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Definitions: The Three Types of Online Search / Research (Explicit, Implicit and Ancillary)

Definition: Explicit Online Research

Direct, intentional research where someone is actively looking for you or your brand by name. This is the most visible form of online research – and historically, the one ORM has focused on.

Platforms:

  • Search (Google, Bing, YouTube etc)
  • Social media platforms (LinkedIn, Facebook etc)
  • ChatGPT (and other AI engines)

Examples:

  • Googling your name,
  • checking your LinkedIn profile,
  • asking ChatGPT “Who is [Name]?”

Definition: Implicit Online Research

Indirect research where you’re discovered as part of a non-brand inquiry – through association with a company, topic, or peer group. You’re not the subject of the research, but you appear in the results.

Platforms:

  • ChatGPT (and other AI engines)
  • Search (Google, Bing, YouTube etc)
  • Social media platforms (LinkedIn, Facebook etc)

Examples:

  • Being mentioned when someone looks up your company or niche,
  • surfacing in AI-generated lists or YouTube suggestions,
  • appearing in related social media content.

Definition: Ancillary Online Research

Incidental exposure in environments not designed for research—where AI tools surface your name while a user is doing something else entirely. This is ambient, algorithmic visibility you can’t track or respond to in real time.

Platforms:

  • Gmail
  • Google Docs
  • Microsoft Copilot
  • Browser-integrated AI

Examples:

  • Gmail autocompletes your name,
  • Google Docs shows your Knowledge Panel,
  • Copilot recommends you mid-document.

The Three Types of Online Research (Explicit, Implicit and Ancillary) – table summary of the official definitions

Type of ResearchDefinitionPlatformsExamples
Explicit Online ResearchDirect, intentional research where someone is actively looking for you or your brand by name. Most visible form, historically the focus of ORM.– Google, Bing, YouTube
– LinkedIn, Facebook
– ChatGPT and other AI engines
– Googling your name
– Checking your LinkedIn profile
– Asking ChatGPT “Who is [Name]?”
Implicit Online ResearchIndirect research where you appear as part of a non-brand inquiry—via association with company, topic, or peer group. You’re not the subject but appear anyway.– ChatGPT and AI engines
– Google, Bing, YouTube
– LinkedIn, Facebook
– Mentioned during company or niche research
– Appearing in AI-generated lists
– Featured in related social posts or YouTube suggestions
Ancillary Online ResearchIncidental exposure in environments not designed for research—AI surfaces your name while users are doing unrelated tasks.– Gmail
– Google Docs
– Microsoft Copilot
– Browser-integrated AI
– Gmail autocompletes your name
– Knowledge Panel appears in Google Docs
– Copilot suggests your brand mid-document

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