How Search Terms Kill Your Business - Literally

How Search Terms Kill Your Business - Literally

A debate over the words ‘should’ or ‘shall’ almost derailed the world’s first universal climate deal in Paris in December last year. The word ‘shall’ would have legally obliged countries to cut emissions rather than just having to try.  ‘Should’ was used instead to denote a guideline or moral obligation only. The legal mechanisms behind these words are significantly different.

If such error can happen to some of the best paid translators on the planet, chances are that your translated content may pose a risk to your business as well.        

If a term can potentially stop 195 nations from signing a historic document, in-country reviewers can certainly delay your product release.

The Sankt-Hedwig hospital in Berlin, for example, would have welcomed better management of terms when their surgeons improperly transplanted artificial knees in 47 patients. Instead of using a procedure in which the artificial joints would be cemented with a shank or shaft, they were implanted without any cement. When the doctors read the instructions for inserting the artificial knee, the term ‘non-modular cemented’ was wrongly translated as ‘zementfrei’, which means ‘does not need cement’ in German. Surgeons put in the knees loose, and patients needed a second surgery. 

Picture 1.  The Sankt-Hedwig hospital in Berlin, for example, would have welcomed better management of terms when their surgeons improperly transplanted artificial knees in 47 patients.                     

Having access to a proper translation of the term ‘non-modular cemented’ along with an example of use in an actual context could have prevented this expensive and painful error. The discipline of keeping such information in an orderly fashion is called terminology management. It is so powerful, that it even drives much of the global economy today. And where it’s not used, companies can be liable for tremendous mistakes like those that happened at Sankt-Hedwig hospital. Here is why.

Most purchases today start with a term

Whether it’s for a car, a camera, or a couch, buyers do their research first before they engage with sales – and they typically start by simply typing a term into a search engine.

Forrester Research reports that by 2017, 60% of all U.S. retail sales will involve the Internet in some way.

Forrester Research Inc. reports that by 2017, 60% of all U.S. retail sales will involve the Internet in some way, either as a direct e-commerce transaction or as part of a shopper’s research. Buyers of both products and services are online, connecting with other buyers on social media and evaluating options on their tablets and smartphones. As a result, modern customers are 65-90% of the way through the purchase decision process before they contact sales.

That’s different from 10 years ago when we were dependent on a sales person to show us what they thought were our best options. Today, we have all information upfront – provided we find it based on the terms we used in our hunt for the best product.

A furniture maker, for example, might offer what they call an olive couch, but a potential buyer might be searching for a green sofa instead. Successful digital marketers, therefore, also manage the words customers use in their research in addition to keeping track of their own terms. They identify search terms that aren't as relevant to their business and add them as negative keywords. They link terms to traffic and conversions either in revenue or sign-ups.      

Terminology is today’s most powerful sales tool.

Terminology is in fact today’s most powerful sales tool. It enables search engine optimization (SEO), internal search within a content management system, external search on the content delivery architecture, web hierarchy, taxonomy,and keywords. Terminology management makes content discoverable so that a buyer can make a purchase decision. Good terminology management is gold.

Picture 2: Terminology drives everything from authoring, content management, translation and in-country review.

Why your writers and experts can be wrong

To make it work, copy text in the source language has to be correct and its terminology unified. That’s surprisingly rare, as especially product names often fall victim to creative writers. Different treatments in hyphenation, capitalization, intercapping, spacing, and use of plural or possessive forms are often just the beginning. Add to it where and how to place company names, model and edition identifiers and term chaos is imminent. These variations may weaken your trademark protection, but also confuse customers and sales teams.

The master of brand name confusion was, interestingly, Steve Jobs. NeXT failed.

The master of brand name confusion was, interestingly, Steve Jobs' company NeXT. While the company name had always been spelled with a lowercase ‘e’, the names of its products changed quite often, such as NextStep, NeXTstep, NeXTStep, NeXTSTEP, NEXTSTEP, OpenStep, OPENSTEP, OpenStep for Solaris, OPENSTEP for MachOS/SPARC, and OPENSTEP for Windows. Sometimes users and engineers referred to "OpenStep/Solaris" when in fact they meant "OPENSTEP for MachOS/SPARC. The most common confusion happened with "OpenStep" and "OPENSTEP", which were not all the same as one might have guessed. As a result, many people just used their personal favorite preference for whatever the latest release was.

In-country reviewers of translated documents often halt or delay marketing campaigns and product releases for the same reason in almost all international companies. They are confused about the right term for a product, technology or mechanism and tend to impose their own preference.  If a term can potentially stop 195 nations from signing a historic document, in-country subject matter experts can certainly stop your new product introduction over disagreement on a name.

The right term boost machine translation

If people do not know what term to use, machines are even more in trouble. Translation technology depends on terminology more than warm-bodied translators who can ask questions and do their own research. A machine needs to be told. And while it is true that some machine translation engines learn over time, their effectiveness depends on the quality of the source texts. If your writers and translators use inconsistent terminology, how much value have the learnings?

 If you really want to know how big your terminology problem is, just compare your translated product names with your international trademark registrations.  

A translation memory loses its value when it stores multiple segments that differ only in key terms. Translation agencies do not always manage conflicts well, especially in countries with an indirect communication style. They may store multiple versions of translated segments as a result, and hence pollute their database with wrong terms.

Even when they manage their terminology right, who verifies that the source term was the right one in the first place? A vast number of terms are being extracted and validated in translation, not during content development. If you really want to know how big your terminology problem is, just compare your translated product names with your international trademark registrations.  

Terminology management needs to drive authoring, content management, in-country review and translation either by humans or machines.

So, when you roll out a marketing strategy for entering a new geography, make sure your content can be found, has financial impact and is legally sound. If you need to make one investment in global digital marketing, do it in terminology first – before you dream of savings from using translation technology or a return on investment in a new user experience.

For more information or to learn how terminology management can help your business, contact the
Rockant Terminology Team .
Sarah Saunders

Content Marketing, Brand Storytelling, Demand Generation for B2B SaaS/Enterprise Software | Trade Associations | Hydrogen and Clean Energy

8y

Great article, Andrew. On a side note: love your creative and effective use of the formatting options available on LinkedIn's publishing platform. Genuinely enhances the reading experience. Thanks for the inspiration.

Ben Desjardins

Fractional CMO | On-Demand Marketing Leader | B2B Business Accelerator | User Experience Optimizer | Maker of the Best Grilled Cheeses 🥪 | 🌎 Globetrotter

8y

Great article Andrew! Will share with my network! Several organizations turn to professional translation agencies to manage their terminology. At Traducta, we share the client's terminology with the content owners via a secure, collaboration platform. This facilitates a consistent use of standardized terms throughout the customer journey.

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Laora Moussay

Chef de projet Digital Workplace chez Gouvernement Monaco

8y

Je ne perds jamais. Soit je gagne, soit j'apprends - Nelson Mandela.

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Sushil Kumar

Co-founder Gharana furniture & Arth Algo Trading and a prudent NSE option trader & investor

8y

Very relevant, We often land in trouble when we need to search. So in today's digital world utmost importance should be given to terminology management. Thanks a lot.

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