend