Jun 12
28
Too Long; Didn’t Listen (TL;DL): The Gist of Webcology #203 – With DuckDuckGo founder Gabriel Weinberg
This week, Webcology was able to snag the affable and thoroughly knowledgably Gabriel Weinberg, founder of everyoneâs favourite dark horse search engine, Duckduckgo.com. Joining co-hosts Jim Hedger and Dave Davies for 40 minutes, Gabriel was kind enough to answer any question that was thrown in his direction.
The following are some of the questions and salient points of the interview. Note: unless otherwise noted, the answers are not direct quotes, but summations.
Why would you start a search engine?
For personal interest â didnât like the increased amount of irrelevant links that would pop up, or the lack of use of structured content, and far too cluttered. Gabriel didnât intend to start a ârealâ search engine.
Did you have any expectations of user growth?
Nope â thought there was room to go where the big search engines donât â but people took to the concept, so they added more user-focused aspects, like privacy, and a lack of clutter.
Why is privacy so important?
Gabriel didnât know much about it when he started, as he was more interested in the tech side of building a SE. But privacy advocates started asking questions, and once it was researched, he found it âcreepyâ to have peoplesâ private info, and rather than be sucked into a cycle he didnât want to be involved in, he chose to dump customer info.
How do you ensure relevant results?
Privacy is a good reason for people to try, but good results gets them to stay â this is done through less spam/clutter and nicer look and feel. More and better instant answers are the relevant issues to users.
What does SEOs need to do to get placement?
Thereâs no easy answer, but get good quality. As a hybrid engine, they have their own indexes, but they use others.
The goal is not a goal to be a Google killer, but to be a unique alternative.
What is search? Whatâs important to your users?
Search is getting info as fast as possible with least mental effort. Main problem with Googlesâ SERPs was that they werenât that readable, showing a lot of irrelevant information in the descriptions led to a lot of back and forth clicking. Simplify it with structured content, so you can process it without as much mental effort.
Why is structured content better for search?
Using the tofu ginger recipe analogy, allowing the site structure to determine the nature of the query actually improves search results, as it identifies the inherent need of the user and gives a better user experience.
Do DDG take data from ODP?
They were, but stopped as it was becoming stagnant.
Are DDG tempted to move away from absolute privacy if it affects the financials?
NO â itâs core to what theyâre doing. Revenue is tied to intent, so itâs not much of a concern.
Mobile search â any plans to get into emerging platforms?
They have apps for android and IOS, But theyâre unique to platform. They plan to release something before the end of year. Instant answers belong on top!
How do they market themselves?
50% word of mouth
25% marketing â the privacy issue has been a huge opportunity for this
25% interviews
Considering how they scale, itâs impressive considering they only have 5 FT employees â their hybrid approach helps with this.
What is a âgoodieâ?
Instant answers, called goodies as they generally happen serendipitously.
Where did DDG name come from? Is it something weâre supposed to get? Does the nameâs irreverence impede success?
Thereâs nothing youâre supposed to get. Just came to mind one day, and Gabriel just liked it. No focus group. It doesnât seem to affect its success â people resonate with irreverence. And it IS memorable.