Searching For- Tricky Masseur — In-all Categories...
No website, no online calendar, only a cryptic email. The user searches all categories hoping to find a phone number or physical address hidden in an old “Furniture for Sale” post (yes, this happens).
This reveals a flaw in standard search design: When a user checks “All Categories,” the platform’s algorithm typically returns fewer relevant results, not more, because it mixes signals (e.g., “massage” in Musical Instruments – a guitar massage? No). The user becomes frustrated and adds modifiers like “tricky” to filter out noise. Searching for- Tricky Masseur in-All Categories...
“Searching for Tricky Masseur in All Categories...” is more than a typo or a curious string. It is a digital artifact of a very human problem: the gap between how services are organized and how people actually seek them. It speaks to trust, ambiguity, and the lengths we go to when a standard search fails. No website, no online calendar, only a cryptic email
Luxury resorts offering specialized deep-tissue work. It is a digital artifact of a very
This will pull listings from any category (gigs, services, etc.) containing your keywords.
: Use an "Aggregation" query to count matches in each category without requiring the user to click into them individually.