Most relevant websites do not come up in the top results because designers and engineers do not cater to the way ranking algorithms work currently.
"[3] As of December 2014, out of 10.3 billion monthly Google searches by Internet users in the United States, an estimated 78% are made to research products and services online.
[citation needed] Findability encompasses aspects of information architecture, user interface design, accessibility and search engine optimization (SEO), among others.
[citation needed] In 2005 he defined it as: "the ability of users to identify an appropriate Web site and navigate the pages of the site to discover and retrieve relevant information resources", though it appears to have been first coined in a public context referring to the web and information retrieval by Alkis Papadopoullos in a 2005 article entitled "Findability".
For seamless search, current websites focus on a combination of structured hypertext-based information architectures and rich Internet application-enabled visualization techniques.