can click through to see the complete results. This would allow them to monitor new sites of interest for keywords they often search on. It should be possible to set this up to only show the new results.
It would also be useful to be able to monitor commonly used sites to see if new content has been added to the site.
Finally, information aggregators should provide help in packaging the results of the project for the client. Export tools should be provided to allow the contents of the knowledge base to be edited in a word processor, for example. It should be as easy as possible to get the information out of the information aggregator into a form that the client would like to see it.
This area of packaging also presents an opportunity. Professional online researchers are always looking for ways to add extra value in the package they give to their clients. One idea is to provide the clients with "active" reports, that is, reports that automatically will provide updated information after they are delivered. Static reports produced with a word processor are a snapshot of the information at a particular point in time. An active report provides this same snapshot view but also has elements that can change over time from feeds.
These active reports will require the client to have their own tool to read the reports and to access the updated information. Some clients will have their own information aggregators. The researcher can then export parts of their knowledge base and the client can import it. Some information could be exported in a standard format like RSS so that the client can use any RSS reader they like. For more extensive active reports, the client will need some kind of package reader. This reader should be free, similar to how the Adobe Reader allows the reading of PDF files.
So the researcher could create an active report or information package using their information aggregator. They would deliver this to their client with a free information package reader that would allow them to receive the updated information. The information package could contain the knowledge base generated for the project along with pages that automatically update. The online researcher in this case becomes an "information package developer".
For clients who do not want to commit to a particular package reader, some of the active content can be exported as HTML pages that could be read by their Web browser and some as RSS feeds that could be read by any RSS reader. But to get the most active versions they would need to use a particular reader.
Many clients will prefer to continue to get their static reports. The information aggregator will still be there to help the information professionals produce these static reports as well as the active reports.
This article presents a target view of features for information aggregators that could be useful to online researchers. Some of these features are available in current products. Others will evolve over time. The bottom line is that information aggregators can be a great tool for online researchers.
About The Author
Ron Tower is the President of Sugarloaf Software and is the developer of Personal Watchkeeper, an information aggregator supporting a variety of ways to summarize the Web.
http://www.sugarloafsw.com