microsoft search
129 TopicsCreating custom search results pages in SharePoint Online
We’re excited to announce that you can now create custom search results pages in SharePoint Online, extending the benefits and flexibility of Microsoft Search so you can make it your own. With custom results pages you can create a new page that can be used to control the layout and design of search results to support your custom needs and now use open-source search web parts from SharePoint Patterns and Practices community, as well as any custom web parts that you may have developed using SharePoint Framework. PnP modern search web parts Custom search results pages with SharePoint Online will be displayed when searching through the native search box, instead of the out of box search results page. NOTE Custom results pages will only be displayed when searching through the modern search box(Microsoft Search). This capability is rolling out WW. A visual queue that Microsoft Search is available in your tenant is the move of the search box from the app or service canvas to the suite navigation bar (header). Modern search box in the suite navigation bar The custom search results page will be used in the same scenarios that were showing the site search results page (when you enter search from site pages, or the home page of the site for example). It will not be in effect when you are searching within a list, library or the site contents page. You may use the link to expand your search from search results in these experiences to get to the custom results page. To configure a custom results page in SharePoint Online follow the steps below: Browse to the site where you would like to configure a custom results page and select Site Collection Settings, Search Settings. In Search Settings, choose to “Send queries to a custom results page”, and provide a value for Results page URL: and save your changes. Configuring the custom results page in SharePoint Optionally you can use PnP-PowerShell to configure the custom results page as follows: Set-PnPSearchSettings -SearchPageUrl "https://tenant.sharepoint.com/..." Learn more about this command at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/sharepoint-pnp/set-pnpsearchsettings?view=sharepoint-ps. . NOTE The custom results page needs to be on the same domain as your site, but doesn’t have to be in the same site collection. In addition to this update, we’re also introducing a new page layout for custom search results pages that can optionally be used to make the search results page appear closer to our out of box search results experience. This new layout can only be active for the pages that are set to be the custom search results page. To learn more about custom results page, check out our Ignite 2019 Search Customization and Development session and bookmark Microsoft Search on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-d4Q5pvRf6IVJuWY8wpAFw/. Resources For open source projects, getting started with our Microsoft Search APIs, and more customization and extensibility samples, visit Microsoft Search on GitHub at https://github.com/microsoft-search. Keep up to date with Microsoft Search on our resource center at https://aka.ms/microsoftsearch and follow us on Twitter @MicrosoftSearch. If you would like to leave feedback to our teams on Microsoft Search visit https://microsoftsearch.uservoice.com. We’re listening!92KViews13likes42CommentsWhat’s new for Microsoft Search – Ignite 2020 Edition
Posted at aka.ms/MicrosoftSearch/Ignite2020 Haven't had a chance to catch up or missed our sessions? Don’t worry, we’ll precap and recap all of the latest news and announcements for Microsoft Search here. Looking for our sessions? Visit https://aka.ms/MicrosoftSearch/Ignite2020/LearnMore. Click here to jump ahead. On the go? You can download this post as a .pdf at https://aka.ms/MicrosoftSearch/Ignite2020/DownloadBlog. NOTE Unless otherwise noted, features and capabilities will be available in H2 CY20. Have you ever misplaced something? Maybe it was your car keys, your favorite jewelry, or something else… The typical process you go through is probably something like this – you ask yourself the question, “where did I put my keys” and then walk backward from where you last went, which rooms you were last in, the last you did perhaps.. That process is synonymous with a traditional search experience, a query and continuous refining of the query until you find what you were looking for – while this process may work for you on one occasion, it’s not consistent enough to be valuable in the future, and what if the keys you’re looking for, aren’t the ones you misplaced, but those of a roommate, partner, or someone else? This is why search needs to evolve, to become more personal, more context aware, more precise, and more available, so wherever you are, whatever it is, you can find it the first time, with minimal effort, and precision. Microsoft Search is the evolution of search, smarter search to help you stay in touch with what’s important and trending around you in Microsoft 365 and your connected systems. Today we announced several new capabilities coming to Microsoft Search in the next few months to make search more intelligent, more productive, and more precise. New Search Features People-centric search Microsoft Search has always put people first and at the center of search… usually when you’re searching for information, you work from its edges to its center, in the same way we may build a puzzle. The strength of Microsoft Search is that it allows you to find that information from the center, the person, outward. It’s people who create and curate knowledge, and we believe that allowing you to anchor on that person, their knowledge, and solve the information puzzle working outward, delivers greater precision, and a more delightful experience – because sometimes the answer you’re looking for isn’t found through a document, it’s found through a person. People centric search allows you to scope and refine your searches, precisely, to an individual to allow you to harness your organizations collective knowledge. Find skills and expertise In the same way we allow you to find what you need through individual knowledge, we are expanding that experience to allow you to not only find information, but also insights and expertise. The ability to find skills and expertise lets you home in on the individual talent in your organization to find the experts that can best help you solve a problem or complete a task. For example, for a marketing campaign, you may want to know who in your company has expertise in social media or perhaps event production. With Microsoft Search, you’ll simply be able to ask, “who knows about social media” or “experts in event production”. Using our machine learning algorithms, Microsoft Search can identify expertise, not only based on self-attestation – or adding skills to your own profile, but also through content understanding, through reasoning over email and documents to identify areas of expertise a person may possess based on collaborative patterns and then suggest to that person to add those discoveries to their profile. This helps keep up to date the evolving nature of knowledge of the individuals in your organization. Power BI search Power BI is the Magic Quadrant Leader among analytics and business intelligence platforms and over 200,000 customers around the world use Power BI and bring 40 petabytes of data into Power BI every month and now we’re making it easier to find Power BI artifacts such as reports and dashboards, by expanding the ability to search across these artifacts in SharePoint and Office.com in addition to Bing. -Source https://powerbi.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/microsoft-named-a-leader-in-gartners-2020-magic-quadrant-for-analytics-and-bi-platforms/ Conversation search Everywhere we look and everywhere we work, we’ll find information – and sometimes this can be overwhelming when we’re trying to put it all into context. Now we’re making it easier to find what you need, across the apps and services you’re using, where you’re working by surfacing Teams, Yammer, and Outlook conversation results in SharePoint and Office.com through a new Conversations vertical to make it easier for you to search once, across all of your organizations information. Image search Leonardo da Vinci wrote that a poet would be "overcome by sleep and hunger before [being able to] describe with words what a painter is able to [depict] in an instant." Now in Microsoft Search across SharePoint and Office.com you’ll be able to precisely find what a painter is able to depict in an instant with new image search. Improved filter design and new filters New out of the box filters will make it easier to find what you need, whether a file, presentation, page, or something else in addition to precisely searching for the most up-to-date . And stay tuned for being able to use your own filters based on the refineable managed properties in the coming months. Topic search Finding information is awesome, organizing that information is even better. Topic answers will come later this calendar year as part of Project Cortex. Project Cortex topics uses AI to identify knowledge topics across teams and systems, and automatically organize related resources and experts to create topic pages--like Wikipedia pages for the enterprise, built by AI. Topics bring together people, content, and information and have a name, definition, description and connections to people, content (e.g. files and sites) and conversations. Topics are automatically mined from content and curated by end-users. Topics can also be created manually. Personal query history Search is something we use every day, a lot, and it’s hard to keep track of what you last searched for now you’ll no longer need to search for what you’ve searched for adding a new option to view and manage your personal query history. With personal query history, you'll see your recent queries as you begin typing in the search box to help you get back to insights and information you recently used or accessed so you'll no longer have to bookmark your queries or memorize the right query to get you back to where you were. Your personal query history can be managed through your Office 365 My Account settings and new My Account privacy controls allow you to delete your query history or download your query history for future reference. New and improved answers in Microsoft Search Acronym answers Did you know the world's longest acronym, according to the Guinness Book of World Records is NIIOMTPLABOPARMBETZHELBETRABSBOMONIMONKONOTDTEKHSTROMONT? Often, we come across unfamiliar acronyms at work. Sometimes, these terms could even mean specific to different teams, projects, or organizations. Finding the meaning of acronyms at work is now easier than ever using natural language queries across Microsoft 365 apps and services. For example, you can query ‘Define DNN’, ‘What is DNN’, ‘Meaning of DNN’ etc. to see all the definitions of DNN used within your organization. Definitions are both mined from the content you have access to and curated by your organizations, Microsoft 365 administrator. Acronyms answers are currently available in SharePoint and Office.com (in English) in addition to Bing.com (in English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, and Italian) and soon in Outlook web, Outlook mobile, Teams mobile, Office apps like Word, Excel and PowerPoint in English and additional languages. Calendar answers Wondering when is your next product meeting or your next meeting with a colleague while you are on-the- go? Forget scrolling through your phone’s calendar to find it. You can now use voice or type in the search box and find your meetings in your favorite Outlook mobile app! Want to forward a meeting to a colleague or reply to an invite with meeting notes? Forget navigating to calendar and browsing through it to find the meeting. You can now search for it right in your inbox without switching views on your large screen Outlook clients! We have been working to make it easy and natural for you to find your events. No more scrolling or browsing required! You can look for a meeting/event with its <title>–, <attendee name> or <time of the meeting>. You can RSVP to the meeting, send emails or join a Teams meeting right from the answer! The calendar answer is available for enterprise users on in the US market and is soon going to be available on Outlook on the web, Outlook for Windows and Outlook for Android with support for Microsoft Accounts and other markets. File answers Search through your piles of files in Outlook just the way you think! Our data suggests that a quarter of search sessions in Outlook end in users opening an attachment or a link in the email. You can now search for files using natural syntax containing file name, author of the file, sender of the email that contains a file or just the file type across attachments you’ve received in addition to files someone shared with you on a Teams chat or your files in OneDrive For Business and SharePoint. Files answers will initially be available on and Outlook on the web in the US market with fast follow in other Outlook clients and other markets. Making the most of Microsoft Search Microsoft Search provides a robust set of tools you can use to make search work better for your organization and now we’re expanding the options available to you and your organization. Are your employees finding what they need? Is search working for you? Over the next several weeks we will begin rolling out new administrative features to help you answer these questions with a new feedback loop and improved search analytics. Admin feedback One of the most common asks for Microsoft Search is to help keep its users engaged through understanding the value of results or a person’s individual search success rate. The new feedback feature in Microsoft Search allows your employees to securely provide feedback to you, the search administrator, on the quality of their search results, suggest answers, and be a partner in the lifecycle of search in your organization. Analytics Tenant Analytics give you the tools and insights to make search great for your company. A new Microsoft Search Insights dashboard will help admins keep employees productive with insights into what they're searching for. See top search queries run on Microsoft Search, along with an impression distribution over time for various answers. Making search uniquely yours Search works best when you can personalize it to suit your unique needs. Over the next several months, we will begin gradually allowing for greater customization of the search experience with Microsoft Search to include custom verticals and filters. You’ll be able to edit out-of-box verticals or create your own, change the way results look and add your own filters based on refinable managed properties. In addition, a layout designer will make it even more simple to create compelling views of connector content via Adaptive Cards. Search wherever you are working Last month we began making Microsoft Search available to more apps and services in Microsoft 365 to include contextual search in Microsoft Teams and now, Microsoft Search in Windows, Outlook, and more improvements in Teams and we’re building on that work to bring Microsoft Search to more Microsoft 365 apps and services. Microsoft Teams As your organization’s use of Teams grows, so does content stored in teams, giving you a rich breadth and history of messages, files, meeting content and other organization knowledge to draw on. Earlier this year we rolled out improved autosuggest results and the ability to get contextual search results in your channels or chats using CTRL + F as you enter your search terms and recently we enabled contextual search from mobile as well. The new full page immersive search results page experience in Teams will deliver on the vision to help you achieve more by finding content faster and more reliably. The experience is optimized for recognition and users will be presented with better relevance and context in the results. Filters are also easier to access allowing people to find exactly what they are looking for. We will also be bringing the power of Microsoft Search into Teams by introducing answers mined from your organization knowledge which will help users get their job done faster. Outlook Searching is the second most popular activity behind email, and over the next several months we’ll be bringing new search innovation to help you find and discover with more accuracy, in less time. We recognize the best search experiences are those that speak your language, can understand ambiguities, and deliver the most confident results where and when you need them. Outlook supports Microsoft Search that recognizes search queries using language you use every day to filter and narrow search results through either typing or speaking via a new microphone option in the search bar. Searching for something specific about a contact will provide an actionable result such as "John's phone number". Search for a specific contact will use Microsoft Search services to provide relevant and actionable results rather than keywords from information from your email and calendar. In addition, real-time updates in travel reminders, powered by Bing and more in the reminder card. Windows Microsoft Search is designed to meet you wherever your working, and now your desktop. Coming soon to Windows 10, when logged in with a Work Account you’ll be able to search across your local and organizational content right from the Windows search box. Microsoft Office Office is with you everywhere you go, on mobile, in the browser and on your desktop. Microsoft Search has been a part of Office.com for some time already for enterprise users, making it super simple to find apps, get back to files and access all the knowledge in the enterprise from in one place. Now the familiar Microsoft Search experience has also come to consumer Office.com. Now we’re bringing Microsoft Search to your favorite productivity apps you use every day in Microsoft 365. When you’re using Word, Excel or PowerPoint, the familiar Microsoft search box is at the top of the app, helping you be productive, and taking advantage of the knowledge of your organization and the web to help be more productive. How often have you had to dig through a document to find something because the document didn't use the exact words you had searched for? With the recent breakthroughs in deep learning techniques, you can now go beyond the common search term-based queries and get answers to your questions based on the document content, opening a whole new way of finding knowledge. For example, when you’re looking at a water quality report, you can easily answer questions like where does the city water originate from? How to reduce the amount of lead in water? By bringing the well-established web search technologies such as query and document understanding, and indexing, and adding deep learning based natural language models, we can now handle a much broader set of search queries beyond “exact match.” On mobile, the Office app let’s you find all your files and work on PowerPoint, Word and Excel without switching apps. When you’re on the go the app also lets you perform common tasks such as scanning QR codes, signing PDFs or transforming pictures into editable Word and Excel documents. Connecting your businesses' islands of information Not only is the amount of information growing at exponential rates, but it is increasingly distributed – from on-premises to cloud applications. Today we announced that Microsoft Graph connectors for Microsoft Search will be generally available later this year and the expansion of our robust ecosystem to include partners Box, Adobe, Cognizant, Go1, LumApps, Accenture, Raytion, Cognizant, and BA Insight. With Microsoft Graph connectors, you can connect disparate systems whether on-premises or in the cloud so you can find information, in context, where you’re working. Along with new Microsoft Graph connectors, we’re also working hard to make Microsoft Search more integrated across Microsoft products to include Microsoft Azure. Upcoming Microsoft Azure integration will create a ‘boundaryless’ cohesive and coherent search experience, Microsoft Search will be able to display query results from existing Azure Cognitive Search indices, such as those powering mobile, web, and custom line-of-business applications. A new way to take advantage of Microsoft Search Lastly, for customers who may not have an Office 365 subscription, we’re pleased to announce a new standalone Microsoft Search service so you can help your employees find information quickly and precisely. Microsoft Search brings the best of intelligent product search to your organization, now whether integrated with Microsoft 365 or used as our new standalone service you can connect to all your applications and data platforms. To learn more or nominate your organization for our private preview visit https://aka.ms/msftsearchstandalone. New and improved developer experiences In addition to our progress with Microsoft Graph connectors, we also released some new features and capabilities in the Microsoft Search API in the Microsoft Graph. We've heard your feedback that some key features for SharePoint developers were lagging behind. A new video will walk you thru the API surface, and you can jump here to see the September 2020 additions. Here's what we've added in our latest release : The following SharePoint types are now addressable by the API : List, ListItem, Sites, and Drives. You can scope queries in entityType property in the searchRequest, and the response will contain search results casted to the appropriate type. We've added support for custom Sort on any sortable property for SharePoint and OneDrive We've added support for aggregation (aka Refiners in the SharePoint world) to enable you to build user experience where users can filter results. We now fully support selectProperties so that you can trim down the requested properties, or get more managed properties from the search index For Graph Connectors, we support passing multiple connections in the request. Search results will be sorted by relevance. Note that we decided to do a few breaking changes in the API, and you will have to update your app before the end of 2020. In the meantime, we will support both schemas to enable you to transition smoothly. Ahead of us, we will be releasing the API in /1.0 before the end of 2020 so that you can use it in your applications in Production and be fully supported. We are still working on our plans for what is news in the Search API in Graph, but we have bold ambitions for the coming year. Keep up-to-date with the latest Microsoft Search innovation by bookmarking our roadmap at https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/roadmap?rtc=1&filters=Microsoft%20Search.39KViews8likes14CommentsFind your free time with Microsoft Search
Kick start 2020 by finding your free time with Microsoft Search… It’s been a busy year for Microsoft Search, here’s the 2019 recap from Microsoft Search and the year ahead… When you need to find something to get work done, what do you do? If you’re like many people, you look through your personal files or company intranet to find what you need. If you don’t know or remember enough about the document you need, your search experience can be difficult and time consuming. The time you put into searching could instead be used to complete your current task. Search shouldn’t hold you back, but rather propel you forward to do more in less time. Let’s face it…a big part of our daily lives is spent searching for things – whether it’s looking for our car keys or trying to find that presentation someone shared with us last week. In the past, finding things meant retracing your steps, what room was I in last, who was in that meeting, who sent that attachment again? Retracing our steps is where enterprise search has been stuck, typing a keyword, not seeing what we want, and typing more keywords until we’re close getting the information we need – or walking room to room until we find our keys… retracing our steps. We believe that for search to work, search needs to evolve – to free you from searching and allow you to discover, and as a result allow you to find your free time. This is where Microsoft Search in Microsoft 365 comes in. We’re looking at search differently. We don’t want to have you ask yourself where you put your keys, we want to tell you where they are. Microsoft Search is your default search experience across Microsoft 365 apps and services, built with AI technologies from Microsoft Bing and intelligence and insights from the Microsoft Graph, Microsoft Search delivers contextually relevant results, when you need them, – whether in Microsoft Word or SharePoint, Microsoft Search is there to help you get answers to your questions and make more time for you - where you’re already working, across the applications and services you use every day. Things you can do... Microsoft Search is ready when you are, just click in the new search box and instantly see answers and insights from the applications, people, and information that matter the most. Microsoft Search allows you to discover people, insights, and information across Microsoft 365 apps and services – delivering contextually relevant results and answers where you’re working. Microsoft Search allows you to focus on what’s important, you’ll spend more time getting work done, rather than searching for your work. Learn more about Microsoft Search at https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/Microsoft-Search-Blog/Welcome-to-Microsoft-Search-intelligent-search-for-the-modern/ba-p/531156. What’s coming... Delivering contextually relevant results from Microsoft 365 is just the tip of the iceberg, over the course of the next several months we’ll be expanding Microsoft Search capabilities to include... Connecting your world of information... Information is everywhere, distributed across disparate systems, file shares, databases and more and you need to find knowledge quickly and easily regardless of where that information resides. Microsoft Graph Connectors, available now in preview, enable you to search over content sources beyond Microsoft 365. Roadmap Id 57065 Learn more about Microsoft Graph Connectors from Microsoft Ignite. Recording > https://medius.studios.ms/video/asset/PPT/IG19-SRCH40 PowerPoint Presentation > https://medius.studios.ms/video/asset/HIGHMP4/IG19-SRCH40 Learn more about Microsoft Graph Connectors at https://aka.ms/MicrosoftSearch/Connectors. Additionally, later this year we will also deliver capabilities to set up custom verticals, add your own refiners, and use adaptive cards to create your own visualizations in the Microsoft Search result page in Office.com and SharePoint. Conversations and content, together... For us, reading comprehension is a basic task, performed daily. As early as in elementary school, we’re able to read articles, and answer questions about its key ideas and details. But for AI, full reading comprehension is still an elusive goal—but a necessary one if we’re going to measure and achieve general intelligence AI. With Microsoft Search, machine comprehension will give a precise answer rather than a URL that contains the answer somewhere within a lengthy web page. Moreover, machine comprehension models can understand specific knowledge embedded in documents that usually cover narrow and specific domains, where the search data that algorithms depend upon is sparse. Semantic search with Microsoft Search provides new conversational experiences to retrieve answers in context. Roadmap Id 57063 Learn more about semantic search in Microsoft Search from Microsoft Ignite. Recording > https://medius.studios.ms/video/asset/HIGHMP4/IG19-SRCH30 PowerPoint Presentation > https://medius.studios.ms/video/asset/PPT/IG19-SRCH30 Unraveling the mystery of acronyms The world's longest acronym, according to the Guinness Book of World Records is NIIOMTPLABOPARMBETZHELBETRABSBOMONIMONKONOTDTEKHSTROMONT. With AI mined acronym answers in Microsoft Search we'll do the hard work to figure it out. Microsoft Search helps you define acronym answers and recommend AI mined answers from your organization. Roadmap Id 57064 And it’s not just curated acronyms, Microsoft Search’s AI technology mines for acronyms across your files and email to find other relevant definitions; you'll be able to view acronyms that in your email, files, and shared documents. Getting insights into who knows what and who’s who How much time do you spend looking for someone who can help answer a difficult question… Finding expertise isn’t always easy, out of date profiles, self-nominated areas of expertise, or incomplete people information makes it hard to make the connections that matter the most – finding colleagues who can help you or helping colleagues find you. By integrating the people answers in Microsoft Search when searching for specific topics, we can help people connect easily and efficiently. Microsoft Search is the ideal canvas to present people results for topics as it spans across mail, documents, teams, and is common and natural for people to look up topics unknown to them in search bar. In addition to finding expertise, we’re also announcing support for searching on an individual’s attributes. Attribute search makes finding people easier than ever, with attribute search you can now located individuals based on their unique attributes, for example, searching for Sofia or Sofia the Engineer in London. Roadmap Id 57067 Customizable to meet your needs Change is difficult. The benefit of Microsoft Search is that you don’t have to change what you’ve been doing. If you’ve built your enterprise search experience around SharePoint, we’re making it easy to keep doing what you’ve been doing. With upcoming customization options, you can use the tried and true SharePoint Framework to customize the appearance of Microsoft Search in your organizations and develop applications on top of Microsoft Search with our new Microsoft Search Graph API (public preview). For samples and more, visit Microsoft Search on GitHub at https://github.com/microsoft-search. Roadmap Id 57064, 32738, 57068, 57133, 57135, 57131 Learn more about customizing Microsoft Search from Microsoft Ignite. Recording > https://medius.studios.ms/video/asset/HIGHMP4/IG19-SRCH50 Learn more about the Microsoft Search public API in the Microsoft Graph from Microsoft Ignite. Recording > https://medius.studios.ms/video/asset/HIGHMP4/IG19-THR4000 PowerPoint Presentation > https://medius.studios.ms/video/asset/PPT/IG19-THR4000 Make the most of Microsoft Search Whether you’re looking for how to make the most of search, fine tune your results, or just keep up to date with the latest news and announcements, we’re here to help. Bookmark our resource center at https://aka.ms/MicrosoftSearch and join the conversation online at https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/Microsoft-Search/ct-p/MicrosoftSearch or on Twitter @microsoftsearch.28KViews8likes8CommentsTake Microsoft Search further with Microsoft Graph connectors
At Ignite last year in Orlando, we shared our progress and continued innovation for personalized, contextual search across Microsoft 365, to bring intelligent search and discovery experiences directly to you – where you’re already working, surfacing people, information, and insights across Microsoft 365 and connected systems with our Microsoft Graph connectors. We recognize that organizations have a wealth of data in other third-party services and applications. Boundary-less search is only as good as the sources it has access to. Expanding Preview to Targeted Release Customers Today, we’re delighted to announce that we are expanding the preview of connectors to all customers in Targeted Release. Over the next few weeks, any customer who has selected the Targeted Release option will be able to start trying connector functionality. Once rolled out to your tenant, you will be able to see the Connectors tab on Microsoft 365 admin center > Settings > Microsoft Search page. With over 130 connectors available, we have received very strong customer interest since we started the preview last November. Thank you for providing us with your feedback during the past several months. We have made many bug fixes and added new features based on your input. New Preview Connectors & Features We will be rolling out 2 new connectors and several new features to all our preview customers over the next couple of months. In addition to the 6 Microsoft-built connectors, we are adding 2 new connectors – Azure SQL and Azure DevOps. Administrators will be able to select which connectors they wish to use for their organizations based on which investments they’ve already made in third-party applications. Further extensibility with APIs will also be possible. Organizations will be able customize the search sources and the display of search results with custom refiners and verticals, and control the display of how sources of information look in result pages. In addition to bringing new connectors to Microsoft Search, we’re continuously building on our connector platform to enable you to create rich new scenarios through the information in your connected systems. Enhanced Connectors Search Experiences We have enhanced the search experience with core features like refiners support, alias support, and search result snippet. Any connector data can take advantage of Adaptive Cards to create rich result type UX on the search result page. Ranking and relevance has been improved to help you find what you are looking for faster. Improved Administrative Experiences The administrative experience for Microsoft Graph connectors has been improved to help you better understand your connector index usage and to provide a more consistent experience across Microsoft-built connectors and third-party connectors. Improved Developer Experiences The Graph connector platform provides open APIs for you to develop connectors for any data source you choose. The indexing API is now unified around a single externalItem entity type to provide a simplified developer experience. The API has been enhanced to support a new labels feature to let you define the semantics of your properties so the indexed data can be participate in richer search and Graph experiences. What’s Next? As we head towards general availability, we will continue to listen to your feedback to enhance Microsoft Search and Graph connectors. We are targeting to have Graph connectors reach general availability this year, and we look forward to sharing more with you at Ignite 2020. We will continue to work with our partners to ensure wherever your data resides, you can bring it to Microsoft 365, delivering search experiences across the apps and services you use everyday. You can learn more about Microsoft Graph connectors at https://aka.ms/MicrosoftSearch/Connectors.13KViews7likes2Comments