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Manage query rules

As a SharePoint Administrator or above in Microsoft 365, you can improve search results in the classic search experience by creating and managing query rules. Query rules help searches respond to the intent of users.

In a query rule, you specify conditions and associated actions. When a query meets the conditions in a query rule, the search system performs the actions specified in the rule to improve the relevance of the search results. This could be by narrowing results or changing the order in which results are displayed. When the query rule condition is met, an associated action could be to show a specific item at the top of the search results. Say you have an intranet site where all company events are maintained in a library, and you want to promote a first-aid seminar. To do this, you create a query rule that boosts the first-aid seminar to the top of the search results when someone searches for "seminar" or "event."

A query rule can specify the following three types of actions:

  • Promote a search result to appear above ranked results. For example, for the query "sick leave", a query rule could specify a particular result, such as a link to a site that has a statement of company policy regarding time off work.

  • Add one or more groups of search results, called result blocks. For example, for a query that contains “Fabrikam sales report”, a query rule might recognize “Fabrikam” as a customer, and then display a result block with pertinent results about Fabrikam from your customer relationship management (CRM) system.

  • Change the ranking of search results. For example, for a query that contains “download toolbox”, a query rule could recognize the word “download” as an action term and boost search results that point to a particular download site on your intranet.

You can create query rules at different levels: for the whole tenant, for a site collection, or for a site. When you create query rules at tenant level, the query rules can be used in all site collections. When you create query rules at site collection level, the rules can be used on all sites in the site collection. When you create query rules at site level, the rules can only be used on that site.

You can configure query rules for one or more result sources, and you can specify a time period for when the query rule is active.

SharePoint has both a classic and a modern search experience. Only query rules that return promoted results can affect the modern search experience. Query rules which do query rewrites are not supported for modern experiences. Users might see such promoted results on the All tab on the search results page when they search across all of SharePoint. Learn more about the differences between the classic and modern search experiences in SharePoint.

Important

In December 2021, query rules with promoted results were deprecated for organization-scoped queries in favor of Bookmark and Q&A answers in modern search experiences. Examples of organization-scoped queries are SharePoint Home and Office.com.

Promoted results will continue to work for all classic search experiences and for sites and hub sites with modern search experiences. Promoted results will also continue to work for environments where Bookmark and Q&A answers are not available.

Promote a search result

You can add several individual promoted results. When there is more than one promoted result, you can specify the relative ranking.

  1. Go to the Manage Query Rules page for the tenant, for a site collection, or a site:

    • For a tenant, in the new SharePoint admin center, select More features. Under Search, select Open, and then on the search administration page, select Manage Query Rules.

    • For a site collection, in your site collection, select Settings Settings icon., and then select Site settings. If you don't see Site settings, select Site information, and then select View all site settings. Under Site Collection Administration, select Search Query Rules.

    • For a site, select Settings Settings icon., and then select Site settings. If you don't see Site settings, select Site information, and then select View all site settings. Under Search, select Query Rules.

  2. On the Manage Query Rules page, in the Select a Result Source list, select a result source for the new query rule.

  3. Select New Query Rule.

  4. On the Add Query Rule page, in the General Information section, in the Rule name field, type the name for the query rule.

  5. Select to expand the Context section.

  6. In the Context section, do one of the following:

    • To apply the query rule to all result sources, select All sources.

    • To apply the query rule to one or more specific result sources, select One of these sources. By default, the result source that you specified earlier is selected. To add a result source to the query rule, select Add Source, select a result source in the dialog, and then select Save.

  7. In the Query Conditions section, do one of the following:

    • Select one of the conditions listed in Overview of conditions that make a query rule fire.

      Note

      The rule fires when any condition is true.

      To add more conditions, select Add Alternate Condition

    • Select Remove Condition to configure this query rule to fire for every query that users type at the level at which you are creating the rule, and then go to the next step. For example, if you are creating this rule for a site collection, select Remove Condition if you want this rule to fire for every query that users type inside any search box in the site collection.

  8. In the Actions section, specify the action to take when the query rule fires. Specify one of the following:

    • To promote individual results so that they appear towards the top of search results, select Add Promoted Result (in SharePoint 2010 Products this was called Best Bets). In the dialog, in the Title field, type the name that you want to give this promoted result. In the URL field, type the URL of the result that should be promoted. Choose Render the URL as a banner instead of as a hyperlink. Select Save.

      You can add several individual promoted results. When there's more than one promoted result, specify the relative ranking.

    • To promote a group of search results, select Add Result Block. For more information, see Create and display a result block a bit further down.

    • To change ranked search results, select Change ranked results by changing the query. For more information, see Change ranked search results by changing the query a bit further down.

  9. To make the query rule active during a particular time period, select Publishing, and then specify the period.

  10. Select Save.

Create and display a result block

A result block contains a small subset of results that are related to a query in a particular way. Like individual results, you can promote a result block or rank it with other search results.

When you configure a query condition for a result block, you use query variables. Query variables are like placeholders for values that you don't yet know, when you specify the query. However, when the query's run, this information is available and the system uses it to send the query to the index. For example, {User.Name} stands for the display name of the user who typed in the query. Another one's {searchBoxQuery}, which stands for the query a user typed in a search box. When you use the Query Builder to configure the query, a list of query variables is shown. (See step 3 in the procedure right below.)

  1. In step 9 of the procedure Create a query rule, on the Add Query Rule page, in the Actions section, click Add Result Block.

  2. Enter the title that shall appear in the result block in the Title field in the Block Title section.

  3. Configure the query that gives results for the block. In the Query section, click Launch Query Builder and on the BASICS tab do the following:

    • Select which content to search by selecting a result source from the drop-down list in the Select a query section

    • Specify your query. See Query variables in SharePoint Server 2013 for a list of available query variables. You can select pre-defined query variables from the Keyword filter drop-down list, and then add them to the Query text box by clicking Add keyword filter

    • If relevant, use property filters to query the content of managed properties that are set to queryable in the search schema. You can select managed properties from the Property filter drop-down list. Click Add property filter to add the filter to the query.

    Note

    Custom managed properties are not shown in the Property filter list. To add a custom managed property to your query, in the Query text box, enter the name of your custom managed property followed by the query condition, for example MyCustomColorProperty:Green

  4. Specify how the search results within your result block should be sorted. Sorting of search results is case sensitive. On the SORTING tab, in the Sort by drop-down list, select a managed property, and then select Descending or Ascending. The list only contains managed properties that are set as sortable in the search schema. You can also sort by rank. To add more sorting levels, click Add sort level.

  5. If you chose to sort by rank, you can optionally define rules for dynamically changing the ordering of results. In the Dynamic ordering section, define when to change ranking by selecting a condition from the drop-down list and then specifying whether to promote or demote the result. To add more rules, click Add dynamic ordering rules

  6. Preview the final query that will be run by the Content Search Web Part, on the TEST tab. The preview is based on the original query template where dynamic variables are substituted with current values. Other changes to the query may have to be made as part of query rules. Click Show more to display additional information.

    • The Query text shows the final query that'll be run by the Content Search Web Part. It's based on the original query template where dynamic variables are replaced with current values. You might end up making other changes to the query as part of query rules.

    • The Query template box shows the content of the query template that is applied to the query.

    • The Query template variables section shows the query variables that will be applied to the query, and the values of the variables that apply to the current page. You can type other values to test the effect they will have on the query. Click the Test Query button to preview the search results.

  7. Click OK to close the build your query dialog.

  8. Define which result source this result block should be applied to. Use the Search this Source drop-down list in the Query section

  9. In the Items drop-down list, select how many results to show in the result block.

  10. Click to expand the Settings section.

    The result block only displays the number of search results that you specified in the previous step. However, you can add a Show more link at the bottom of the result block that'll show all search results for the result block. To add a Show more link, select "More" link goes to the following URL, and then type a URL. You can use query variables in this URL—for example, http://www.<site>/search/results.aspx?k={subjectTerms}.

  11. Click OK.

Change ranked search results by changing the query

The ranking model calculates a ranking order of search results. You can change this ranking by promoting or demoting items within the search results. For example, for a query that contains "download toolbox", you can create a query rule that recognizes the word "download" as an action term. Once you've done this, you can change the ranked search results and this will promote the URL of a specific download site on your intranet.

You can also dynamically change the sorting order of the search results, based on several variables such as file name extension or specific keywords. When you change ranked search results by changing the query, you'll see that your results are security trimmed and refinable. Moreover, the search results don't show up if the document's no longer there.

  1. In step 9 of the procedure Create a query rule, on the Add Query Rule page, in the Actions section, click Change ranked results by changing the query. The build your query dialog appears

  2. On the BASICS tab, do the following:

    • Select which content to search by selecting a result source from the drop-down list in the Select a query section

    • Specify your query. See Query variables in SharePoint Server 2013 for a list of available query variables. You can select pre-defined query variables from the Keyword filter drop-down list, and then add them to the Query text box by clicking Add keyword filter

    • If relevant, use property filters to query the content of managed properties that are set to queryable in the search schema. You can select managed properties from the Property filter drop-down list. Click Add property filter to add the filter to the query.

  3. Specify how the search results within your result block should be sorted. Sorting of search results is case sensitive. On the SORTING tab, in the Sort by drop-down list, select a managed property, and then select Descending or Ascending. The list only contains managed properties that are set as sortable in the search schema. You can also sort by rank. To add more sorting levels, click Add sort level.

  4. If you chose to sort by rank, you can optionally define rules for dynamically changing the ordering of results. In the Dynamic ordering section, define when to change ranking by selecting a condition from the drop-down list and then specifying whether to promote or demote the result. To add more rules, click Add dynamic ordering rules

  5. Preview the final query that will be run by the Content Search Web Part, on the TEST tab. The preview is based on the original query template where dynamic variables are substituted with current values. Other changes to the query may have to be made as part of query rules. Click Show more to display additional information.

    • The Query text shows the final query that'll be run by the Content Search Web Part. It's based on the original query template where dynamic variables are replaced with current values. You might end up making other changes to the query as part of query rules.

    • The Query template box shows the content of the query template that is applied to the query.

    • The Query template variables section shows the query variables that will be applied to the query, and the values of the variables that apply to the current page. You can type other values to test the effect they will have on the query. Click the Test Query button to preview the search results.

  6. Click OK to close the Build Your Query dialog.

  7. Click Save.

Make a query rule inactive on a site

Query rules that are created at the tenant level are inherited by site collections and sites. Similarly, query rules that are created at the site collection level are inherited by sites in the site collection. If you don't want a query rule to apply to a site that inherits it, you can make the query rule inactive for the site.

  1. On your site, select Settings Settings icon., and then select Site settings. If you don't see Site settings, select Site information, and then select View all site settings.

  2. On the Site Settings page, in the Search section, click Query Rules.

  3. On the Manage Query Rules page, on the Select a Result Source menu, select the result source that contains the query rule that you want to make inactive.

  4. In the Name column, point to the query rule that you want to make inactive, click the arrow that appears, and then click Make Inactive.

Rank query rules for a site collection

When multiple query rules are active for a tenant, a site collection, or a site, more than one rule can fire for a query that is performed at that level. By default, the rules don't fire in a given order. However, if you want to control the order in which the rules fire, you have to add the query rules that you create to query groups. To do this, you select rules to add to a group, and then you specify the order in which the rules in the group will fire if they're triggered. You can also prevent query rules that rank lowest in a group from firing even if they do get triggered.

  1. In the site collection, select Settings Settings icon., and then select Site settings. If you don't see Site settings, select Site information, and then select View all site settings.

  2. On the Site Settings page, in the Site Collection Administration section, click Search Query Rules.

  3. On the Manage Query Rules page, on the Select a Result Source menu, select the result source that contains the query rules that you want to group.

  4. For each query rule that you created that you want to add to a group, point to the rule and select the check box.

    Note

    Query rules that you created for this site collection are listed in the Defined for this site collection section.

  5. Click Order Selected Rules.

  6. In the Order Selected Rules dialog, do either of the following, and then click OK:

    • Select Move rules to new group with this name, and then type a name for the group.

    • Select Move rules to existing group and select a group in the list.

  7. On the Manage Query Rules page:

    • To change the order in which a rule in a group will fire if it's triggered, change the number ordering of the rule.

    • To prevent query rules that are ranked lowest in the group from firing, go to the row for the group's query rule that should fire last, and then in the Actions column, in the Continue/Stop list, select Stop.

Overview of conditions that make a query rule fire

Query condition Description Configuration Example
Query Matches Keyword Exactly The query rule fires when a query exactly matches a word or phrase that you specify. In the Query exactly matches one of these phrases text box, type one or more phrases separated by semicolons. Type "picture; pic" in the box. The query rule fires when a user types "picture" or "pic" in a search box. The rule doesn't fire if a user types "pictures" or "sunny picture."
Query Contains Action Term The query rule fires when a query contains a term for something that the user wants to do. The term must be at the beginning or end of the query. Enter the action term that causes the query rule to fire by doing one of the following:
Select Action term is one of these phrases, and type one or more phrases.
Type the word "download" in the Action term is one of these phrases box. When a user types "download Contoso Electronics datasheet" in a search box, there are chances the user isn't searching for a document that contains the words "download," "Contoso," "Electronics," and "datasheet." Instead, the user most likely wants to download a Contoso Electronics datasheet. The query rule fires, and only the words "Contoso," "Electronics," and "datasheet" are sent to the search index.
Query More Common in Source The query rule fires if users frequently sent this query from another source that you have already specified. In the Query is more likely to be used in this source list, select a result source. You selected Local Video Results in the list. The query rule fires if a user types the word "training" in a search box and if that word had already been frequently typed in a search box in the Videos vertical.
Result Type Commonly Clicked The query rule fires if other users frequently clicked a particular result type after typing the same query. In the Commonly clicked results match result type list, select a result type. You selected SharePoint MicroBlog Post in the list. If users frequently click a microblog post in search results, consider configuring the most recent microblog post as the first promoted result, and the next most recent microblog post as the second promoted result (in the Actions section).
Advanced Query Text Match You want to use a phrase or a dictionary entry that causes the query rule to fire, and then define more detailed conditions for when the query rule fires. Enter the phrase or term that causes the query rule to fire by doing one of the following:
Select Query contains one of these phrases, and type one or more phrases.
You selected Query contains one of these phrases, and then chose Start of query matches, but not entire query. The query rule fires only if the phrase is at the beginning of a query, not if it's at the end.