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This is a similar to question Why is the “this question might exist” search better than the normal search? but I think my point is fundamentally different.

My point is that it doesn't appear obvious (it didn't appear obvious to me, as a new user) that I might easily find the answer to my question by starting the "ask question" process and typing in my question.

What happened to me is I spent about 30-60 minutes, using Google and Stack Overflow search, trying to find an answer to a question. (I ended up with many hits that didn't give me an answer I needed and reading the "close but no cigar hits" took some time.)

Deciding that I had given it a good effort, I decided to ask and as I asked, the answer popped up.

My suggestion is to tell new users, ideally during the tour, that starting the "ask question" may lead to rapid success.

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    Consider that the title you used for your question is probably a better search term to use on Google and Stack Overflow search than whatever else you have attempted?
    – Oded
    Jun 8, 2015 at 13:59
  • Oded, after I had the success, I tried that in both the Stack Overflow search and the Google search. The Google search worked but the Stack Overflow search didn't. Unfortunately, I asked my question last Wednesday or Thursday and have forgotten the exact search string. In any event, I've learned my lesson but the new users following me haven't; many of them don't even know Stack Overflow exists, yet. What I'm made was an educational suggestion. (Among other things, I'm a teacher.) Jun 8, 2015 at 14:06
  • The point I was trying (very poorly) to make was that the searches (Google/Stack Overflow/Ask a Question) are all very different - there is no guarantee one of them is better than the others.
    – Oded
    Jun 8, 2015 at 14:15
  • Oded, fair enough. Jun 8, 2015 at 14:19
  • I got a similar feeling, and I concluded that when asking a new question the search engine takes into account also the tags you have chosen, and that could lead to different results. Jun 8, 2015 at 15:06

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