According to IBM, structured data is "highly organized and easily decipherable by machine learning algorithms." It’s a type of quantitative data. In 1974, IBM developed Structured Query Language (SQL) for structured data. It also created a SQL database to sort that data to make it easily accessible.
So, what is the difference between structured and unstructured data? In this piece, we’ll look at both, focusing on structured data.
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Structured data works with programs and algorithms. It can be as simple as the price, size, and material of a shirt you sell online. Google quickly understands these bits of data, so it can include them in search results, creating a richer, more dynamic result for the searcher.
Although structured data is a must-have in today’s online world, not all businesses use it.
Using this form of data ensures search engines include your brand and products when people are looking for your company or product.
A well-defined structure
Has a persistent order
Easy-to-access
Standardized format
Usually stored in a database
Data model compliant
Structured data has several benefits, including:
Its user-friendly style and easy access
Being perfect for machine learning (ML) algorithms
Tools can use and analyze it easier than unstructured data
However, it also has drawbacks:
Data inflexibility
Limited storage options mean you have to completely update it if there’s a change in requirements
The alternative to structured data is unstructured data.
Unstructured data is not pre-defined, and you can’t store it within a relational database management system (RDBMS). It is difficult to process and analyze and doesn't have a consistent internal structure. Because of this, unstructured data is difficult or impossible for data mining.
Most companies still use unstructured data and miss out on the customer interaction and social media convenience of structured data.
Structured data falls into the tabular format with rows and columns. Structured rows and columns make it easily accessible to people or machines. Examples are SQL databases and Excel files.
Guidelines for Google structured data deal with technical and quality guidelines.
Format markup must be either JavaScript Object Notation (JSON-LD), Resource Description Framework (RDF), or Microdata
Do not block access using noindex, robots.txt, or other access controls
Follow anti-spam rules
Content should be up-to-date, relevant, and original
Do not use fake reviews or other misleading aspects
All markup content must be visible
Your data must reflect the content on the page
You must complete all required properties for the specific rich result type
Structured data must be on the page that it is describing
Images must be relevant
Image URLs must be indexable and crawlable
This open-source relational database management system (RDBMS) puts data into collections and organizes it.
OLAP is an acronym meaning Online Analytical Processing. It’s a computation method that allows users to get data and query data to analyze in high-speed conditions from centralized storage.
Also known as Postgres, PostgreSQL is an open-source RDBMS that supports languages like Python, Java, JSON, and SQL.
Programmed in the C language, SQLite is a non-standalone software library database engine that is serverless and transactional relational.
Structured data use case examples include:
Accounting firms that need to record financial transactions and process the results
Travel agencies and service industries that make online bookings with dates, addresses, phone numbers, etc.
One of the main advantages of a structured data arrangement is the boost to indexing from content organization, as it’s simply more efficient. There is also a higher click-through rate to your website listings, giving you higher conversion rates.
Structured data:
Increases your online visibility
More easily moves you in search engine rankings
Allows more people to click on your offerings
Gives you a better conversion rate than without it
This means your company can sell more of your product with the content than without it.
You can use the Google Structured Data Testing Tool to test your structured data. This tool is user-friendly and allows you to put in the code you want to check or paste the URL of the page you want to test. Google will run it and notify you of any issues. You can test RDFa, Microdata formats, and JSON-LD with the Google Structured Data Testing Tool.
Structured data helps man and machine talk. It gives programs and algorithms simple, bite-sized pieces of information. They can process your data quickly, increasing your website's search visibility.
Structured data uses data models to determine how you process, access, and store that data.
Typical examples of structured data usage include:
Invoicing software
Contact lists
Some customer relationship management (CRM) systems
SQL databases
Excel files
The key difference between structured and unstructured data is that structured is quantitative, and unstructured is qualitative.
Structured data adheres to a format and is easily accessible, while unstructured does not and is not.
The tabular format for structured data makes it easier to store, and it requires less space than unstructured data, which does not follow a format and takes up more space.
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