The process is so simple. Add a snippet of mindlessly easy HTML code to your Web site's search page and then have Picosearch index your site. You can design your site's search page so that it blends into the rest of your site and set other options. Regardless, your site's visitors will be able to search your site within minutes of beginning to set up your personal search engine.
My own site is sufficiently large and complex that I added a search engine. My client's site is so easy to navigate that adding a search engine that would detour visitors to a search page would mostly just take them away from the site' content not a good thing.
Picosearch reports the search terms used by your site visitors. These reports almost tempt me to remove the search feature from my own Web site. My visitors tend to be techie-savvy and literate, but more often than not they enter search terms that miss the mark so widely that they probably never find site content that meets their needs.
Picosearch offers both manual and automatic reindexing of your site's documents. When I add significant content to a site, I usually manually reindex the site right away. Doing so is as easy as entering my account number or email address plus a password, followed by a couple of mouse clicks. Otherwise, I let the automatic reindexing do its thing. However, if I haven't added content to my site in awhile, automatic reindexing seems to go away until I reset Picosearch options.
One thing I like most about Picosearch is the power that it offers more technically proficient site visitors. As a simple example, visitors who are tracking down one of my books and know the exact title can zero into the right Web pages by enclosing the title in quotation marks, while others can enter a not-so-precise phrase and still find on-target results. I added a few hints to my visitors about how to use features like this one.
Rarely is there a free lunch. But in the case of Picosearch and competitors in this category including FreeFind and Google Site Search, the price is cheap enough for many of us. For Picosearch, that price is sponsored links on the search results page that your visitors see. These text-only links are clearly marked and reasonably few, though they often have little or nothing to do with a visitor's search of your site despite their personalized wording that attempt to tie the search term to sponsored destinations.
Whether you are willing to accept sponsored links or are willing to pay to avoid them, Picosearch is best of breed in the personal-site search engines these days..
J.W. Olsen has been a full-time IT author, columnist, editor, and freelance book project manager with more than 1000 editorial credits since 1990, and has provided computer, Web site, and editorial services to clients since 1985. He welcomes feedback via the response form at www.jwolsen.com.
Picosearch
Picosearch LLC
www.picosearch.com
Price: Free
Summary: Give visitors to your Web site a powerful search feature for free
Stay connected and informed by visiting our Enterprise IT Community!

Become a member today for instant access to free InformationWeek research, expert advice, peer perspectives, and more on the following topics:
- Application Performance Management (APM)
- Security Management
- Mainframe 2.0
- IT Automation
- Service Assurance
Also, visit our Government, Retail and Financial Services groups to see how these technologies apply specifically to those industries.
NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.