What if there was something a bit more specific that you wanted to search for? In this guide, we will show you some tips and tricks on how to better refine your Google search so as to better surface results that might be more relevant to what you want.
If you’re searching for song lyrics or maybe a line in a book or poem, there are certain words that are too general that might affect the search, such as “and”, “or”, “they”, and so on. If you’re trying to search for a very specific phrase, then that’s where using “quotes” in your search term will make Google search for that exact phrasing.
Using quotes will force Google to only show results with the quoted words or phrases in priority.
So in case ubergizmo.com does not have the articles you were searching for (why, oh why!?), but you’re hoping some other tech publication might have it, you can use the “related:” term.
For example, “related:Ubergizmo.com” and it will try to find similar or related websites. We shouldn’t even tell you how to find competing sites, but we still do, because it will help you.
If you do not find what you’re looking for, chances are you might try searching again using different wordings or phrasings. However, to save you the time from having to do that, you can instead include multiple searches that can act as alternative search terms to bring up more results.
This can be done using “OR”, so for example, you can search for “cars OR trucks for sale”.
Sometimes a webpage may no longer exist or it might have been moved, but thanks to Google’s efforts at archiving and caching the web, you might be able to pull up a cached version of a specific website by typing “cache:” followed by the website’s address.
Say you forgot the name of a company or website that you’re trying to visit, or if you’re not sure if it’s a .net, .org, or .com website. By using “inurl:” followed by the word, Google will list websites that will have the word in its URL. This can be useful if you’re trying to find website addresses that might contain somewhat generic terms.
While there are probably a lot more different ways to refine your search results, we think that this list should contain the tools that most of us would use on a daily basis, so if you did not know about them before, give them a try and maybe you’ll start to find that you are getting search results that are better and more relevant to what you were searching for.