
On 05.25.10, In State of Search, by Aniko Lecoultre
Whenever I type on Google search box, I like to see what Google suggests me. Indeed, sometimes, other users’ searches give me ideas for a better search or, most important, reveals me fresh, rising searches. As Suggest dataset is updated frequently, simply by tapping I can see the aspects users are mostly looking for. In [...]
Whenever I type on Google search box, I like to see what Google suggests me. Indeed, sometimes, other users’ searches give me ideas for a better search or, most important, reveals me fresh, rising searches. As Suggest dataset is updated frequently, simply by tapping I can see the aspects users are mostly looking for.
In the case of clinical trials, this is much more helpful, because the search volume being low, it does not enable the other tools to supply this type of information.
So, let Google suggest us on clinical trials. Putting some suggestions together offers a pretty nice view on what users are really looking for in clinical trials:
This puzzle shows us a diversified interest in clinical trials. Indeed, along with common searches like jobs and training, or with specific searches like trials for different diseases, users search also for aspects like “clinical trials and surveys corp”, “clinical trials and ethics”, “why clinical trials fail”, “why clinical trials are important”,”how clinical trials works”…So, users are looking at clinical trials as a whole, and this is a great news for clinical trials.















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