Search Suggestions Management
Designing the Search Experience of a Corporate Website
Search is no longer a secondary feature on a corporate website. Visitors increasingly bypass navigation menus and go straight to the search bar, while AI systems also rely on search structures to understand corporate information. In this context, search suggestions displayed within the search interface play a critical role in shaping user discovery and guiding attention to key content.
Search Suggestions Management in Corpis is not a simple keyword display feature. It is an operational tool designed to structure search experience and information discovery at the enterprise level.
What Content Managers Need
Corporate website operators across global organizations face recurring challenges:
- Difficulty understanding what visitors are actually searching for
- Important content such as IR, ESG, campaigns, or official notices being buried in search results
- Search functionality existing, but failing to guide users effectively
- Reduced visibility of core corporate information in AI-driven search environments
As a result, organizations need a way to guide users before search results appear, rather than relying solely on post-search ranking.
How Other CMS Platforms Respond — and Their Limitations
| CMS | Feature Availability | Implementation Method | Ease of Use | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adobe Experience Manager | Partial | Custom components or development | Low | Heavy developer dependency |
| Contentful | Partial | External search or customization | Low | Search UX must be designed manually |
| Drupal | Partial | Module-based configuration | Medium | Complex structure, high operational overhead |
| HubSpot CMS Hub | Yes | Marketing-focused search suggestions | Medium | Campaign-oriented, limited for corporate data |
| Joomla | Partial | Plugin-based | Low | Maintenance complexity |
| Sanity | No | Custom implementation required | Low | No built-in discovery layer |
| Shopify Plus | Partial | Product-centered suggestions | Medium | Not suitable for corporate content |
| Squarespace | No | Basic search only | Low | No suggestion control |
| Webflow | No | Limited search capability | Low | Not enterprise-ready |
| WordPress VIP | Partial | Plugin-based | Medium | Quality inconsistency, operational burden |
| Wix | No | Restricted search features | Low | Poor scalability |
Most CMS platforms focus on search results pages, leaving pre-search discovery and guidance outside the scope of operational control.
Corpis Search Suggestions Management
Corpis extends search into a fully manageable operational layer.
- Administrators can manage search suggestions displayed within the site-wide search interface
- Each suggestion can be assigned a clear action type:
- Search Action: Executes a site-wide search using the selected keyword
- Redirect Action: Directs users immediately to a specific landing page (IR, ESG, campaigns, etc.)
- Display order and priority can be controlled without development support
- Changes can be applied and operated in real time
This functionality transforms search from a passive tool into an intentional information guidance mechanism.
Expected Benefits of Using Corpis
- Reduced bounce rates through clearer user navigation paths
- Improved accessibility to IR, ESG, policy, and campaign content
- Search behavior data contributing to content strategy optimization
- Increased likelihood of citation and reference in AI-powered search environments (AEO)
- Search experience becomes a reusable and scalable operational asset
Search is no longer a technical detail. It is a strategic operational capability.
Customer Feedback
- H Enterprise, Communications Team / Website Operations “Search suggestions allowed us to proactively guide users toward the information they need most.”
- D Group, ESG Operations Team / Sustainability Content Management “Access to ESG-related content improved significantly, especially for report pages.”
- K Global, IR Team / Disclosure & Investor Materials “Highlighting IR keywords at the search stage reduced repetitive investor inquiries.”